Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to think about long term care. These unexpected expenses can wipe you out. Don't rely on Medicaid because you could end up in a horrible facility.
+1000
Anonymous wrote:It depends entirely on what you think your expenses will be but I would not be comfortable with your current levels of savings, particularly when combined with low SS combined payments. I am also about 10 years out and we are saving/paying down mortgages pretty aggressively at this point (post college/weddings).
$1m in savings will get you around $40k/year if you draw it down. Your $5k in SS gets you $60k. So that's $100k/year. Sounds like you will still have a mortgage for the first 5 years. Only you can answer if that's enough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCUM is crazy about this. Normal people would feel like you do - and would feel that, with over $1 million in retirement savings and another 10 years to go, of course you can travel and buy a couch.
On DCUM they'll tell you to move into a garden apartment rental and eat only rice and beans until you hit $11 million, then maybe you can get takeout pizza once a year.
These are the people who die from stress two weeks into retirement
Anonymous wrote:DCUM is crazy about this. Normal people would feel like you do - and would feel that, with over $1 million in retirement savings and another 10 years to go, of course you can travel and buy a couch.
On DCUM they'll tell you to move into a garden apartment rental and eat only rice and beans until you hit $11 million, then maybe you can get takeout pizza once a year.
Anonymous wrote:You don't tell us your HHI or expenditures or planned expenditures in retirement so we can know what's right for you--but Fidelity estimates that to retire at 67 you need 7x your current household income at 55. So if your current HHI is around 155k, you're on target--though if you want to retire at 65 instead of 67 you might need a bit more.
Also, healthcare is the wildcard--current average needed for retirement for a couple is 300k for all post 65 health expenses excluding long term care. (But I think that's figured into the Fidelity estimate).
And--just FYI--Social security may not pay off the amount you expect, be taxed at a higher rate in the future or tweak cola increases etc. Even though you are 10 years away, you are also retiring right at the expected point the SS surplus funds run out (and recent fiscal policy likely will worsen this). Our advisor suggests figuring SS in at 75% to be cautious.
The thing is also that it's really hard to know where retirement balances will go--but running out of money is way worse than having too much. So people may die "loaded" but still have saved the right amount to address the range of uncertainties. But your husband may be responding to this with anxiety about spending anything.
All that said, it sounds like you would benefit from a visit with a fee-only financial planner where they can figure out these details AND where you can have a third party likely tell you both that even if you need to keep up your level of retirement contributions, there is still room to buy a couch and paint the house. That neutral, expert voice can help move your husband away from just fear-based invest all the surplus possible.
For what it's worth, our HHI is around 120k, we're 50&55 and have about 1.5 million in retirement assets. We feel like it's likely to be a bit more than we need so we're contributing less (15% with the match) and spending a bit more freely now.