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Old 03-06-2021, 03:08 PM   #41
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After seven years of retirement, I'll just say that my retirement spending has been in the ballpark of what I expected up until 2020.

Now my basic stay at home expenses are rather modest, but my retirement income is considerably more than that.

So my travel and other discretionary expenses have tended to soak up much of the difference.

I'll be glad when things get back closer to normal...
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Old 03-09-2021, 03:31 PM   #42
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Very close to projected, including very expensive LTC and health insurance.
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Old 03-09-2021, 03:53 PM   #43
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About 30% more than planned but the market has been doing so well that it hasn’t bothered us.
Restarting some old hobbies, buying hobby items that I always wanted. That’s ok though.
Fixing things in the house that before retirement I would have postponed (ice maker).
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Old 03-09-2021, 04:03 PM   #44
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Retired in 2005. Within 1 percent of forecast net worth. I am convinced it is due more to luck than skill! Spending dead on, inflation lower, return on investments lower. My spreadsheet was a work of art! I had spending, inflation factors, taxes, rmd’s, house pay ents, travel. You get the picture. While spending was on, it was not on the things I planned! Income was more than I thought.
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Old 03-09-2021, 05:17 PM   #45
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Almost double what I was spending just prior to retirement adjusted for retirement savings and taxes. That is what I started with for retirement spending planning. The projections showed me awash in money. Funny how all sorts of things pop up to sop up that extra cash. No worries about running out of money. Life is good.
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Old 03-09-2021, 05:33 PM   #46
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2020 was my first full year of retirement (I worked for 3 months in 2019 and DH has been retired for 9 years) and excluding the vacation budget which went unused last year, we spent about the same as we had when I worked.

I tracked our spending for 7 years before retiring, so I had a very good idea of how much was needed in income from SS, pensions and investments and planned accordingly.
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Old 03-09-2021, 07:34 PM   #47
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My spending has been consistent both pre and post retirement. The only thing I noticed is that in the past year, due to COVID I find myself spending a lot more money on stuff for the house and almost nothing on travel and restaurant dining. But the total amount I’m spending is still about the same, just on different stuff.
Aha! Still accumulating but as we WFH and genrrally spend a lot more time there we also spent more on groceries and home repairs less on travel and dining.
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Old 03-09-2021, 07:36 PM   #48
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About 30% more than planned but the market has been doing so well that it hasn’t bothered us.
Restarting some old hobbies, buying hobby items that I always wanted. That’s ok though.
Fixing things in the house that before retirement I would have postponed (ice maker).
We’ve had similar increases vs what I’ve been calling our ‘base’ budget. We had some unexpected influxes of cash and DH has continued to work part time, so the extra dollars have been there. But I hope I run out of stuff to fix soon!! We have a few more budgeted for hobby purchases and home projects, but all else is mostly on track.
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Old 03-09-2021, 08:13 PM   #49
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Ours has been about 10% above expected/planned, but we have enough cushion that we're fine with that. About 35% of our spending is discretionary...so not too worried.

The biggest surprise has been increased utilities. I knew they would go up, but (especially with the pandemic...being home all the time) wow they've gone up a lot! When w*rking for Megacorp, we were only "awake" at home for about 5 hours/day...and now it's about 15 hours/day lol.
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Old 03-10-2021, 02:54 AM   #50
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Been retired only 2 years (now 63) so too early to tell, especially with C19 limitations. I’m not collecting SS yet & Portfolio is still all time high, so likely less than expected. I thought I would be drawing down the portfolio until I filed for SS. Also, though, there has been more than expected income from various unplanned sources, and now past employer is enticing me to do some part time fairly effortless consulting, for more than I was making. So...hard...to...resist...easy...money...with....C 19....
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Old 03-10-2021, 05:24 AM   #51
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We are mostly on par except we are finding we are spending more money on eating out. But that's relative because prior to retiring we never ate out except a few times when on vacation and some Chinese take out every few months.


A lot of our neighbors in our new community eat out constantly. They almost seem obsessed with it. As soon as they hear about a new place opening they have to run there. They also are obsessed with shopping also. Honestly I think it is out of boredom.


So back to us, if some of them want to get together and go out we have been joining them. We only moved last year so trying to make and keep some friendships.



