Anonymous wrote:No one at $5M-10M stays there. In ten years they will have 2x the amount. It’s plenty to enjoy life, travel first class if you want, eat well, enjoy experiences, etc. $30M just gets the super nice second home and some chartered private jets but it isn’t a remarkable difference in lifestyle, especially if focused on preserving the wealth for future generations as opposed to spending it. You won’t Own a Jet for example…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have to admit that we are at $5M and related to the dark humor from this scene in Succession.
We know we're in good shape, especially in our 30s, but we don't feel like $5M is enough to retire on and are still ambitious to achieve more in our careers and financially.
Part of this is because we are in a VHCOL where we hope to stay, and our current net worth and salary barely gets us an old condo that needs a lot of updates. We're also in a high achieving peer group from college and work, and we feel just average among (successful!) peers. Rich people problems, I know.
This isn't part of it. It's all of it.
5-10 million is objectively enough tho set yourself up for life, set your kids up, never have to worry about money again. If my DH and I had 5 million, he'd quit his job (which he hates) and get a job working less than full time doing something he enjoys (he knows what it would be, it's a low paying but rewarding career). I would continue in my job, which I like. We'd invest thoughtfully to ensure income. We'd upgrade our home, but not to a mansion -- we'd buy one of the 1-1.2m homes in our desired neighborhood that we cannot quite afford now, or potentially buy something cheaper and renovate. We only have one kid and have no desire for a huge house.
We'd make some small lifestyle upgrades (regular house cleaners, slightly nicer vacations, buy some items we now deem too pricy for us like an electric vehicle) but would not vastly overhaul our lifestyle. We'd still cook at home a lot, because we like to (though it would be thrilling not to worry about budgeting for groceries and to have a nicer kitchen to cook in). We would not change our friends, who now vary from MC to UMC and where incomes probably top out around 500k (and most well below that).
Kid might go to private school -- we could afford it on that income but we are aware it could change our peer set and our kid's peer set, so we'd really think hard about it. I could see us sending her to a private that is more UMC crunchy liberal families than super rich. But I could also see us just staying in public, especially if we could afford to ensure we were in bound for high quality public schools.
If 5-10m is "a nightmare" to you, that's entirely because of your peer group, personal ambition, and values. It's objectively "enough" money for most things that matter to most people. But if you belong to the subset of people for whom "owning a private jet" matters, then I'm not really sure any amount of money will ever make you happy. Good luck.
You can't even afford to do the lifestyle upgrades you want retiring with a net worth of $5M. $50K/per year/per kid for private is 10% of your entire NW. Are you sure you're not confusing NW with HHI?
Anonymous wrote:It all depends. DH and I are dual lifetime gs-15 feds and will retire around 60 with an annual pension of about 150,000 per year plus whatever social Security adds to that. We have a net worth of around 4.5 million now (7 million including equity in two houses) and we will inherit 5 million from one set of parents, putting us pretty squarely in this zone. We aren’t big spenders and my kids all understand that they don’t stand to inherit the way I will, but DH and I feel like we are in pretty good shape. The pension helps because we have no mortgage and our annual expenses outside of kids’ education and enrichment is less than $100,000 a year in primarily travel, entertainment, and home costs. But no, I don’t feel too badly for myself and I certainly wouldn’t want to have less money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:5M is enough to retire and have a $200k a year lifestyle without working.
Its not enough to have a $1M a year HHI lifestyle.
And this is the key. If you spend 150-200 k a year then you are in good shape. If you spend 500-600k it is not enough. All depends on spend level. Could someone be fine on 150-200k -- of course. But if that is not what they have done cutting back does not make a lot of sense unless you are at the end of your earning potential.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I relate to this. We’re at around $9mm net worth (not including our house, which is $5mm but only $2.5mm equity) and we don’t feel like it’s close to enough to retire, and we don’t live a super luxurious lifestyle. We’re mid-30s and live in a VHCOL city, which I think makes a difference. We plan to retire a little on the earlier side - maybe early 50s? - but when I hear about wealthy people buying fancy cars and designer clothes, I don’t consider myself “one of them.” I know I’ll get absolutely roasted for saying I don’t consider us rich, but there probably isn’t much of a difference between my lifestyle and most people who post here.
You could buy a lot of fancy car and designer clothes if you weren't living in a $5M house with $2.5M left to pay off. And you're only in your mid-30s?
