I have about $330,000 in my account with 26 years working and am relatively ashamed at my balance as well. For the first half of my career I only contributed 5% to get the matching funds and have only put in 10% of my salary for about 10 or 12 years. I recommend to new employees to put in at least 10% from the start if they can swing it. I did at least have my money in an L-Fund for a good part of the time, but I consider it a bad mistake that I was so "hands off" during the years that it was most crucial. For example, I rode the 2008 crash all the way to the bottom (thank goodness I didn't sell at the bottom).
2 things:
- Don't give up, especially if you plan to keep working way past when you are eligible to retire. When you finally get 200-250K in your account, those returns really make a huge difference.
- Don't base your success on those around you. Your needs are unique. Though I may retire with under $400,000 in my TSP, I will be completely debt free. I don't need as much money to live in retirement as I do while working. I will pick up a "fun" job to put more spending money in my pocket.
I WILL CONTINUE TO MANAGE MY TSP IN RETIREMENT. Though, I won't be contributing, I've still got a good balance to build with. Retirement is not the end.