Taking an early retirement package

Twistnshout

Dryer sheet wannabe
Joined
Feb 6, 2015
Messages
18
Location
fountain hills
Hi All,

I've been a saver since about 21. I used to do all of my own investing from lessons taught to me by my mother. That is up until the mid ninties when I started paying more attention to fun then money. The wife and I handed over our assets to a financial manager but I still have an account with my company.

I probably should have kept on top of it more, looking back now I just think he has done a poor job. But I cant complain too much since it "appears" we can retire soon.

My company is likely going to lay somone off. If I want to stay I can but the severence pay is a two year paycheck and the possibility of not being offered again. This along with our savings appears to be enough. Although we are still factoring in our sons college expenses-he's 15.

I thought since the likelihood of my company offer is VERY high I need to bone up with what others have to offer as far as advice in ER and hey maybe I can help them too.:cool:

Look forward to being aboard. :greetings10:
 
Welcome to the forum and glad to hear you are in a position to be unconcerned (well, mostly) about the possible layoff.
 
I think a lot of folks on this forum still working would do a back flip if they got offered a 2 yr severance package (with medical)
 
To be sure you have enough to retire you need to know your spending. Include everything including taxes and healthcare (which usually change in retirement). Once you have an all in number, plug it into firecalc. Make sure you explore all the tabs to input ss and any other income sources you might have.

Consider dyi the investments to same the FAs fees.

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I think a lot of folks on this forum still working would do a back flip if they got offered a 2 yr severance package (with medical)
Yeah medical, dental, eyes, too. But who knows how long it will last with whats going on now in healthcare. But happy about it for now.:)

From what I've gleaned (so far) is nothing changes in my coverage until I hit 65. Need to learn more about this.
 
To be sure you have enough to retire you need to know your spending. Include everything including taxes and healthcare (which usually change in retirement). Once you have an all in number, plug it into firecalc. Make sure you explore all the tabs to input ss and any other income sources you might have.

Consider dyi the investments to same the FAs fees.

Sent from my Nexus 5 using Early Retirement Forum mobile app
Good info. I tried FIREcalc and I must be doing something wrong. It asks for your spending and portfolio and thats it. There is a little more to it then that. Pensions, SS, etc. that need to go into the calc and I dont see that??
 
You need to go through each of the tabs near the top of each page:
 

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Welcome to the forum, Twistnshout. Here are some questions you may find helpful. http://www.early-retirement.org/for...-answer-before-asking-can-i-retire-69999.html
Thanks! Yeah I found that and the FIREcalc. Never heard of it until this day. Just wish I understood it better?

My company has a fidelity retirement calc that is pretty understandable. In a down (really down) market I fail while in my 90's. It shows my spending as the culprit. I have inflated my numbers a bit. So its likely the reason. Still I'd rather be over then under.
 
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Good info. I tried FIREcalc and I must be doing something wrong. It asks for your spending and portfolio and thats it. There is a little more to it then that. Pensions, SS, etc. that need to go into the calc and I dont see that??

A stated in the forum prior, use all the tabs on top, it will show you the way:D
 
Two year severance, I would jump on that. Just make sure your numbers are good before you pull the trigger.
 
Honestly with a 2 year severance you almost can't make a bad decision if it is reasonable to get employed at anywhere near your old salary. Take the money, work the plan and if you conclude in 6 months you want or need to work some more do it, nest eggs build up nicely with double pay at your age, add compounded growth and that takes care of spending in your 90s that you mention. Enjoy your success


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