Teacher Terry
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2014
- Messages
- 7,736
I think everyone should do what works best for them individually. Some people would not be able to sleep with that plan.
A frugal person could retire with $1,000,000 at 30.
I think more people should take the route of extreme early retirement from "career" positions and live life, supplementing along the way, doing lower paid work that is more enjoyable or less stressful, when needed/wanted.
Even with kids. Raise your kids, teach them, be part of your community.
Maybe this is a generational perspective shift but I don't see any particular honor earned or bozo buttons handed out for putting in 30 years at megacorp, having strangers raise your kids, and living life through purchased products and annual vacations at the all-inclusive resorts, while looking at your best years and health fade in the rear view mirror.
Thinking more like - van down by the river.Living in a van under a bridge maybe?
But they're missing the main point of the 4% calculation, I think. Doesn't the 4% rule sort of stop working beyond 35-40 years or so?
Living in a van under a bridge maybe?
But they're missing the main point of the 4% calculation, I think. Doesn't the 4% rule sort of stop working beyond 35-40 years or so?
I have a couple of old friends/cow*rkers who sort of did this, although not exactly. In their early 40s they "retired" to the beach in FL with the intention of living off their savings as long as they could, sort of like "retirement is wasted on the old". They lasted a decade or so, partly due to a fairly large payoff at the track. But last I heard they both have had to go back to work, and I don't think retirement is in their future for a long, long time. To each his own, but at 59 and having been retired for 9 years, I would be absolutely miserable going back to work.
30k is 3% of 1M. Much more sustainable.
Might allow you to live in an RV down by the river. LOL
If you can manage to accumulate 1 Million in investable assets by 30 you most likely will be in position to retire at 40 with 5 Million.![]()
Wife / family member expensive medical needs, have kids, divorce settlement, lawsuit, hyper-inflationSame here. Way too many things can go wrong - serious illness, accident (think falling off a ladder) rampant inflation, and other unknowables.
If you can manage to accumulate 1 Million in investable assets by 30 you most likely will be in position to retire at 40 with 5 Million.![]()
Over at another FIRE message board, people were discussing this family (two adults in mid-30s and a baby) that were theoretically retiring on $1M at 4%. Another case was a mid-20s shooting to ER at 30 with $600k @ 4%.
I said these folks were crazy for using 4% and thinking these amounts could realistically last the rest of their lives. I got downvoted to oblivion for this opinion. Am I wrong?
Or a 4 BR 1800 square foot house in Raleigh and multi-week trips abroad every year. If you roll like we roll.YMMV of course.
30k is 3% of 1M. Much more sustainable.
Might allow you to live in an RV down by the river. LOL
At my current rate of spending, $1M stuffed under the mattress earning 0% would last more than 40 years.
This is exactly the question I've been thinking about lately - my spouse and I are 30, no kids, annual spending is $45k, net worth is $1.1 million. We aren't really happy with out jobs, but I don't think this is enough to retire on, especially with healthcare costs being so uncertain. I hope in 5 years we can switch to part time work.
Why not call it quits with 15 million at 50? Or 30 million at 60? Eventually you could have enough to have one heck of a nice funeral!![]()