+1 The answer to the OP is Yes. |
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It is pretty simple.
3% SWR off of $2.5 million is $75k per year. Add $80k of rental income that's 156k per year. Subtract taxes and any penalties for early withdrawal if you are taking from retirement accounts. If you can afford to pay all of your expenses from that, then you can afford to retire. |
Your 'credit card" spending seems really low to me for a mom with two teenagers, at your income level and presumed standard of living. How sure are you that it is accurate? Does it include kids expenses (shoes, clothing, classes, tutoring, sports equipment?). Holiday/birthday gifts? Food - includes groceries, take out, dining out, special meals? Vacations? All entertainment? AND all medical copay? I'm not saying it is impossible to be so frugal. But someone with a $4020 mortgage plus a $200/month cleaning service usually isn't just spending $1500 a month on "life" so I question if it is accurate. |
premium depends on where you live. MD is the cheapest, but VA and DC not too far behind. We are a family of 3, oldest 61 yrs of age, and we pay $1550 for a hdp. |
I’m blown away that this is always the DCUM recommendation. I work with new teachers. They often come in expecting it to be easier than their former jobs. Many don’t last two years. |
I’ve seen retail positions that pay 90 |
This requires an entire new thread about frugal spending. My kids are happy wearing comfortable clothes from their older cousins, dont know about brand names and dont have their cell phones. They aren't athletic and have no interest in sports. They get tutoring ($350/mon each but this isnt a long term expense) and birthday parties (also varies per kid preferences). We use the library, eat out only on special occasions, dont buy organics, don't get food delivered, and don't get Starbucks drinks. We use the Facebook BN group and goodwill. We do vacation but the last vacation was months away and we dont stay at 4star resorts. I use my credit cards for groceries, copays, school lunches, gas and get cash back. My credit card balance is usually around $1500. Some people spend on luxury bags, nails, shoes, cars - i love coming home to a clean house and choose not to scrub my toilets. |
+1 |
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I think you would want more in your non retirement brokerage/savings.
As others asked, could you do something else in your industry or adjacent? |
| Wow. I’m impressed your kids don’t want cell phones. Also impressed with your extremely low credit card expenses. We spend more that amount on food alone each month. |
| Teenagers without cell phones? You can get a plan for $10/month and a new phone for $100? Do you live in the DMV or something like an Amish community? |
This will change when they are teens and a cell phone is needed for school. You could reduce the tutoring as there are plenty of cheaper online options. Sometimes grocery delivery is cheaper, like at Walmart, depending on where you shop. |
| You're kids are too young for you to effectively retire in two or three years if your job goes away. Plan for a new job now, work at least until kid #2 is done with college. Then reassess. I wouldn't suggest retiring until you are mortgage-free. |
+1 other than my mortgage-my big expenses each month are kids feeds for sports activities and academic enrichment/tutoring. |
Is it possible it's double that amount for a family? So, if you make $92,000 or below as a family it's free? It is for him, his wife and one child. |