You saved 350K out of 700 -- How much did you pay in taxes? |
| I was calling BS on this as well - I made a similar number last year and I am not a hyper saver, but there was no path to saving $350K plus maxing 401K, so $350K after tax. We saved around $150K after tax, and there is no chance we were saving another $12K a month. None. |
We save ~90K per year on a salary of 320K after taxes with fully funded 401K (35K extra). If our salary suddenly bumped to 700K, I could see us saving close to that amount; I.e. we have the spending habits/costs of someone saving aggressively at ~300K salary and then another 150K-200K after taxes rolls in. It's possible IMO, but would require a lot of financial discipline and saving. I admit I would have issues doing that if I was pulling in that kind of cash. |
I paid about $250k in taxes - a fair amount of my income is classified as dividends, but still that's a blended rate of 36%. So, I netted $450k. My employer added $30k of the 401k money, so that is above the $700k figure - if I thought it mattered, if have been more clear there. So, from the $450k, I have housing costs of ~$36k ($12k deductible), I spend another $36k in food/utilities/entertainment, another ~$30k in random expenses (clothes, travel, etc). $17500 in personal 401k contributions. That leaves well over $300k excess. I could jack my housing to $72k per year and the picture wouldn't change much. My kids are small, my wife is relatively frugal, and other than anonymous message boards we don't do anything that would flaunt our good fortune. It blows my mind that someone could make more than $500k annually and not accumulate major wealth in fairly short order. No wonder the country has absurdly low average savings rates.
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Not a hyper saver is the understatement of the year. $125k out of $700k. You need to tighten it up. You have any idea how much wealth you're missing after a couple decades of compounding? You might not need it, but that's millions and millions of dollars. |
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I said $150K. Let's see - $60K in nanny, $15K in preschool right off the top.
When you factor in two maxed 401Ks, plus matches and sharing we are in excess of $200K saved for the year. We spend money because we can, but I sleep very comfortably on what we are saving. Thanks for the advice but I really don't think we need to 'tighten it up' - I know exactly where we are on our plan. We are early 40s and could easily hang it up in 8-10 years if we want to. We aren't willing to live like monks now in order to have a bigger bag of money later. |
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Me: 45, Income $106K
DH: 52, Income $140K Combined retirement savings = $780K College savings for 2 kids = 30K I was a SAHM for 7 years and went back to FT work 3 yrs ago at which point we started saving for college and increasing retirement savings. $900K house will be paid off when I retire, although not likely by the time DH retires. I'm feeling behind on college savings but OK about our retirement position based on an analysis of our current savings trends and anticipate retirement needs. |
Our IRAs and 401Ks may not be as large as some others our age, but our overall wealth is nearing $5 million. Just don't necessarily designated our ETF portfolio as retirement, but I guess that is what it will be used for one day. |
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THis threat makes me nervous.
me: 42, have saved 200k. Started my first 'real' job at 32, since I was in grad school, getting a phd and fellowships until then. Salary is under 100k. DH: 49: has saved 250k. There is NO excuse for this, but poor planning on his part, since he's been working since 25. Salary now at 150k and I make him max and he will do 'catch up' once he hits 50. We have 3 kids, who will be heading to college when we retire. the only thing that helps me sleep at night is knowing that there's a trust that will probably cover three college tuitions and give them a bit of money for house downpayments, etc. But I worry about our own retirements, at this rate, although if I stay with this job (that I'm starting to hate) I'll have a small govt pension. |
Isn't 550k good for mid 40s couple? |
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Me: 33, 150k
DH: 36, 450k |
| Both 28. Combined 140k in retirement accounts. |
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http://money.cnn.com/calculator/retirement/retirement-need/
Sweet. I'm saving 15% for retirement and it says I'm falling short by 3 million. Yikes. How much am I supposed to be saving? I thought I was saving a lot! |
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Me: 49, Saved about $280K, based on choosetosave.org, I have about 45% of what I need saved (I have a second part-time career post-retirement lined up)
Spouse: 54, Saved about double me (somewhere around $550K), according to choosetosave.org, this is fine and will be better by the time of actual retirement. |
I didn't get good results using the ballpark calculator on that website. It told me I have about 35% of what I need saved and therefore I need to save a massive amount of my salary. |