We contribute the $36k match, and even with partial employer match it adds up to $48k total. If your employer is more generous then it's not difficult. |
Not everyone gets a match, not everyone gets such a generous match, and not every family is dual income. |
See post above you - 7:59 |
Well, OP was able to. |
Dude...your employer matches 100% of your 401k contributions? Where do you work? |
You two made a very bad mistake. Hope you were able to rebuild since then. I am guessing you jumped into the housing market in 07 and lost money there. Lesson learned, I suppose. |
| But you have still put in $50k/year since 2007. You should still have a hefty chunk of change in your accounts. |
don't torture yourself. you can't go backward. Onward and upward. |
If you had left it in and were invested as 90:10 (stocks:bonds) along with a $50k yearly contribution, my estimate would be between close to ~$1M and that's probably on the low-side. If that had been your balance in March 2009, it'd be closer to $1.5M-$2M because the market tripled between then and now. |
I don't even understand WHY? What was the pressing "investment" that required to use ALL your retirement money? Did you not view retirement $ as untouchable? Is it bc you wanted a McMansion? |
It doesn't matter if OP was investing in hookers and blow. That money is gone, and OP realizes it was a dumb mistake. |
| Who advised you to do this. Ugh. |
WHY are you a presumptuous douchebag? |
Your employer does not need to match 100 % of your 401(k) to have 401(k) contributions of $38,000. For example, my employer gave a 401(k) match in 2016 that was 10 percent of my salary ($160,000), and so they matched $16,000. Then, with profit-sharing, it hit up against the IRS limit of approximately $53,000 and I had to pay tax on the amount that went over. I work at a publicly-traded company. |
+1. I'm in law and DW is in consulting. Our total 401k contributions after matching and profit sharing contribution is $67200. |