What's the Best Age to Start Investing?

Let's cut to the chase.The answer to when you should start investing in stocks is exceedingly simple -- as soon as reasonably possible, assuming:

  1. All of your high-interest (read: credit card) debt has been paid off.

  2. You've built an emergency fund to provide a minimum of three months' basic income should you lose your job.

Pass those two tests, and you should start investing immediately -- whether you are 12, 32 or 52 years old. There's almost no way your future self will regret making the decision.

Lessons from a master

The authoritative biography on Warren Buffett is mammoth -- over 800 pages. But as far as this article is concerned, the most important part of the book is on its cover: The title is The Snowball.

There is no better way to visualize how Buffett built his fortune -- and why it's so crucial for you to start investing as soon as possible.

Anyone who has stepped outside with their child in January knows how annoying and clumsy the beginning of a snowball can be. At the start, your back hurts from bending over and you wonder if you're making any progress.

Give the effort a little time, however, and you're suddenly rolling 100 pounds of frozen water around your yard. Not only that -- and this is the important part -- but with each revolution, your snowball is adding exponentially more weight.

Arrange your task so you can roll the snowball down a hill, and you'll have a veritable boulder on your hands in a matter of minutes.

Boy rolls a big snowball to build a snowman in winter day
Boy rolls a big snowball to build a snowman in winter day

Start investing early and this process takes care of itself. Image source: Getty Images

That's how it works in investing. And it helps explain why the best age to start investing is right now -- no matter your age.

If you need some convincing, here's an eye-opening example.

If you invested $1,000 in Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK-B) back in 1964, it would have been worth an astounding $24 million by the end of 2017. However, over those 53 years of holding shares:

  • One-fourth of that growth took place in just the past 14 months.

  • One-third of that growth took place in just the past two years (2016 and 2017).

  • Half of that growth occurred over the past five years (2013 to 2017).

Here's what those returns look like, with an exact ending value of $24,048,480.

Chart of a $1,000 investment in Berkshire over time
Chart of a $1,000 investment in Berkshire over time

Chart by author. Data source: Berkshire Hathaway annual letter.

There's a reason that Albert Einstein reportedly quipped that compound interest was "the most powerful force in the universe." Once something starts growing exponentially, the effects of time on that growth can be mind-boggling.