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Money in Your 20s: The Complete Financial Playbook

Everything you need to do with money in your 20s — the order of operations, the accounts to open, the debt to tackle, and the habits that compound into.

Kike Faúndez
Written by
Founder of CashControlly
Published on 9 min read
Tools9 min read

Your 20s will determine more about your financial future than any other decade — not because of income (it's typically low), but because of habits and the compounding runway you establish. This is the complete playbook.

The 20s financial order of operations

  1. Emergency fund ($1,000): Non-negotiable first. Every financial setback without this goes on a credit card.
  2. Employer 401(k) match: Free money. Every dollar of match is 50–100% instant return.
  3. Pay off high-interest debt (8%+): Student loans at 3–5%: don't rush. Credit cards at 20%+: urgent.
  4. Open Roth IRA and start contributing: Even $50/month at 23 > $500/month at 33 mathematically.
  5. Build emergency fund to 3 months.
  6. Increase Roth + 401(k) toward max.

The lifestyle inflation trap

Most 20-somethings have their first real paycheck after years of student poverty and immediately upgrade: nicer apartment, new car, better restaurants, more travel. These upgrades are permanent. The savings rate never recovers to what it could have been at entry salary. The financially successful move: live at 80% of your salary for 2–3 years after your first job and bank the difference.

The financial accounts to open in your 20s

  • HYSA for emergency fund: Ally, Marcus, or SoFi — 4%+ APY, free
  • Roth IRA at Fidelity or Schwab: Tax-free growth, $7,000/year
  • Checking account (fee-free): Chime, Ally, or local credit union
  • 401(k) at employer (auto-enrolling)

The 20s investing mistake that costs decades

Keeping retirement money in money market or stable value funds "because the market is scary." A 23-year-old in a stable value fund at 2% vs a diversified index fund at 7% over 40 years on $10,000: $22,000 vs $149,745. The additional $127,000 is the cost of avoiding market volatility at 23.

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About the author

Kike Faúndez
Kike Faúndez
Founder of CashControlly · Santiago, Chile

Enrique 'Kike' Faúndez is an Information Systems and Management Control Engineer from Universidad de Chile, with master’s degrees in Finance from Universidad de Chile and Industrial Engineering from Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. He has 15+ years of experience in regulated financial services across finance, operations, and digital product development. He founded CashControlly in Santiago, Chile, with the conviction that personal financial control should not be a privilege, but an accessible and well-designed tool.

Credentials
  • Master's in Finance, Universidad de Chile
  • Master's in Industrial Engineering, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
  • Information Systems and Management Control Engineer, Universidad de Chile
  • AI and ITIL certifications
  • 15+ years in regulated financial services
Learn more about the founder

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