Your investment time horizon — how long until you'll need the money — is the single most important variable in choosing appropriate investments. Under 2 years: cash savings only. 2-5 years: cautious mix (mostly bonds and some equities). 5-10 years: moderate (60-70% equities). 10-20 years: growth-oriented (75-85% equities). 20+ years: predominantly equities (80-90%). Different pots of money can have different horizons — your emergency fund has a very short horizon; your pension has a very long one.
Most people focus on which investment to choose. The more important question — and the one that determines what investments are appropriate — is when they'll need the money. Time horizon overrides almost every other consideration in portfolio construction.
Why Time Horizon Is Decisive
Markets go up and down in the short term. This volatility is the dominant feature of equity investing over 1-3 year periods — a diversified portfolio can fall 30-40% during a severe downturn. Over 20-30 year periods, this volatility becomes largely irrelevant because history shows diversified equity markets have recovered from every significant crash.
The practical implication: money needed in 18 months cannot afford a 30% market fall without you having to sell at the worst moment. Money not needed for 20 years can absorb the same fall comfortably, because you have time to wait for recovery.
A Practical Framework
Under 2 years: cash only
Easy-access savings accounts or short fixed-rate bonds. The risk of markets falling and not recovering before you need the money is too high. Missing 0.5% in potential return is a trivial cost; a 25% loss on money needed next year is catastrophic.
2-5 years: cautious to moderate
Some investment exposure is reasonable but significant equity risk is inappropriate. A portfolio of 40-60% bonds and 40-60% equities limits downside while providing some growth potential.
5-10 years: moderate to growth
10-year rolling periods for diversified global equities have historically been positive the vast majority of the time. A 60-70% equity portfolio is appropriate for this horizon.
10-20 years: growth-oriented
Longer horizons allow equity investments to work through even severe downturns. A portfolio of 75-85% equities, with bonds providing emotional stability during falls, is appropriate for most investors at this horizon.
20+ years: predominantly equities
For pension savings 20-30 years away, the expected return premium of equities over bonds and cash, compounded over decades, dramatically outweighs short-term volatility. 80-90% equity allocation is often optimal.
Multiple Pots, Multiple Horizons
The mistake is applying the same investment approach to all savings regardless of purpose:
- Emergency fund → zero risk → easy-access cash account
- House deposit (3 years) → cautious → conservative portfolio or fixed-rate savings
- Children's university fund (12 years) → growth-oriented → equities-focused portfolio
- Pension (25 years) → predominantly equities → maximum long-term growth
For how time horizons interact with the pension vs ISA decision, our article on pension vs ISA for retirement saving covers when each wrapper is most appropriate.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does time horizon change in retirement?
Yes — but it doesn't become zero. If you retire at 65 and expect to live to 85+, money you won't need until age 80 has a 15-year horizon. Even in retirement, a portion of your portfolio should remain invested with a long-term perspective while the near-term spending portion stays in cash.
What if I think a crash is coming — should I shorten my horizon?
Timing the market is not the same as adjusting your time horizon. If your genuine financial need is in 15 years, a market crash this year doesn't change that fact. Selling to cash on crash predictions consistently produces worse outcomes than staying invested.
For independent guidance on investment risk matching your horizon, MoneyHelper's investment risk guide is comprehensive and impartial.
