corn18
Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
- Joined
- Aug 30, 2015
- Messages
- 1,890
Keep a small amount in your TSP to keep it open. I did that 12 years ago just to keep access to the G fund.
Every year I go back to Bragg for AA week.
I've been stationed at Bragg 4 different times. My last AA week was hands down the best one. Not because it was my last. It was the 2015 AA Week where we did the Airborne Review on Sicily instead of the Division Review on Pikes Field.
I'll take a nice comfy C-17 ride over a walk down Ardennes to stand in the sun any day of the week. Although I will say there was something amusing about watching people in formation with fixed bayonets pass out and then everyone running off the field in Corcoran 1s.
How many military retirees are on here?
I retired in 2014 with nearly 37 total years and 27 years active duty both active Army 8 years and 20 years AGR in 2 states ND and GA also deployment to desert Shield and desert storm 90-91, a stateside deployment of 1 year at NTC and 1 yr deployment to Iraq in 07 so just over 3 years spent deployed 2 warzone deployments.
Did you work after military retirement? If so, did you really HAVE to work?
I did work for 2 years about 25 hrs per weeks as part time custodian at University of Nebraska Lincoln. I could have chosen not to work but still had a daughter in HS and 1 kid in college. Did it to help them out with expenses in HS and college. Did not have to work as retired E-7 with over 30 years years so that put me at nearly 75% of my base pay instead of the usual 50% of base pay that those who retire with only 20 years get. I also got 100% VA disability from 2014 to 2019 but now am at 80% as my VA disabilty was reduced from 100% to 80%. It was reduced because I had severe migraine headaches and I went 2 years without any episodes or ER visits. My migraine part of disability was rated at 50% but is now rated at 0% I am ok with that as I would rather NOT have migraines than have the extra $ that a 100% disabilty provides. 100% VA disability was about 3K and now I get about $1730 per month for 80% VA Disability. Should migraines come back I can file for increase, VA doc tried numerous drugs over years ,but finally with ZOMIG the migraines have stopped. I will be temporary 100% again soon,as I will need a knee replacement surgery within the next year. surgery is on delay now because of covid backlogs. rating will go to 100% for a year after surgery and might remain at 100% depending on how knee mobility is after that year is up
Where did you retire to? Lincoln Nebraska, since wife grew up here. I am from Fargo grew up there but parents are long gone and wife likes Nebraska winters better.. much less severe than Fargo.
Did your pension and any saving cover your lifestyle?
[FONT="]Add another retired vet to the tally. I retired from a 30yr USAF career in 2016, when we moved from an overseas post to our current location. When I was commissioned in 1985, the thought that I would do 30 years never crossed my mind. After a series of overwhelmingly positive assignments, getting married and having children, the years flew by and retirement snuck up on us. Joined this site in August 2019 and have found the content extremely helpful.[/FONT]
[FONT="]Did I work after retirement? Yes - currently in year 3 of what will be a 4 year post retirement job; currently at the OMY point right now.[/FONT]
[FONT="]Did I really HAVE to work? No, but we chose to in order to continue to grow our retirement assets.[/FONT]
[FONT="]Did your pension and any savings cover your lifestyle? They could have, but I enjoyed the job (boss is phenomenal and a pleasure to work for…wouldn’t have lasted as long as I have if it was anyone less capable) and the financial compensation. A career of living well below our means enabled DW and I to amass a sizeable nest egg. Our pension, Tricare medical coverage and New GI Bill benefit (paid for 4yrs of DD’s in state university), contributed to our solid financial situation. [/FONT]
[FONT="]Straying a little off topic, it was only in the past 6 months or so that we turned our attention from accumulating wealth to serious consideration of how to manage our assets in retirement. The good news is that this site has been invaluable to DW and I in identifying the fact that we DO NOT need to work anymore - Firecalc, ORP, New Retirement, Flexible Retirement Planner and Fidelity’s planning tools all confirm we are going to be able to live very comfortably and securely into our late 90s and beyond should we be so lucky. Travel, volunteering, and time with family and friends will fill up our days after we finish up our work life.[/FONT]
[FONT="]The bad news is that our previous fixation on asset accumulation skewed our assets heavily towards tIRAs (TSP and Vanguard), creating the first world problem of managing our assets, particularly our large tIRA balance. Since our pension takes us into the current 22% MFJ bracket before any distributions or other income, were still mulling over whether, when, and how much of our tIRA we should roll over into a Roth or not. We also have considerable Roth IRAs, but with hindsight being 20/20, we would have beefed up our Roth savings in lieu of tIRA savings in our earlier years when our tax bracket was lower.[/FONT]
So I joined the Blue ID card club on 1 December. 100ish days on terminal leave was nice. Getting my first haircut since August tomorrow and haven't shaved since August 20. The hair is driving me nuts-keeping the beard though.
