How We Supercharged Our Retirement Savings

Eyes on the Prize

3918 5 women who have saved millions for retirement 1
3918 5 women who have saved millions for retirement 1

Anyone who ever thinks about retiring knows she’s supposed to be amassing a fortune in her retirement accounts. But that’s easier said than done: The median working-age household has just $3,000 in retirement savings, according to the National Institute on Retirement Security.

But some women — let’s call them supersavers — have managed to squirrel away huge caches of money. Each woman profiled here has saved hundreds of thousands toward her retirement, whether in traditional retirement accounts, investments, or other savings accounts. What do they all have in common? 

Here’s how they did it — and how you can too.

Ilene Davis, 65, Cocoa, FL: $1.5 Million Saved

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3918 5 women who have saved millions for retirement 2

Davis has been a saver as far back as she can remember. She’s been mostly on her own financially since she was 19, except for an 11-year marriage, and she has worked as a mathematician, computer programmer, and stockbroker. Currently she’s a certified financial planner.

To save more, Davis buys most of her clothes, especially pricy formalwear, plus household items from thrift stores, and she recently furnished her new house with items she bought on Craigslist. She has almost always bought cars used, and drives them “until they [need] too much maintenance to be worth keeping,” she says.

Davis rides out the stock market crashes to reap the benefits of a long-term investment strategy: “Yes, I lost a lot in 1987, 2002, 2008, but without stocks, I seriously doubt I'd be where I am wealth-wise,” she says.

But savings of this magnitude require a frugal lifestyle, too. As a financial advisor, Davis tells her clients: “Have friends who have similar values, especially in your earlier years when compound interest can be your best friend for wealth.” She loves to entertain, but instead of buying prepared foods, she gets ingredients on sale and does her own cooking for parties. She loves to travel with friends, and they all split rental cars and stay in moderately priced hotels.

Lidia Shong, 40, Mountain View, CA: $415,000 Saved

3918 5 women who have saved millions for retirement 3
3918 5 women who have saved millions for retirement 3

Shong started saving at 25, when she was making $9.25 an hour at Williams-Sonoma. “I haven't always been able to afford maximizing my contributions based on IRS limits, but I always made a point in saving enough to get the full company match, which sometimes almost doubled my contributions,” she says. Her career progressed — she’s currently the head of marketing for AboutLife — and so did her retirement savings.