Silicon Valley loves the story of the 20-something dropout who builds a billion-dollar company from a dorm room. It’s a great story. It’s also mostly wrong.
A study published in 2020 in the American Economic Review, built on U.S. Census Bureau and IRS data covering 2.7 million business founders from 2007 to 2014, found that the fastest-growing new companies — the top 1 in 1,000 — were started by people whose average age was 45.
The research is a few years old, but it’s making the rounds again thanks to recent coverage from outlets like MarketWatch, and the numbers hold up.
I’ve been writing about money for more than 35 years, and I’ve watched this myth get repeated so often it’s practically gospel. Turns out it’s backward. Here’s what the data actually shows, and why it matters if you’re sitting on decades of experience and wondering if it’s too late to bet on yourself.
1. The math flat-out favors middle age
Researchers found that a 50-year-old founder is 1.8 times more likely to build one of the highest-growth companies in the country than a 30-year-old.
Founders in their early 20s had the lowest odds of success of any age group in the entire study.
2. Experience is worth more than raw hustle
The study tracked founders’ work histories and found that people with three-plus years of experience in the exact industry they launched into saw dramatically higher success rates than people jumping in cold — with the odds of hitting top-tier growth roughly doubling.
The closer the match between your old job and your new business, the better your shot.
3. Younger founders wash out faster
Recent data from the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor, cited by AARP, found that Americans 55 to 64 keep their businesses running for the long haul at far higher rates than founders 25 to 34, who shut down at three times the pace. Staying power counts, and older owners have more of it.
Quick aside — most internet financial advice comes from people who weren’t alive during the last recession. I’ve been writing about money for more than 35 years. Want rock-solid advice? Sign up for the free Money Talks Newsletter. Takes 10 seconds. No fluff. No spam.
4. Reputation opens doors that cold outreach can’t
Kiplinger recently reported that older founders tend to launch with a built-in edge: an established professional network, existing client relationships and credibility earned over a career. That’s not something you can buy. It’s something you accumulate.
5. Investors are betting wrong, and that’s their problem, not yours
Here’s the kicker. The same researchers found that venture capitalists still skew their money toward younger founders, despite the data showing those founders have lower odds of building a breakout company. If a funding gatekeeper is chasing the wrong age group, that’s a flaw in the system, not proof you’re too old to compete.
None of this means age guarantees success. It means the “young founder” myth investors and headlines love isn’t backed by the numbers. If you’ve spent decades building expertise, relationships and financial discipline, the research says you’re better positioned to start a business now than you would have been at 25.
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