| 52 had 20 years and changed careers 10 years ago. So it's earning interested in its own $500k. |
| retired, 65, 24 year service 745K not taking any out until 70 |
I call bs unless you rolled something over. |
|
Age 45, 20+ years of service, about $400K |
| 38, 10 years service, $292k |
| 36, 7 years service, $200k+, and another $45k from 401K. We usually put in the maximum. |
just as an update... things performed well from 2012 through 2014: currently 59+ / 26 yrs. (retired May 2013)/ $790k (not withdrawing anything until at least age 65+ probably). |
How? I put in 13% of my 80k. I'm 28, 6 years of service and 68k... |
Yes, I rolled over 6 years of max with 100% match. |
Oh wow!! 100% match! I had no idea employers would even offer this. |
It was actually automatic and was considered part of our pay package. |
PP probably put in the extra 6k/year that you are foregoing. Compound interest is magical. Learn the lesson now and start maxing. Cut elsewhere. |
13% doesn't equal $16,500/year! So that helps, and I guess we just haven't lost much? We don't pay attention, but think I have most of the money in the fund that's by year - maybe 2040? When I was younger, each salary bump meant more to retirement, living at the same rate. |
That's the trick - save early and often. In my 20s and 30s, pre-kids, I maxed out. Took time off after having kids and haven't contributed in 10 years but still have $450K in account. DH has continued has $750K after 30 years in. Still not enough. We have no 529s little other savings and kids will be in college when we are in our 60s. |
|
It is unwise to move your money to a broker when retiring because they charge much more than TSP to manage it. Either select an L account or use simple tools to determine your asset allocation within TSP. Never take a loan from your account.
|