Received ridiculously good news from the VA on the 3rd with regards to a rating-and I haven't even completed all my exams. Although the exams I completed captured most of the things a 28+ year artilleryman with some deployments and most of a career on jump status would have, so I guess it isn't a huge surprise.
Spoke to the TSP yesterday via email. They are still waiting for the Army to tell them I'm done. They said it could take up to 60 days for that to happen. Slightly annoyed as I want to roll it into Fidelity, but oh well.
Went through the Tricare enrollment-apparently the USFHP with Martins Point is essentially Tricare Prime with a different name. I've already changed PCMs with them twice lol. The first one turns out wasn't accepting new patients, so I called a different one. Then I went and looked at bios and one of the other Docs was retired Army, airborne qualified, and had done a deployment with an airborne BCT that I also did a couple deployment with. He did the Iraq tour where they had 50+ KIA in the BCT and I did the two following Afghanistan tours. He'll either be a good doc or it will be one of those-take some motrin, change your socks, and drink water deals. At least we may have something to talk about.
Now I just need to find some land to buy. Sort of waiting until after 1 Jan so I don't have to take a capital gains hit this year when I move money for the purchase.
10 days into it, life is good so far. Not seeing any need to seek any future employment.
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Yes, I get about $3,300 after tax military retirement, VA disability @80% will be about $1772 per month ( it is not taxed). Our mortgage is low 750 per month with 11 years left and I plan to take my SS at earliest age 62 and invest it all.should be about 1100 or so after taxes. I dont use many of the benefits besides Tricare, I could drive to Offutt AFB and use the BX and commisary, but nothing there that we cant find at a regular grocery store and besides Nebraska does not have a food tax and going through the gate is more hassle than it's worth IMO. Maybe if I lived 5 miles or less from the gate but I live in Lincoln 50 miles away so i's not worth the drive. I can order online from AFEES, but they really dont have anything that I cant get locally. Fianlly at a point where we can do some serious investing starting this month we are dumping over 1k per month into Vanguard balanced index fund. it may ramp up to 2k per month when i get SS retirement and toss that into the mix Anyways, No regrets about retiring and no alarm clocks LOL!
After Tricare covers the 20%, we get regular EOB's for $0.
Thanks for your service. I would recommend maxing out everything you can although try not to stress out since after reading your thread, you already have your basic monthly bills covered. These investments you are striving for are extra $$$$. Life is short my friend and enjoy. Just strive for an emergency fund for Housing, Car maintenance, some extra cash, and you will be fine. Medical is covered and if you are 80% VA disabled or more a lot of your LTC issues should be covered as well. I will say, I would recommend (as others have) focusing on Spousal income if you were to pass away 1st? I do like the fact that you have life insurance until age 75. Personally,
I retired as a Command Master Chief in 04 and I had to continue to work. I had an EX-wife and lots of bills; and re-married 6 years prior. To your point, it is tough on an enlisted person (salary wise). Like most, a lot sacrifice and moves, etc. When I re-married 97 we had about 10K to our names, and as of 2020 we were at 1.2M in investments and 200K in cash. Actually made the most money ever working as a gov contractor and Gov GS and banked 40% of income between cash and 401K's over the past 15 +years. Hopefully, 2021 will be the year at age 61 I walk away. Just padding the accounts while COVID still plays out. Working from home most of the time so (in my view) no sense giving up the salary while in this environment.
