Clark Howard’s 1% Rule: How to Build $569,000 in Retirement Savings Without Feeling the Pinch
Key takeaways
- The U.S. personal savings rate has fallen to 4% in the first quarter of 2026, down from 6% two years earlier, even as per capita disposable income climbed to $68,617.
- Howard s framework is right, and the arithmetic is friendlier than most people realize.
- Consider a worker earning $60,000 who starts at a 3% savings rate.
Clark Howard’s 1% Rule: How to Build $569,000 in Retirement Savings Without Feeling the Pinch Inside Creative House / Shutterstock.com Michael Williams Mon, June 1, 2026 at 8:20 PM GMT+7 4 min read The 1% Rule From Clark Howard Consumer finance host Clark Howard, who has spent decades answering listener questions on saving and debt, put his entire philosophy into one sentence: "I increase what I save every six months by 1%. That s been a core principle, what I ve been about for all 30 years I ve been on the air, that you do things slow and steady and build habits."
The stakes are concrete. The U.S. personal savings rate has fallen to 4% in the first quarter of 2026, down from 6% two years earlier, even as per capita disposable income climbed to $68,617. Americans are earning more and keeping less. The University of Michigan consumer sentiment index sits at 49.8, approaching recessionary territory. Waiting until you feel confident enough to start saving is a strategy that pays nothing.
Howard s framework is right, and the arithmetic is friendlier than most people realize. A 1% bump every six months is small enough to absorb inside normal wage growth. Average private hourly earnings reached $37.41 in April 2026, up from $36.12 a year earlier. When you direct a slice of each raise to savings before it reaches checking, the lift is invisible at the paycheck level.