Iโm 24 making $2,000 monthly as a youth pastor. Can I save for retirement on this income?
A 24-year-old youth pastor called The Ramsey Show recently with a question millions of low earners ask themselves: "how do I save for retirement when I have a low income?" He explained he was taking home about $2,000 a month on church staff, with about a $1,500 a month housing al
A 24-year-old youth pastor called The Ramsey Show recently with a question millions of low earners ask themselves: "how do I save for retirement when I have a low income?" He explained he was taking home about $2,000 a month on church staff, with about a $1,500 a month housing allowance on top. Dave Ramsey didn't answer the question he was asked. He answered a different one: is this income enough to live on at all?
This advice applies to anyone earning below $30,000 annually without a second income or substantial surplusโfix the income problem first, then build the retirement strategy.
A recent study identified one single habit that doubled Americansโ retirement savings and moved retirement from dream, to reality. Read more here .
The stakes here matter beyond one phone call. If you try to force a retirement savings plan onto an income that can't cover basic adult life, you either fail at the savings, fall into credit card debt, or burn out chasing both. The mechanics of compounding only help if you can sustain the contributions for decades. Starting and stopping is worse than starting later with a stable base.
Co-host George Kamel said it bluntly to the caller: "I don't think you can on $2,000 a month, even if you lived at home, even if you you know, had a great benefit of, you know, whatever it is that they're offering you." That's the correct verdict. The right move here is a second income, not a Roth IRA contribution rate.
Run the numbers. A $2,000 monthly take-home works out to $24,000 a year. For context, the national average hourly wage in April 2026 was $37.41, and per capita disposable personal income in 2026 Q1 was $68,359. The caller is earning roughly a third of what the average American has available to spend after taxes. Even the national savings rate, which spans every income level, sits at just 3.7%. If the average household saves under 4% of disposable income, expecting a $24,000 earner to fund a meaningful retirement account out of cash flow is fantasy math.
Read: Data Shows One Habit Doubles Americanโs Savings And Boosts Retirement
Most Americans drastically underestimate how much they need to retire and overestimate how prepared they are. But data shows that people with one habit have more than double the savings of those who donโt.

