| We are at $13m. I probably would retire at $18m, but then again, I actually do love my job and my colleagues. |
| So your half of $18m is about $9m if you split up. Will you be okay with that amount? Or keep working? |
| No I don't have 18M |
She’s avoiding the question, so probably a troll of it’s all from a big inheritance. |
| I’m ^^ and she said her jobs and salary and spend, and I don’t see how this is possible. |
| I have 1.4M and wish I could retire |
How did you get to 18M? |
| Op here-saved, stock market. That was all DH. We have some real estate, but did not appreciate a lot at all. Mostly stocks. |
| I would quit today if I had that much. We’re at 7.5M. |
Mmkay. On those numbers. Sure. |
+1 We are hovering around 3M in our late 40s/early 50s, but don’t envy you at all. Maybe because it seems you lack empathy and awareness of the world around you. I’m definitely not motivated to work forever or much longer. I can’t relate to your hoarding behavior at all. The world has so many people in desperate need. It’s gross. |
Idk I’m a govt worker, my H a cop and we have $5M not including our house. My answer is we maxed our retirement since we were 27. |
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I was in your position about 10-12 years ago. You are caught in the rat race. You make so much money and while you likely objectively spend a lot, you make so much that your net worth is rapidly increasing. And the more you accumulate, the faster it increases. Logically you know that it is enough but once you exit you feel like you won’t ever be able to get back in. Therefore, you are afraid. Working a few more years can easily change your net worth by several million which massively increases your buffer.
So, I set a target that I objectively knew was extremely solid and also subjectively felt like it was definitely enough. And then when I hit that number I knew it was enough. For what it’s worth for me that number had to get literally everything I could possibly want. And I had to be generating the income to afford my lifestyle from 3 different income streams. I could have definitely retired on $10M or $20M but I was young and while that money was objectively plenty it wasn’t enough to do everything I wanted in the lifestyle I was accustomed. And since I was still young there wasn’t a need to compromise. |
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I had an epiphany the other day. I’m a government worker and in my late 50s. Given the instability I keep freaking out about “what’ll I do if my job goes away”. I was listening to another retirement spiel and then it hit me - pretend like whatever you have in cash/investments today is the baseline. That’s your “principal” Project a modest return on investments, like 4-5 %. That’s the “interest” I ran my numbers and they’re way less than yours - when I added my pension to social security and the interest, I’m just fine and never have to touch the principal. Can you live off of your interest?
It’s not a novel concept, but I never really framed it that way. I’m pretty sure you can live off of your investments. |
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You are asking three different questions--do you have enough to retire, should you retire and how can you feel secure enough to retire.
Yes, you have enough to retire. Most people will never see $18M in their bank accounts, ever. Move the money to somewhere safe and you will still be fine. Should you retire is up to you. I am a few years younger than you and have nowhere near your NW but if I won the lottery tomorrow, I don't know that I would retire. I might shift to a slower, lower paying job but I like my current job and I don't mind working. My kids are in school, my friends all work, my parents don't have health issues where they need me to be around all the time. I would be bored to tears if I didn't have something to do. So I don't think you are wrong to keep working if you like it. How to feel secure is another issue. I agree with one of the PPs who said therapy. I think it may help you to talk about it and figure out ways to change your mindset. I have similar issues with money (though not as much of it) and I often think I should do the same. |