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33 and 36, about $207,000. About $75k is in Roth IRAs and the rest is in TSP/401K. We haven't been maxing out the non-Roth savings as we were building savings for a house down payment, then renovations, but need to revisit them and bump them back up now. We did always make sure to put in enough to get the full match at least.
I'll also have a federal pension which will help. |
I'm not the PP you quoted, but I think you're missing his/her point. Just because you have a college savings plan, that doesn't automatically decrease the need for financial aid. It's not that simple. If you have a college savings plan for your DC, it just means that you put a priority on saving for DC's education. Maybe you saved for college but didn't save for retirement. |
| Both 35, 100k |
| 47 & 48 , $300k combined plus current military pension and future federal pension. |
| 36 and 33. About $110k combined, plus one pension. |
Its steadily gone up, but 9 years ago it was about $300K. this year it will be about $750-$850K |
[b] 36 year old here as well... $0 savings, $0 retirement, $12.56 in cheating account. Hope this makes you feel good about yourself OP. |
<headtokeyboard> What the what? If you have a college savings plan it doesn't automatically decrease the need for financial aid? Of course it does! Yes, there are a lot of factors that go into the aid decision, but if there are two students in identical situations, except that one has $40,000 in a 529 and the other doesn't, the one with the 529 needs less aid. How can this be remotely controversial? If you saved for college in a 529 and not retirement, you're an idiot, yes. But you don't need financial assistance for college (or as much, anyway). You need help with retirement. That's not the point of the financial aid. |
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39 and 42, about $600,000 in retirement savings (401k, IRA, Roth). About another $150,000 liquid savings. HHI of roughly $320,000 (predominantly one income), depending on the year.
We feel behind. |
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if the last poster feels behind, then we are WAY behind. 37 and 40, around $275k saved, HHI of about $170k (gross). Large mortgage (typical DC area, not $1MM house or anthing), paid off $60k in private student loans a few years ago, and not enough saved for 529s either.
We save a little more than the match for both of us, but we don't work for the govt and we don't max it out like we should. 2 daycares is expensive though too. |
| 35 and 38 almost 500K. |
Part of the reason that I feel behind is that for the past 2 years, we've basically treaded water, despite contributing $30,000+ each year. Not that this is unique to me, obviously, but still frustrating, and leads to the conclusion that we're behind (and we ARE behind where we wanted to be at this age). Guess retirement at 55 isn't happening. |
Gimme a break. Of course I get that. And, I think we're simply trying to make the same point. That it's ridiculous to save in a 529 and not save for retirement. That's what most of the PPs were trying to say. |
Is anyone planning this? I have no idea how that happens for normal people (no big inheritance, no selling the wildly profitable company) with kids. If you start working around 20 and plan on living until 95 -- not that you will, but that's what you're supposed to plan for -- how do you do that? Save enough in 35 years to support yourself for 40? |
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37 and 39
about $250k in retirement. $400K mortgage on a million dollar home one federal pension. we're behind. I really have no idea how we'll get to the numbers we're "supposed" too. Outside of the mega wealthy (those who make a fortune selling a business or have salaries where they can just stash 200K/cash away per year), I have no idea how 95% (no, make that 98-99%) of our generation of Americans are ever going to retire. Those of us making anywhere <$400k and just putting away $30-40K/year are screwed. And that is a TON of money compared to what most Americans can even dream of saving. |