Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did you get to 5M? Apple stock in the 90s?
No student debt. Maxed contribution retirement saving since we were 22. We don’t have fancy cars or hobbies.
Anonymous wrote:Only $10k a month, huh?
. I think the 10k per month seems ridiculously low. I think that’s a thing they call it flexible retirement or something like that. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband and I make 300k combined and have close to 5M saved. Our house is worth 700k and we have 500k in college savings for 2 kids.
Fidelity’s retirement investment calculator calculates that we’ll only be able to spend about 10k a month to weather a significantly below average market.m but an average market would give our kids 100M when we die. Planning for the significantly below average scenario seems crazy conservative. I’d like to retire before age 55 with hopefully 6M.
Is 6M too low? The 4 percent rule would suggest that we would be able to spend 240k per year which would be more than enough.
Thoughts?
TIA
Will the kids be out of the house by then? If so, I'd say go for it. Your $5M will be around $7-8M in 5 years time.
Anonymous wrote:How did you get to 5M? Apple stock in the 90s?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband and I make 300k combined and have close to 5M saved. Our house is worth 700k and we have 500k in college savings for 2 kids.
Fidelity’s retirement investment calculator calculates that we’ll only be able to spend about 10k a month to weather a significantly below average market.m but an average market would give our kids 100M when we die. Planning for the significantly below average scenario seems crazy conservative. I’d like to retire before age 55 with hopefully 6M.
Is 6M too low? The 4 percent rule would suggest that we would be able to spend 240k per year which would be more than enough.
Thoughts?
TIA
Surely you mean 10 million lol.
DP. I'm sure they mean 100mil. Compound interest is a wonderful thing.
Anonymous wrote:My husband and I make 300k combined and have close to 5M saved. Our house is worth 700k and we have 500k in college savings for 2 kids.
Fidelity’s retirement investment calculator calculates that we’ll only be able to spend about 10k a month to weather a significantly below average market.m but an average market would give our kids 100M when we die. Planning for the significantly below average scenario seems crazy conservative. I’d like to retire before age 55 with hopefully 6M.
Is 6M too low? The 4 percent rule would suggest that we would be able to spend 240k per year which would be more than enough.
Thoughts?
TIA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband and I make 300k combined and have close to 5M saved. Our house is worth 700k and we have 500k in college savings for 2 kids.
Fidelity’s retirement investment calculator calculates that we’ll only be able to spend about 10k a month to weather a significantly below average market.m but an average market would give our kids 100M when we die. Planning for the significantly below average scenario seems crazy conservative. I’d like to retire before age 55 with hopefully 6M.
Is 6M too low? The 4 percent rule would suggest that we would be able to spend 240k per year which would be more than enough.
Thoughts?
TIA
Surely you mean 10 million lol.
Anonymous wrote:My husband and I make 300k combined and have close to 5M saved. Our house is worth 700k and we have 500k in college savings for 2 kids.
Fidelity’s retirement investment calculator calculates that we’ll only be able to spend about 10k a month to weather a significantly below average market.m but an average market would give our kids 100M when we die. Planning for the significantly below average scenario seems crazy conservative. I’d like to retire before age 55 with hopefully 6M.
Is 6M too low? The 4 percent rule would suggest that we would be able to spend 240k per year which would be more than enough.
Thoughts?
TIA