Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Around age 44 for first million and now around $2.5M at age 49. DH is big law partner.
about $500K in home equity
$700K in 401k & IRAs
$100K in 529s
$1.4M in more liquid accounts - checking, savings, CDs, mutual funds, bonds (getting ready to buy new house)
How did you double that in 5 years? And, what is your HHI now (if you don't mind sharing)? We're at 44 with first million.
Anonymous wrote:Around age 44 for first million and now around $2.5M at age 49. DH is big law partner.
about $500K in home equity
$700K in 401k & IRAs
$100K in 529s
$1.4M in more liquid accounts - checking, savings, CDs, mutual funds, bonds (getting ready to buy new house)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For me it was a combination of high income (>200k at 22 yo) and low expenses (still was living in my college shared apartment), a little luck in investments and maxing out everything I could. Now 32, looking to cross $1.2M this month.
IT?
Nope. It was investment banking. Had I stayed, I'd be making big law partner type money right now, but the entire experience was pretty miserable.
Curious: are investment banker hours the same crazy as big law hours for the big money makers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For me it was a combination of high income (>200k at 22 yo) and low expenses (still was living in my college shared apartment), a little luck in investments and maxing out everything I could. Now 32, looking to cross $1.2M this month.
IT?
Nope. It was investment banking. Had I stayed, I'd be making big law partner type money right now, but the entire experience was pretty miserable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is very informative for me, although this is far from a fair statistical study.
I would have guessed that many/most people would cross that threshold in their 50s as their income peaks, they pay off their mortgage and the kids move "off the books."
Instead, it seem like most people who make it to the $1 million level do it in their 30s. If you don't make it, maybe the way to do is to have a steep trajectory rather than counting on a slow and steady climb.
I wonder how much of it is that those who start saving in their 401(k)s at the start of their career never miss having the money and hence contribute the max allowed each year? If you start saving at 30, you'd miss the money more than someone who always saved for retirement. And let's not discount the power of compounding...
That said, that's just looking at 401(k). Seems most folks here have a combination of 401(k) funds with home equity and extra investments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For me it was a combination of high income (>200k at 22 yo) and low expenses (still was living in my college shared apartment), a little luck in investments and maxing out everything I could. Now 32, looking to cross $1.2M this month.
IT?
Anonymous wrote:why would someone in I.T. make over $200K at age 22?
Anonymous wrote:why would someone in I.T. make over $200K at age 22?