Short version: £1,000 covers roughly 0 months of essential spending, and clears the typical pot for 0 of five age groups. But “good” depends on your age and outgoings — and on what people like you actually have. Here is the honest picture.
A median tells you where you sit. It can’t tell you if you’re doing alright. The crowd can.
see the crowd’s verdict →Here is the typical (median) amount of cash savings at each age — half of people have more, half have less. We use the median on purpose: the “average” is dragged sky-high by a small number of very wealthy savers, which is exactly why headline figures make everyone feel behind.
Every other page hands you a number and leaves you to spiral. The judgement — am I doing alright, or do I need to act? — is what you actually came for. On The Money Verdict, real people anonymously rate whether £1,000 at your age is “sound” or “a bit silly”, so you get an honest read instead of a guess.
And if money genuinely feels tight, that is not a failing and you are not alone. Free, non-judgemental help is available from StepChange and Citizens Advice — worth a look before you lose sleep over a benchmark.
Is £1,000 in savings good? £1,000 covers about 0 months of typical essential spending. Most guidance suggests 3–6 months as a safety net, so £1,000 is an early start — every bit counts. Whether it is “good” depends on your age and outgoings.
How does £1,000 compare by age? It is around or below the typical pot for most age groups — the median is about £5,000 for 25–34s and £10,000 for 35–44s, so £1,000 clears 0 of the five age benchmarks below.
Am I behind with £1,000 saved? Almost certainly not. Medians are low and a huge share of people have very little put aside, so being below a headline figure is extremely common — it is a starting point, not a verdict on you.
The Money Verdict settles every money question the honest way — anonymously, by people just like you.
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