This board truly has no clue what the lifestyle of the average American is like.
Of course he can retire with 1.5mil and a paid off house! Of course it’s possible to squander it, but it’s also possible to live a nice, quiet, fulfilling life. |
If he lives 60 more years, that's only 25k a year or basically 2k/month, in today's money. With this money he has to pay taxes, insurance, and upkeep on a home, plus maintenance and eventual replacement on a modest car. Plus food, clothing and healthcare. Even for a "nice, quiet, fulfilling life." I think your confidence is unfounded. |
I don’t understand everyone saying no. He could live off of the interest in a HYSA. Invest some, HYSA some, maintain the health insurance and he’ll be fine |
Never understand why DCUM people can’t understand buying bonds. You buy $1.5MM of risk free bonds at 5% and you make $75k per year without touching the principal. Many people can live on that per year. |
What is his job. That is not enough to permanently retire. He needs to at least work until he is 40 or 50 to save some more money and avoid touching his inheritance to ensure it grows more. He also wants to make sure he has some earnings history to ensure he will get some social security money in old age. |
Something like this happened to my BIL. He still hasn't worked a day in his life. My sister supports him though. |
If he doesn't pay SS tax, he's not going to be rescued by SS payouts at 65. |
Would work in the short term but not hedge against inflation. And as pp points out, he also won't receive SS. |
Long term bonds are 4.7% at the moment, and inflation exists. |
Is he living in DC or in rural Arkansas? |
Go it…but PP was simply taking $1.5MM and dividing by 60 which makes zero sense to come out to $25k per year. |
It is possible to live off that if one lives a very humble, sparse life.
It is not possible to live off that and own even a free and clear house anywhere near here. The income off $1.5M cannot keep up the house I am guessing that he inherited. It’s the lack of social security and inflation as to house expenses that will ultimately make it impossible. Downsize to a cheap apartment or condo and work minimum wage for 25-30 hours per week, I think it would be doable. |
This. Once people understand this, it's like a lightbulb going off. |
This is in theory. Have you actually done this? I have a now 8-year-ladder of tax free bonds paying 5%. The yield to maturity is not 5% due to the premium you have to pay to get them. And it is next to impossible to buy them directly. You have to go through a bond broker of some sort. I have them in an account that I manage. But before I moved them, I was paying .04 in a managed account. If I wanted to keep buying them (which I don't) I would have had to stay in that managed account. And, as mentioned, they are not inflation adjusted. |
The average DCUM type doesn’t understand that 75K is the current MEDIAN American *household* income. Bunch of book smart idiots acting like 75K is poverty wages for a single man WITHOUT A MORTGAGE… |