At 50, This ER Doctor Didn’t Know What a Net Worth Was. How He Hit Financial Independence.

Photo of Carl Sullivan
By Carl Sullivan Published

Quick Read

  • An emergency physician who had a single-digit savings rate at age 50 increased it to 40% within a year and achieved financial independence about 10 years later.

  • High-income earners often fall into an “emergency wealth problem” where they spend everything they make, losing years of compound growth.

  • The fix requires ruthlessly prioritizing debt with interest rates above 7-8%, maxing 401(k) matches, building an emergency fund, and automating index fund investments.

  • Are you ahead, or behind on retirement? SmartAsset's free tool can match you with a financial advisor in minutes to help you answer that today. Each advisor has been carefully vetted, and must act in your best interests. Don't waste another minute; learn more here.

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At 50, This ER Doctor Didn’t Know What a Net Worth Was. How He Hit Financial Independence.

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It’s not uncommon for middle-aged people to realize they’re not where they should be financially. “At 50, I didn’t know what a net worth was,” said Bill Yount, an emergency physician and co-host of the Catching Up to FI podcast. “I had no idea what a budget was.” He and his physician wife had pulled two doctor incomes for two decades, yet they were still living paycheck to paycheck.

Yount recently shared his story as a guest on the How to Money podcast, where he reminded listeners it’s never too late to get your financial house in order. A high income without a plan produces what Yount calls an “emergency wealth problem.” It could mean years of compounding lost, savings rates in the single digits, and a retirement runway that keeps shrinking.

Yount went from a single-digit savings rate to a 40% rate within a year, and hit financial independence about 10 years after his wake-up call. He is candid that the compression is painful and would have been easier spread across a career.

Consider this scenario: A household taking home roughly $200,000 after taxes can lift its savings rate from 5% to 40%. That redirects about $80,000 a year into investments and debt paydown. At a 7% long-term equity return, $80,000 invested annually grows to roughly $1.2 million after 10 years.

“Money in, money out, spend it first, save it later” is how Yount describes the 20 years he lost. He came out of residency with $30,000 in credit card debt from vacations to Jamaica he felt he deserved — what he calls “rich doctor syndrome.” The fix came down to a decision, in his words, “Nobody’s coming to save me. It’s on me, man.”

Yount tells late starters to address debt and investing at the same time.  The variable that decides the order inside that parallel attack is your highest interest rate.

Run two scenarios. A 6% mortgage and a 4% federal student loan should be paid on schedule while you max the 401(k) match and load index funds. A 22% credit card balance should be attacked “like your hair is on fire” before any non-matched investing. Yount’s threshold is 7% to 8%. Above it, the guaranteed return from paydown beats the expected return from equities. Below it, you invest through the debt.

Two non-negotiables sit on top of that decision. Build a 3 to 6 month emergency fund first so a car repair does not become a new credit card balance. Never skip the 401(k) match, which is an instant 50% or 100% return depending on the formula.

After DIYing the accumulation years, Yount hired a fee-only fiduciary at $700 a month, or $8,700 a year. That may sound pricey, but Yount believes it’s worth it. The advisor showed him he could cancel his disability and life policies because he was self-insured, and the combined premium savings made the fee “a net positive or a wash.” The advisor also covers his wife if he is gone, and handles IRMAA, Social Security timing, and tax efficiency in the decumulation phase.

Tips for financial planning

  1. Calculate your net worth. Assets minus liabilities on one sheet.
  2. List every debt by interest rate. Anything above 7% to 8% gets the aggressive payment. Everything below stays on schedule while you invest.
  3. Capture the full 401(k) match.
  4. Size your emergency fund to 3 to 6 months of expenses, then redirect that monthly contribution into a simple index portfolio.
  5. Send every windfall to the fire. Tax refunds and bonuses go to the highest-rate debt or the index funds, not to lifestyle.

Yount’s parting advice: “It’s never too late to start. It’s always a good time to start, and you can always catch up to FI.”

Photo of Carl Sullivan
About the Author Carl Sullivan →

Carl Sullivan has been a Flywheel Publishing contributor since 2020, focusing mostly on personal finance, investing and technology. He started his journalism career covering mutual funds, banking and business regulation.

Besides his freelance writing, Carl is a long-time manager of editorial teams covering a variety of topics including news, business and politics. He’s currently the North America Managing Editor for Flipboard and worked previously for Microsoft News and Newsweek.

Carl loves exploring the world and lived in India for several years. Today, he resides in New York City’s Queens borough, where you can hear hundreds of different languages just by riding the subway.

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