Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Y’all are nuts. Who needs 200k in retirement?
Admittedly planning on owning the house outright, and my work should cover our insurance if I stick around to retirement age. But we are only planning on spending 50k or so in todays dollars and already feel like that’s going to feel lavish. Where are these 200k+ numbers going? Genuine question, I’m trying to figure out if I’m missing something.
Everyone has different plans for retirement. We are expecting to spend about $250K/year after tax in early retirement. That includes budgeting $50K annually for travel, $20K for philanthropy, $35K to run our house even after it's paid (insurance, property taxes, utilities, cleaning service, landscaping, etc), $15K for our country club membership, $25K for financial advisory fees. Obviously, you can do things differently and spend a lot less money depending on your lifestyle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Y’all are nuts. Who needs 200k in retirement?
Admittedly planning on owning the house outright, and my work should cover our insurance if I stick around to retirement age. But we are only planning on spending 50k or so in todays dollars and already feel like that’s going to feel lavish. Where are these 200k+ numbers going? Genuine question, I’m trying to figure out if I’m missing something.
Everyone has different plans for retirement. We are expecting to spend about $250K/year after tax in early retirement. That includes budgeting $50K annually for travel, $20K for philanthropy, $35K to run our house even after it's paid (insurance, property taxes, utilities, cleaning service, landscaping, etc), $15K for our country club membership, $25K for financial advisory fees. Obviously, you can do things differently and spend a lot less money depending on your lifestyle.
You are going to be spending 10 percent of your income on financial advisory fees?
That is the craziest thing I’ve ever heard…
That's not our income, it's the expected annual spending. We have a very high net worth.
No matter your HHI, that’s crazy
Np
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Y’all are nuts. Who needs 200k in retirement?
Admittedly planning on owning the house outright, and my work should cover our insurance if I stick around to retirement age. But we are only planning on spending 50k or so in todays dollars and already feel like that’s going to feel lavish. Where are these 200k+ numbers going? Genuine question, I’m trying to figure out if I’m missing something.
Everyone has different plans for retirement. We are expecting to spend about $250K/year after tax in early retirement. That includes budgeting $50K annually for travel, $20K for philanthropy, $35K to run our house even after it's paid (insurance, property taxes, utilities, cleaning service, landscaping, etc), $15K for our country club membership, $25K for financial advisory fees. Obviously, you can do things differently and spend a lot less money depending on your lifestyle.
You are going to be spending 10 percent of your income on financial advisory fees?
That is the craziest thing I’ve ever heard…
That's not our income, it's the expected annual spending. We have a very high net worth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Y’all are nuts. Who needs 200k in retirement?
Admittedly planning on owning the house outright, and my work should cover our insurance if I stick around to retirement age. But we are only planning on spending 50k or so in todays dollars and already feel like that’s going to feel lavish. Where are these 200k+ numbers going? Genuine question, I’m trying to figure out if I’m missing something.
Everyone has different plans for retirement. We are expecting to spend about $250K/year after tax in early retirement. That includes budgeting $50K annually for travel, $20K for philanthropy, $35K to run our house even after it's paid (insurance, property taxes, utilities, cleaning service, landscaping, etc), $15K for our country club membership, $25K for financial advisory fees. Obviously, you can do things differently and spend a lot less money depending on your lifestyle.
You are going to be spending 10 percent of your income on financial advisory fees?
That is the craziest thing I’ve ever heard…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Y’all are nuts. Who needs 200k in retirement?
Admittedly planning on owning the house outright, and my work should cover our insurance if I stick around to retirement age. But we are only planning on spending 50k or so in todays dollars and already feel like that’s going to feel lavish. Where are these 200k+ numbers going? Genuine question, I’m trying to figure out if I’m missing something.
Everyone has different plans for retirement. We are expecting to spend about $250K/year after tax in early retirement. That includes budgeting $50K annually for travel, $20K for philanthropy, $35K to run our house even after it's paid (insurance, property taxes, utilities, cleaning service, landscaping, etc), $15K for our country club membership, $25K for financial advisory fees. Obviously, you can do things differently and spend a lot less money depending on your lifestyle.
Anonymous wrote:$150k at ages 57/63.
Anonymous wrote:We are aiming for $175K combined from investment drawdowns, pensions, and SS, for an early retirement (by our mid 40s).
Recently got an EU citizenship, so there is opportunity for some extended geo arbitrage. COL is much lower in much of Europe and QOL is the same or better.
Why work more of our best remaining years away just to get soaked by high taxes on W2 income and likely substantial reduction of SS benefits via means testing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m 61. I retired around a decade ago. My spouse and I live off of a little over $200k a year. We find it very easy to do and want for nothing. Yes, we’re in the DMV.
What are your healthcare costs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Y’all are nuts. Who needs 200k in retirement?
Admittedly planning on owning the house outright, and my work should cover our insurance if I stick around to retirement age. But we are only planning on spending 50k or so in todays dollars and already feel like that’s going to feel lavish. Where are these 200k+ numbers going? Genuine question, I’m trying to figure out if I’m missing something.
Everyone has different plans for retirement. We are expecting to spend about $250K/year after tax in early retirement. That includes budgeting $50K annually for travel, $20K for philanthropy, $35K to run our house even after it's paid (insurance, property taxes, utilities, cleaning service, landscaping, etc), $15K for our country club membership, $25K for financial advisory fees. Obviously, you can do things differently and spend a lot less money depending on your lifestyle.