Best of luck to you and the family
Thanks as well for your many years, we have an emergency fund of about 10K and toss about $200 a month in it, finally got it built back up after spending 12k on a roof,new shingles for house and garage and replacing old sewer and water p ipes which resulted in redoing some walls and ceilings. Now finally have a decent emergency fund and can finally get serious about saving for our own retirements. I wasted 20's and 30s was in a Royal neighbor annuity( a waste of $$ basically) 3 kids, a few moves, caring for ailing parents , and we just did not manage to save much..
Congrats on you and family for making it into "the Land of Critical Mass" as Bob Brinker used to say on his Radio program years ago Known as "Money talk" Anyone withy a worth of 1 million or more he called critical mass. At 1.2 mill ion that is amazing. Anyway at my age 60 wife and I may not make it into the millionaire club, but "God willing and the creek dont rise" we hope to crack the 1/2 million club in about 15-16 years. Riding the Vanguard VBIAX balanced fund as far as we can. We don't have IRA or 401 or any tax advantage accounts so it is all taxable and since we don't have "earned income' only option is a taxable account. VBIAX has averaged about 7% and after tax about 5.4. Of course past performance does not indicate future performance, but that fund with it's 60% stock 40% bond seems to me to be acceptable risk at my age. One advantage retirees have and it is a huge one is that Tricare is very good, wife and I do not have dental we just pay out of pocket for that which is basically about 500 a year for us each to have a teeth cleaning, I can get glasses at VA and we just pay out of pocket for my wife's glasses.
Had family friends retired from the Navy after serving 20 years. They currently live in the Philippines and their Navy pension and social security goes a long way there.
Very true and domestic he!p in the PI is easy to find and cheap since a lot of the young locals are always looking for work. We clean our own home here in the USA but the maid service to clean homes in our country charge quite a bit to clean houses.My first Navy assignment was in the Philippines. I was at a small communication station about an hour away from the hubbub of Subic. As you went through the barrios on the road to/from Subic, most of the houses were fairly basic Philippine “nipa huts”. But every so often there would be a quite nice, much larger home constructed of spackled concrete block. Supposedly, those homes belonged to either local politicians or Filipinos retired from the US Navy who had come back to the PI to live. Their pensions went a long way there.
My first Navy assignment was in the Philippines. I was at a small communication station about an hour away from the hubbub of Subic. As you went through the barrios on the road to/from Subic, most of the houses were fairly basic Philippine “nipa huts”. But every so often there would be a quite nice, much larger home constructed of spackled concrete block. Supposedly, those homes belonged to either local politicians or Filipinos retired from the US Navy who had come back to the PI to live. Their pensions went a long way there.
Kudos for asking this question now. I get way too many unhappy e-mails from vets who didn't know what they didn't know, and didn't think to ask about it until it was way too late.I'll revive this post. I'll be retiring 1 Jan 23, after 21 years 3 months in the AF. Deployed now but back in October and after leave, R&R, TAP, I won't be seen much till after 1st of the year 2023. I start the skillbridge program in July so I'm pretty much done in June of next year. I'm super excited about it, I was always told by the ole timers that I'd know when it was time, well I know for sure I'm ready to go, after 8 deployments and several more TDY's and 2 short tours, I'm ready to have some stability. I've been planning this heavily and building income sources on the side for about 10 years now. My goal was 10 sources of income I am now at 7 not counting my fiancés income. I can proudly say that I am and have been living off my side income for several years now. The mil pay has been invested and thrown at the mortgage the last few years. I found my dream home that came with a rental property back in 2019 and will have it paid off in a few months so I'll be 100% debt free with around 800K invested. I plan to continue to do my side business/s which are online sales, buying and selling ATV's or whatever I can find (this is what I love to do by the way) and the rental. I value freedom and flexibility and the ability to do what I want with my time and I can't wait to see what that feels like. I should pull in right at $32K a year after taxes from mil retirement not counting any disability (that's a wildcard for me), and of course Tricare is a big perk. Any advice from those that have gone before, any thing you wish you'd known a year out?
