obgyn65
Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
I haven't read the answers from other forum participants above, but to the OP : you are all set. Congratulations. Enjoy your retirement.
In this case, you would need to gross up to the $75k what you need to pay for taxes for the first year. FIREcalc will apply inflation from that point.So, taking our current $75/yr (after-tax) spending and adding 3% inflation for 5 years makes that ~$86k. Adding federal and state taxes onto that means we'll need more like $115k pretax income.
+1Sandman, for spending, use the amount it is now. Make sure it includes taxes.
When you are getting pensions, SS benefits and withdrawing $ from your IRAs, you'll be paying taxes on them. That's an expense - and money spent (buying all the things govt providesOhhhh, so Firecalc's "Spending" is meant to be BEFORE-tax? I thought it meant actual money spent.
Also, if you aren't already doing so I would strongly urge you to use your Excel skills track your actual spending. We did this for three years prior to retiring and it was a huge help in our planning.
You might try some mustard on her once in a while to spice things up.I have started thinking about catchup on DW too.
Sandman62 said:I just realized I'd made a mistake in calculating our retirement spending and income needs: I had calculated our pension benefits knowing what we'll get when we retire in 5 years. However, that's in "5 years from now" dollars, so don't I have to adjust for inflation?
So, taking our current $75/yr (after-tax) spending and adding 3% inflation for 5 years makes that ~$86k. Adding federal and state taxes onto that means we'll need more like $115k pretax income.
Does that make sense? If so, then for the 15 years until SS (unless we do so spousal benefits earlier), we'd need to either withdraw $15k/yr from our portfolio or tighten up our budget.
That said, when entering Spending in Firecalc, is that today's dollars or as of retirement date?
I'd suggest starting tracking your current spending for the next few years and see if you'll have any wiggle room for cuts if needed in the future. You are planning to do 'catch-up' for your 401k, what about doing the same for your DW or would it really scrimp your current lifestyle?
...I'm hoping that pot plus our current income stream will suffice...
You might try some mustard on her once in a while to spice things up.![]()
You might try some mustard on her once in a while to spice things up.![]()
Honestly, we've never really tracked our budgets because we live below our means. We've never really scrutinized our spending for "Where else can we tighten up?" because we really haven't needed to. I'm not trying to be flippant; just being honest. We save for retirement, pay our bills, eat, live, etc, and bank the rest. We don't take annual extravagant vacations or have other expensive hobbies. We put one kid through college with no loans and we don't anticipate any for DS. No car payments. No mortgage.
I actually thought I was being conservative by arriving at our curent annual spending by simply starting with our income, then deducting taxes, what we save, what we currently spend on college and other kid costs - all things (except for taxes) that will go away before retirement (notwithstanding the chance of college grad kids possibly still needing some support). Then I just assumed that "We spend the rest".
With $100K in pensions annually and a million in cash, you are golden. Quit over thinking it.