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Picture this: You’re 50, earning $70,000 a year and finally, after years of financial turbulence, in a stable enough place to take stock of where things stand. The problem? You’re staring at $30,000 in debt spread across student loans, a personal loan and a stubborn credit card balance, and your retirement savings are almost nonexistent.

It’s a situation that might feel embarrassing, but it’s anything but rare. According to an AARP survey, one in five Americans over the age of 50 has no retirement savings at all, and more than 60 percent worry they won’t have enough money to last through retirement. (1)

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The anxiety is widespread, but anxiety and doom are different things. At 50, is it actually too late?

The short answer is no. Here’s the longer one.

First, tackle the debt strategically

With $30,000 owed across multiple accounts, the first order of business is getting a handle on what it’s actually costing you. Not all debt is equal.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) recommends two core approaches to debt repayment: the highest interest rate method, which targets your highest debt first and saves the most money over time, and the snowball method, which focuses on the smallest balances first to build momentum but may mean paying more overall. (2)

For most people carrying credit card debt, that urgency is significant. According to Federal Reserve data, the average credit card interest rate currently sits around 21 percent — meaning every month a balance lingers, a substantial portion of any payment goes straight to interest rather than reducing what’s owed. (3)

There’s no need to pause retirement contributions entirely while paying off debt or to ignore debt while trying to save. A measured approach, by aggressively reducing high-interest balances while making minimum payments on lower-rate loans, frees up cash that can eventually be redirected toward savings.

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The retirement gap is real, but catch-up provisions exist for a reason

Here’s where your age actually works in your favor: The IRS specifically rewards late starters by allowing workers 50 and older to make additional “catch-up” contributions to retirement accounts beyond standard limits. (4)

For 2026, those workers can contribute up to $8,600 to an IRA: the standard $7,500 limit plus a $1,100 catch-up contribution. (5)

And for someone without access to a workplace retirement plan — a situation that affects nearly 57 million American private-sector workers, according to AARP — a Roth IRA is worth serious consideration. (1)

Roth contributions go in after tax, meaning withdrawals in retirement are tax-free. That’s particularly valuable if you expect to be in a higher tax bracket later or simply want more flexibility.

Social Security will also be part of the picture. The Social Security Administration notes the estimated average monthly retirement benefit is $2,071, as of January. (5)

That’s not a full replacement income, but a meaningful base that reduces how much your personal savings need to cover in retirement. For someone at 50 who has spent decades in the workforce, those credits are already accumulating.

And the overall math can be encouraging. For example, according to the CFPB, someone who starts saving over $1,500 a month at 50 could still reach $500,000 by 65, assuming average annual returns of around seven percent. That’s comparable to what someone saving $200 a month from age 25 accumulates. (6)

The wider context: You’re not alone, and time still matters

The feeling of being irreparably behind is a common (and counterproductive) mental trap. AARP found that “everyday expenses continue to be the top barrier to saving more for retirement, and some older Americans say that they never expect to retire.” (1)

But that paralysis often reflects a belief that starting late means starting pointlessly. It doesn’t.

A 15-year runway to 65, combined with catch-up contribution limits, compound growth and Social Security as a foundation, means there’s still real ground to cover.

The key is to eliminate your highest-interest debt as fast as possible, open a Roth IRA and begin making catch-up contributions. Then revisit whether your income has room to grow through things like career development or additional work.

None of it is a magic fix. It just requires a plan and the willingness to start before 51.

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We rely only on vetted sources and credible third-party reporting. For details, see our ethics and guidelines.

AARP (1); Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (2),(6); Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis (3); Internal Revenue Service (4); Social Security Administration (5)

This article originally appeared on Moneywise.com under the title: You’re 50 with $30,000 in debt and nothing saved for retirement — here’s how to hit $500K by 65

This article provides information only and should not be construed as advice. It is provided without warranty of any kind.

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