This all said, we are not doing extravagant meals. Some things are just pancake breakfasts or pizza or a pub for lunch. Some Chinese and Mexican. We have done some more expensive places- Italian and so forth. Maybe one drink. But it adds up each month.



Again because we are new in this state and this area and community we are trying to attend everything for social reasons otherwise we will be left out.



I do have a misc. line in our budget so I consider this part of it. I also increased our food budget when COVID hit as I was spending like $200 more a month on food. We had just moved and had no stock pile yet. We bought a small chest freezer and proceeded to fill it up, as well as the pantry. Now I am trying to empty both a bit as things have calmed down, but I do find food to be a bit more expensive in this area. I really need to get my receipts out and track it in a more detailed way.


When we worked I never bothered worrying too much about it as we had paychecks coming in and I knew we could cover any line item if we went a little over.


Things are different now and we are still trying to adjust.
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Old 03-10-2021, 07:40 AM   #52
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I retired with a fairly lean budget and stayed in a strict budget for the first five years. At the five year mark I reassessed and have bumped up spending a bit year 6 and 7. Covid beat back spending in year 8.

I was never a detailed budget type, (Earnings - Savings = Spending) but always had a feel for where the money went. About the only surprise was health insurance increases as I miss read my separation contract. That's offset by utility costs not rising as much as I expected.
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Old 03-10-2021, 02:50 PM   #53
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Spending over the past nine years is approx. what we anticipated. The categories have changed with some lifestyle changes how ever the bottom lines have been well inside the ballpark.
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Old 03-10-2021, 03:13 PM   #54
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62, 14 years retired.

The first 5 or so years spending went about as planned. After that spending ramped up (travel and entertainment) as investment income ramped up. Now spending almost twice what I expected, except the last 12 months (no vacations).
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Old 03-10-2021, 04:10 PM   #55
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Originally Posted by Perryinva View Post
Been retired only 2 years (now 63) so too early to tell, especially with C19 limitations. I’m not collecting SS yet & Portfolio is still all time high, so likely less than expected. I thought I would be drawing down the portfolio until I filed for SS.
We're in the same pre-Social Security phase, 18 months in, and also have more in retirement savings than on the day we retired.

I didn't expect it either.
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Old 03-10-2021, 05:48 PM   #56
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ERd about 20 years ago. Expenses are about what I expected and income stream still pays all bills including CCRC monthly fees. Eventually the income streams (5) will not be enough to pay it all. At that time we will have to start pulling cash out of savings. This is exactly as I had planned it.
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Old 03-10-2021, 08:18 PM   #57
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For those of you who are retired, how close to your projections and predictions has your spending actually been? Where did you find you underestimated, or overestimated, how much you would spend?
So far (32 months of retirement as of the end of February) our total expenses are about 5% lower than what we projected. We overestimated our medical expenses and our planned vacation travel was greatly reduced last year. Our taxes are higher than estimated, primarily due to Roth conversions since we were not eligible for Roth accounts until after I retired.

Also, going into retirement I did not plan to pay off our mortgage (still had 9 years on a 15 year loan at a very low interest rate), but with pandemic expenses and interest on savings both going lower last year we decided to pay off the mortgage early.

From a cash flow perspective we are way ahead, we have only spent 25% of what we budgeted to spend from our cash. it is a combination of lower expenses, a not planned for inheritance, and greater than expected income, some of which I intentionally did not consider in the plan (DW's part time income and her own SS before FRA, since I wanted to retire independent of those factors).
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Old 03-11-2021, 05:58 PM   #58
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Retired nine years ago.

Two good things that have impacted cash flow. First, inflation was lower than I forecasted during the period. Second, investment returns were better than I forecasted.

So, it has all been good. Now for the next nine or ten years.
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Old 03-11-2021, 06:55 PM   #59
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Averaging about 20% below budget, but the budget is on the aggressive side.
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Old 03-12-2021, 08:39 AM   #60
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About twice what I had projected, but about half what my projected wr was.
More or less the same as my pre-retirement spending level, though.. I wound up not moving to se Asia and stayed in HCOL areas, while my stash quadrupled since I fired in 2000.
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