Time is your greatest asset in your 20s and 30s—yet most people squander it by treating money like an afterthought. If you’re under 40 in 2026, the single most powerful move you can make today is this: aggressively eliminate high-interest debt while simultaneously maximizing tax-advantaged investing . This dual strategy harnesses compound growth over decades while stopping wealth erosion from expensive borrowing.
High-interest debt (credit cards at 18–25%, personal loans above 10%) acts like a reverse investment: every dollar you carry costs you far more than most portfolios earn. Meanwhile, starting investments early lets compounding work magic. A $5,000 annual contribution at age 25 growing at 8% historically could exceed $1 million by 65—delay to 35 and you’d need nearly double the contributions to catch up.
Step 1: Prioritize and Destroy High-Interest Debt
Anything over ~7% should come first—except when you can grab “free” money elsewhere (more on that below). Credit card balances, payday loans, and high-rate personal debt drain net worth faster than markets rise.
- List all debts: interest rate, minimum payment, balance.
- Use the debt avalanche method: pay minimums on everything, throw extra cash at the highest-rate debt first.
- Consider balance transfers to 0% intro cards (if your credit allows) or debt consolidation loans under 7–8%.
- Cut lifestyle leaks: dining out, subscriptions, impulse buys. Redirect that cash to debt.
Once high-rate debt is gone, the psychological and financial freedom is massive—freeing income for investing.








