Context Matters More Than The Number
Here’s what nobody tells you: comparing your savings rate to someone else’s is only useful if you’re in genuinely similar situations. A 25-year-old engineer in Petaling Jaya with no dependents shouldn’t feel bad about saving differently than a 45-year-old parent supporting aging relatives and school fees.
What actually matters is whether your rate aligns with your goals. Saving for a home down payment? You might target 20-25% for 3-4 years. Building an emergency fund? Even 5-8% gets you there in a reasonable timeframe. Planning for retirement 20 years out? You’ve got more flexibility and can benefit from longer compounding periods.
The best savings rate is the one you can sustain without burning out. A rate that feels impossible will fail within months. A rate that feels almost invisible becomes part of your life.
That’s why Malaysian financial planners often suggest starting with whatever feels manageable — 5% if that’s all you can do — then increasing it by 1% every time your income increases. You’re not making drastic cuts. You’re just keeping that new money instead of spending it.