Kudos for asking this question now. I get way too many unhappy e-mails from vets who didn't know what they didn't know, and didn't think to ask about it until it was way too late.
You’re probably already choosing a TAP date. If your fiancé has the time then I’d strongly recommend that they attend with you. You’ll each hear the presentations differently, and you’ll have many thoughtful conversations based on what you’ve learned. Having both of you attend TAP together is far better than bringing home a stack of TAP paper and trying to share everything you’ve learned over dinner.
You’ve probably heard this before, but now is the time to clean up your records. If you’ve been [-]hiding[/-] er, I mean, overlooking a potentially disqualifying medical or physical condition, then get it documented in your medical records now.
When you’re back from deployment, visit your local VA clinic or office’s Veteran Service Officer for an appointment to review your record. (They also do a limited review at TAP.) That’ll get you started on what additional documentation might be necessary. You'll be using the VA's Benefits Delivery Discharge during your military retirement physical. The VSO will ask you questions about things that you haven't thought of in years, and they can help you get the right documents in the right places in the right records.
Be aware that the retirement physical is only the military's official check for undiagnosed surprises before you leave active duty. (DoD doesn't want to dump these surprises on the VA.) If you have any additional questions about a physical condition or a medical symptom then ask it on the screening form, and make sure that the medical staff follows up with the additional referrals to specialists. It's not easy and it's certainly not fun, but it's far easier to handle this stuff on active duty than it is to do it with the VA (or Tricare) after you retire. My personal example involved an allergy screening test (skin scratches) and an exam of my nasal passages with a fiber-optic scope. Both were highly unpleasant (let alone the medical bureaucracy) but they definitely fell into the category of "things I wish I'd known a decade ago."
If you need specific items listed in your DD-214 (for example, documentation that you’re qualified to supervise the operation & maintenance of naval nuclear power systems) then talk with your personnel staff to see whether your service record (and your service’s personnel database) already has what it needs in it for the DD-214 software to populate that part of the form. The personnel staff don’t know what additional items you might need to fit into your DD-214, and the software might not automatically add it. I had to spend six months with the Navy’s BUPERS database wonks waiting for them to update an obscure database with my nuke history so that I had the right code added to the DD-214. Your personnel staff might not have the system access to add that info on their own.
I’d talk more about your Skillbridge plans with the Linkedin group “Veteran Mentor Network.” (https://www.linkedin.com/groups/4466143/) They’re the people who can tell you what they wish they’d known, and some of them run their corporation’s Skillbridge programs. You’ll also be able to review topics like buffing up your Linkedin profile:
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/ultimate-linkedin-cheat-sheet-michael-quinn/
The Skillbridge program can be tremendously valuable if you view it as an extended career interview through informational networking. VMN will help you turbocharge that.
This is a ridiculously complex chart of the 12-month countdown to military retirement. I’m not suggesting that you need to follow it. Instead I’d read through it on the chance that there’s something in the checklist that you haven’t thought of yet.
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/navigating-military-retirement-thoughts-lessons-kirk-windmueller/
I don’t know much about the VetsFirst program, but they have another example of an incredibly detailed separation guide at their site:
Military Separation Guide | VetsFirst
Again, it’s way more info than you probably need (let alone care about) but it’s worth reading through it to add items to your own list.
If you’re planning to travel then I’d recommend Stephanie Montague’s Poppin’ Smoke site:
Military Separation Guide | VetsFirst
She and her military-retiree spouse have been perpetual travelers for over five years now. When the military Space A program restarts (2022?) she’ll be among the first to spread the news.
Of course you can ask us more questions here, or send me a PM. You can search more keywords at The-Military-Guide, and my books are in the military base libraries and public libraries in all formats.