How to turn $250 a month into $50,000 with ASX shares

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Building a meaningful portfolio does not always require a large lump sum. In many cases, consistency matters far more than timing the market.

If you can invest $250 a month into ASX shares, the path to $50,000 is more achievable than it might first appear.

It just requires time, discipline, patience, and a sensible approach to where that money goes.

Start with the maths

Let’s keep this simple. If you invest $250 every month, that’s $3,000 per year. On its own, that would take more than 16 years to reach $50,000.

But investing is not just about what you contribute. It is about what your money earns along the way.

If your portfolio grows at an average of around 8% per year, which I think is a fair return to target, your $250 monthly investment could reach $50,000 in just over 10 years.

That is the power of compounding. Returns start generating their own returns, and over time the growth becomes less dependent on what you add and more driven by what you already have.

Why consistency matters more than timing

It is easy to get caught up worrying about when to invest. Should you wait for a correction? Is the market too expensive right now?

In reality, regular investing smooths this out.

By putting money into the market every month, you naturally buy more shares when prices are lower and fewer when prices are higher. Over time, this dollar-cost averaging can reduce the risk of poor timing decisions.

Even in more uncertain periods, the broader strategy often remains the same. Staying invested in quality ASX shares and using volatility as an opportunity has been a consistent theme among professional investors.

What to invest in

The next step is deciding where that $250 goes.

For most investors, a simple approach works best. That might include a mix of broad market exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and a few high-quality ASX shares.

An ETF like the Vanguard Australian Shares Index ETF (ASX: VAS) or the Vanguard MSCI Index International Shares ETF (ASX: VGS) can provide instant diversification. This means your returns are tied to the overall market rather than the success or failure of a single company.

Alongside that, you might consider adding a handful of individual ASX shares over time. Businesses with strong earnings growth, recurring revenue, or structural tailwinds can help lift long-term returns.

The key is not to overcomplicate it. A portfolio that you understand and can stick with is far more valuable than one that looks impressive on paper but is difficult to maintain.

Let time do the heavy lifting

One of the biggest advantages you have as a long-term investor is time.

Early on, your contributions will do most of the work. But as your portfolio grows, compounding begins to take over.

For example, once your portfolio reaches around $30,000, an 8% return adds $2,400 in a year. That is almost the same as your annual contribution.

From that point, the growth starts to feel faster, even though your monthly investment has not changed.

Staying the course

The biggest risk to this strategy is not market volatility. It is behaviour.

There will be periods where markets fall, sometimes sharply. It is tempting to stop investing or move to cash. But those moments often end up being the most important times to stay consistent.

History suggests that markets recover over time, and long-term returns are driven by staying invested through those cycles.

Foolish takeaway

Turning $250 a month into $50,000 is about building a habit, sticking to it, and giving compounding time to work.

Keep the process simple, focus on quality, and stay consistent. The results tend to follow.

The post How to turn $250 a month into $50,000 with ASX shares appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

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Motley Fool contributor Grace Alvino has positions in Vanguard Australian Shares Index ETF. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Vanguard Msci Index International Shares ETF. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.