Track Your Financial Goals with These 4 Measurements

Investors need to know their savings rate, investment return, tax rates, and net worth to track progress toward financial goals. The post Track Your Financial Goals with These 4 Measurements appeared first on The White Coat Investor - Investing & Personal Finance for Doctors.

Apr 6, 2025 - 12:24
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Track Your Financial Goals with These 4 Measurements
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By Dr. Jim Dahle, WCI Founder

Here's a question:

“I am an emergency physician who recently completed residency. How can I make sure I am as successful in my finances as in my clinical practice?”

Business expert H. James Harrington once said,

“Measurement is the first step that leads to control and eventually to improvement. If you can’t measure something, you can’t understand it. If you can’t understand it, you can’t control it. If you can’t control it, you can’t improve it.”

As physicians, we have often become intimately familiar, perhaps too familiar, with business-related metrics (eg, door-to-doctor time, physician satisfaction rating, and percentage of downcoded charts). There are also metrics for your financial life that can be measured and allow you to “keep score” in working toward your financial goals. Of course, the purpose of keeping score is not to compare yourself to anybody else but to compare your performance from year to year and against your own financial goals.

Today, we'll revisit four of the most important ways to measure your financial goals.

 

4 Measurements to Track Your Financial Goals

 

#1 Your Net Worth

Perhaps the most important measurement someone seeking financial success can monitor is net worth. Net worth is the sum total of all your assets minus the sum total of all your liabilities. Assets include bank accounts, retirement accounts, investments, home equity, and the cash value portion of life insurance. Liabilities are primarily debt, such as student loans, mortgages, auto loans, and credit card debt.

Financial professionals find it amazing that so many physicians have no idea how much they owe in student loans. It can be scary to add it all up, but it is hard to reach any reasonable financial goal if you don’t know your starting point.

Pour yourself a tall drink of your favorite beverage, sit down with all of your student loan paperwork, and actually add it all up and write it down. Chances are good that, if you have never done this, the total is quite a bit more than you think, given the relatively high student loan interest rates. Most physicians graduate from residency with a negative net worth due to high student loan burdens. One of their first financial goals should be to get back to a net worth of $0 (#livelikearesident) as soon as possible. Many doctors find it more difficult to get to $0 than to go from $0 to $1 million in net worth!

More information here:

How I Went from a Negative Net Worth in My 30s to Early Retirement

We’re (Finally) Broke! Why Being Worthless Feels Amazing

 

#2 Your Savings Rate

Another important financial metric is your savings rate. This is the percentage of money saved in a given year toward your long-term financial goals—such as retirement or college—divided by your gross income. While there are many different ways to measure a savings rate, it only matters that you are consistent with your method (since you’re “competing” only with yourself). I suggest you count retirement account contributions and other investments as well as paying down debt as “savings.” If you are unsure what to count as income, keep it simple and use your total income from your tax return. In 2024, it can be found on Form 1040, line 9.

I generally recommend physicians save 20% of their gross income toward retirement. While 15% may be enough if you work long enough and don’t make too many investment mistakes—and 25%-40% may be required for a very early retirement—20% is a good starting place for most doctors. However, 5%-10% is almost surely going to be inadequate. Measure your savings rate each year, and if it is too low to reach your goals, find ways to boost it throughout the year.

 

#3 Your Tax Rates

I am often surprised to find that physicians have no idea how much they actually pay in taxes. There are two tax rates worth tracking.

 

Effective Tax Rate

The first is your effective income tax rate. To calculate this, add up your federal income tax, state income tax, and payroll tax, and then divide that sum by your gross income.

effective tax rate

For me, this number has varied quite a bit throughout my earning years. It was as low as 5% during my time in residency and the military, but in 2014, it was around 23%. Since 2017, it has been over 30%. If you find your effective income tax rate is similarly high, it may be worthwhile to seek out ways to legally lower that tax burden, such as contributing more to tax-deferred retirement and Health Savings Accounts, keeping better track of potential deductions, or moving to a state with a lower tax burden.

 

Marginal Tax Rate

The second tax rate worth knowing is your marginal tax rate. This number is generally significantly higher than your effective tax rate. The easiest way to calculate it is using tax software upon finishing your taxes each year. Simply add $1,000 of hypothetical income and see how much your tax bill rises.

When I did this a few years ago, my tax bill increased by $418 for that hypothetical $1,000, so my marginal tax rate was 41.8%. The software accounts for federal income tax, state income tax, phaseouts, and even payroll taxes if you are self-employed. Knowing your marginal tax rate is useful when making decisions about money, such as whether to invest in taxable bonds or tax-free (but lower-yielding) municipal bonds in a taxable account. It may also affect how many extra shifts you wish to work, knowing that 30%-50% of every additional dollar you earn is going to taxes. Your marginal tax rate can be lowered using the same techniques used to lower your effective tax rate.

More information here:

3 Big Tax Deductions for Doctors

The 1 (Weird) Tax Trick the IRS Hates

 

#4 Your Annualized Investment Return

Many investors have no idea what their investment returns are. That makes it very difficult to know if you are on track to reach your goals. It is best to calculate your returns on an after-expense, after-tax basis. The most accurate way to calculate your investment return is by using an Internal Rate of Return (IRR) function in a spreadsheet or a financial calculator.

The only data needed to do this are the amounts and dates of contributions and withdrawals (including any dividends not reinvested) to the account. Since the contributions will not be regular, you will need to use a function called XIRR, or the internal rate of return, with nonperiodic cash flows. This function provides an annualized rate of return as opposed to an average rate of return. It is important to know the difference since the only return you can spend is an annualized one.

By way of comparison, the average annual return of the S&P 500, with dividends reinvested, from the years 1871 through 2024 was 11.0%. However, the annualized return during that time was just 9.36%. This effect is due to the volatility of investment returns; in short, you need a 100% gain to make up for a 50% loss. The more volatile your investment returns, the greater the difference between your average returns and your annualized returns.

 

Keeping score by calculating these simple financial metrics once a year can provide you with the knowledge and motivation you need to reach financial success.

What do you think? Which metrics do you keep track of in your financial life and why? 

[Today's post was originally published at ACEPNow. This updated post was originally published in 2015.]

The post Track Your Financial Goals with These 4 Measurements appeared first on The White Coat Investor - Investing & Personal Finance for Doctors.