Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:2x
40
Don't know. Want to be able to retire at 55 or so.
I don't know how on earth some of these multiples are possible unless people had a windfall (maybe in real estate) or a big inheritance.
we're at about 14 times. Includes an inheritance (not huge), and significant home equity. In 40s so had the benefit of years of investing. But we also currently have a relatively low HHI (for dcum not for the real world), so our overall number is probably lower than most here.
Anonymous wrote:
Multiple of income is only relevant if one's standard of living requires a significant portion of the annual HHI. If one makes $2mm/year but only lives on $200K/year, then aiming for an arbitrary multiple of annual HHI will only distort the actual calculation of when accumulated savings are sufficient to fully fund retirement.
Anonymous wrote:Why? We only live once might as well enjoy it. If kids are set for life why not by the sports car, use the netjets card, lease the skybox, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:~2x
37
45
Multiple of income is only relevant if one's standard of living requires a significant portion of the annual HHI. If one makes $2mm/year but only lives on $200K/year, then aiming for an arbitrary multiple of annual HHI will only distort the actual calculation of when accumulated savings are sufficient to fully fund retirement.
Most people spend everything they don't put away for retirement though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:~2x
37
45
Multiple of income is only relevant if one's standard of living requires a significant portion of the annual HHI. If one makes $2mm/year but only lives on $200K/year, then aiming for an arbitrary multiple of annual HHI will only distort the actual calculation of when accumulated savings are sufficient to fully fund retirement.
Most people spend everything they don't put away for retirement though.
Anonymous wrote:~2x
37
45
Multiple of income is only relevant if one's standard of living requires a significant portion of the annual HHI. If one makes $2mm/year but only lives on $200K/year, then aiming for an arbitrary multiple of annual HHI will only distort the actual calculation of when accumulated savings are sufficient to fully fund retirement.