You should get roasted.
Anonymous wrote:5M is enough to retire and have a $200k a year lifestyle without working.
Its not enough to have a $1M a year HHI lifestyle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have to admit that we are at $5M and related to the dark humor from this scene in Succession.
We know we're in good shape, especially in our 30s, but we don't feel like $5M is enough to retire on and are still ambitious to achieve more in our careers and financially.
Part of this is because we are in a VHCOL where we hope to stay, and our current net worth and salary barely gets us an old condo that needs a lot of updates. We're also in a high achieving peer group from college and work, and we feel just average among (successful!) peers. Rich people problems, I know.
This isn't part of it. It's all of it.
5-10 million is objectively enough tho set yourself up for life, set your kids up, never have to worry about money again. If my DH and I had 5 million, he'd quit his job (which he hates) and get a job working less than full time doing something he enjoys (he knows what it would be, it's a low paying but rewarding career). I would continue in my job, which I like. We'd invest thoughtfully to ensure income. We'd upgrade our home, but not to a mansion -- we'd buy one of the 1-1.2m homes in our desired neighborhood that we cannot quite afford now, or potentially buy something cheaper and renovate. We only have one kid and have no desire for a huge house.
We'd make some small lifestyle upgrades (regular house cleaners, slightly nicer vacations, buy some items we now deem too pricy for us like an electric vehicle) but would not vastly overhaul our lifestyle. We'd still cook at home a lot, because we like to (though it would be thrilling not to worry about budgeting for groceries and to have a nicer kitchen to cook in). We would not change our friends, who now vary from MC to UMC and where incomes probably top out around 500k (and most well below that).
Kid might go to private school -- we could afford it on that income but we are aware it could change our peer set and our kid's peer set, so we'd really think hard about it. I could see us sending her to a private that is more UMC crunchy liberal families than super rich. But I could also see us just staying in public, especially if we could afford to ensure we were in bound for high quality public schools.
If 5-10m is "a nightmare" to you, that's entirely because of your peer group, personal ambition, and values. It's objectively "enough" money for most things that matter to most people. But if you belong to the subset of people for whom "owning a private jet" matters, then I'm not really sure any amount of money will ever make you happy. Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:I relate to this. We’re at around $9mm net worth (not including our house, which is $5mm but only $2.5mm equity) and we don’t feel like it’s close to enough to retire, and we don’t live a super luxurious lifestyle. We’re mid-30s and live in a VHCOL city, which I think makes a difference. We plan to retire a little on the earlier side - maybe early 50s? - but when I hear about wealthy people buying fancy cars and designer clothes, I don’t consider myself “one of them.” I know I’ll get absolutely roasted for saying I don’t consider us rich, but there probably isn’t much of a difference between my lifestyle and most people who post here.
Anonymous wrote:I’m the early retired big law partner above. It worked for us because we got married young, had kids (four) young, avoided the private school money pit, and lived well within our means when I was making good money. When our youngest was late into their college years (UVA) the light was very clear at the other end of the tunnel so I decided to quit messing around and just walked away.
When you’re not paying for the kids’ educations, have a nice chunk of equity in your house after years of ownership, and no longer saving for retirement $200k to $250k goes a surprisingly long way. We have a nice house in the city, a nice house in the country, and a rental property in a desirable part of the DMV. We travel extensively and well - not luxuriously, but well - and don’t want for much of anything. And, as I said, our net worth has actually almost doubled in the last decade despite neither one of us working. The key to really is to live below your means when making good money. We never lived like millionaires even when we were actually making (close to) that amount of money, so we didn’t have to change our lifestyle at all once we stopped pulling that kind of money in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It all depends. DH and I are dual lifetime gs-15 feds and will retire around 60 with an annual pension of about 150,000 per year plus whatever social Security adds to that. We have a net worth of around 4.5 million now (7 million including equity in two houses) and we will inherit 5 million from one set of parents, putting us pretty squarely in this zone. We aren’t big spenders and my kids all understand that they don’t stand to inherit the way I will, but DH and I feel like we are in pretty good shape. The pension helps because we have no mortgage and our annual expenses outside of kids’ education and enrichment is less than $100,000 a year in primarily travel, entertainment, and home costs. But no, I don’t feel too badly for myself and I certainly wouldn’t want to have less money.
$12m and the pension “helps”? Poor poor you.