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Home » Deep Briefs »  » The 60/40 Portfolio Explained: A Beginner's Guide

The 60/40 Portfolio Explained: A Beginner's Guide

Author: Nate Gregory
Published: May 5, 2026 
Disclosure: Briefs Finance is not a broker-dealer or investment adviser. All content is general information and for educational purposes only, not individualized advice or recommendations to buy or sell any security. Investing involves significant risk, including possible loss of principal, and past performance does not guarantee future results. You are solely responsible for your investment decisions and should consult a licensed financial, legal, or tax professional before acting on any information provided.
Summary:
  • A 60/40 portfolio holds 60% in stocks and 40% in bonds (or other fixed income).
  • It's designed to balance growth from stocks with stability from bonds.
  • Your "right" mix depends on age, time horizon, income needs, and how well you sleep when markets drop.

There's an old saying in investing - don't put all your eggs in one basket.

The 60/40 portfolio is one of the most well-known ways to follow that advice. It's a simple split - 60% stocks, 40% bonds - that's been around for decades.

But the 60/40 isn't a magic formula. It's a framework. Whether it actually fits your situation depends on a few things we'll walk through below.

This is the kind of stuff we cover in Market Briefs, our free daily newsletter that explains what's actually happening in markets in plain English. You can join investors who get it every weekday morning at briefs.co.

What Is the 60/40 Portfolio?

The 60/40 portfolio is exactly what it sounds like. You put 60% of your money in stocks and 40% in bonds.

That's it.

Here's why each piece is there:

  • Stocks (60%) - the growth engine. Stocks have historically returned around 9-10% per year over long stretches. They're how your money actually grows.
  • Bonds (40%) - the stabilizer. Bonds typically pay interest at regular intervals and don't move as wildly as stocks. When stocks fall, high-quality bonds often hold steady or rise.

A bond is basically an IOU. When you buy one, you're lending money to a government or company, and they pay you interest until the bond matures.

The idea behind the 60/40 is that stocks do the heavy lifting on returns while bonds smooth out the ride.

Why the 60/40 Portfolio Mix Matters

Picture two investors in a bad year for stocks - say the market drops 20%.

Investor A is 100% in stocks. Their portfolio is down 20%.

Investor B is in a 60/40 - stocks are down 20%, but bonds are up 3%. Their overall portfolio is down closer to 11%, which is still painful but a lot easier to ride out.

That's the whole point of the 60/40 - it caps your upside a little, but it also caps your downside.

For a lot of investors, that tradeoff is worth it. Especially if you're someone who panics and sells when markets get rough.

The biggest mistake most investors make isn't picking the wrong stock. It's selling at the bottom because they couldn't take the pressure.

Is a 60/40 Portfolio Right for You?

Here's where it gets personal. The classic 60/40 was built around an "average" investor - and you're not average.

Four things shape your real allocation:

  1. Time horizon. When do you actually need this money? A 25-year-old saving for retirement has 40 years. A 60-year-old has maybe 5-10 years until they start pulling money out.
  2. Risk tolerance. How well do you sleep when your portfolio drops 15% in a month?
  3. Income needs. Do you need cash flow now, or are you building for later?
  4. Other assets. Do you have a pension? Social Security? Rental property? Cash savings?

If you're 25 with no kids, no mortgage, and 40 years until retirement, putting 40% in bonds is probably too conservative. You can ride out market drops because you have time on your side.

If you're 60 and counting down to retirement, having only 40% in bonds might actually feel risky. You can't afford a 30% drop two years before you stop working.

60/40 Portfolio Allocations by Age

There's a rough rule of thumb - your bond allocation should roughly match your age. So at 30, you'd have 30% in bonds, and at 60, you'd have 60% in bonds.

It's overly simple, but it captures the basic idea. As you age, you generally want more stability.

Here are some sample mixes that build on that idea:

Stage of Life Stocks Fixed Income
Young aggressive (20-35) 80-90% 10-20%
Mid-career (35-50) 60-70% 30-40%
Pre-retiree (50-65) 40-50% 50-60%
Retiree (65+) 30-40% 60-70%

You can see the 60/40 lands right in the middle - a reasonable starting point for someone in their 40s or 50s. For younger investors, it might be too cautious.

What Goes Inside a 60/40 Portfolio

The 60/40 isn't just one stock and one bond. Each piece has lots of options.

Inside the 60% stock allocation, you might hold:

  • Index funds that track the S&P 500
  • Dividend growth stocks - companies with long histories of paying and raising dividends
  • Some international exposure
  • A small slice of higher-yield stocks or REITs (real estate investment trusts - companies that own income-producing real estate)

Inside the 40% fixed income allocation, you might hold:

The point: each piece has flavor. A 60/40 of all-S&P-500 and all-Treasuries is very different than a 60/40 of speculative growth stocks and high-yield bonds - same headline number, very different risk.

How to Rebalance a 60/40 Portfolio

Here's where most people miss something important.

Say you start the year at a perfect 60/40. Stocks have a great year and grow 20%, while bonds grow 3%.

By year-end, your portfolio isn't 60/40 anymore - it's drifted closer to 65/35, or even 70/30. You've quietly become more aggressive than you planned.

Rebalancing is the process of selling some of your winners and buying more of your underperformers to get back to your target.

It feels weird. Why would you sell something that's going up?

Because rebalancing forces you to do the most important thing in investing - buy low and sell high. You're trimming the asset that ran up and adding to the one that lagged.

Most investors rebalance once a year. Pick a date like January 1st, check your allocation, and bring anything that drifted more than 5% back to target.

If you're still adding new money to your portfolio every month, you can rebalance just by directing new contributions to whichever side is underweight. No selling required - it works similar to a dollar-cost averaging strategy.

The Honest Truth About the 60/40 Portfolio

The 60/40 has been criticized in recent years. There have been periods when stocks and bonds both fell at the same time, breaking the usual pattern.

That doesn't mean the framework is broken. It means no allocation works perfectly in every market.

The 60/40 still does what it was built to do over long stretches - smooth out the ride and reduce the urge to panic-sell. For investors who want a simple starting point, it's a reasonable foundation.

Just remember: it's a starting point, not a finish line. The right mindset matters as much as the right percentages.

If you want more on how to build a portfolio that fits where you actually are - your age, goals, and risk tolerance - Market Briefs breaks down topics like this every weekday morning. Thousands of investors read it before checking the markets, and you can join us free at briefs.co.


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