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.
DCUM retirees need it.
They need to pay private school and college tuitions for the grandkids. Pay for they children’s weddings, put the down payments on children’s homes.
You can’t do that on 50k.
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.
Anonymous wrote:Also, I haven’t included social security which is an extra 3-4K a month, so that probably bumps up the annual retirement income past $150k.
Finally, no inheritance factored in, but we may also receive something there, for either/both sides.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Husband and I are 53 and 50. We make about $250k combined. A few years ago it was more like $150k.
We have about 1.7m in savings, and about 600k in equity on a $1m house.
Our goal is 3.5m, with the house paid off and the two kids done with college. (We have separate 529s for that). That gives us about $125k a year.
Approximately early 60s retirement. The wildcard for us is no healthcare (neither of us is fed) so we may not be able to retire u til 65 depending on the cost of private care and our health in 10 years.
It boggles my mind how people save so much, afford such an expensive home, and pay off two kids’ college expenses on a $150k HHI. The math doesn’t work for me unless you are literally eating Ramen and tuna fish every night, take no vacations or have a lot of help from your parents.
Anonymous wrote: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.
What about the other $100K in the budget?
Kind of sad to spend more on the empty part of a giant house than on philanthropy. With $50K/yr travel, are you even at home(s) more than half the year?
We live in DC, and our house isn't giant - 2,000 square feet plus a finished basement. Property taxes are $12,000 a year, our utilities, cable, phone and internet are $7,500. Landscaping is $4,000. Cleaning is $6,000. Insurance is $4,000.
We'd like to travel comfortably in retirement, especially when we're older, and pay for our kids to join us. $50K means we would be away from our "giant" home maybe a month a year.
For philanthropy, this number is outside what we've already contributed to endowed funds and donor advised funds/foundations. To get $250,000 in income, we'd pay $125,000 in taxes with current rates so I'm pretty comfortable with our contributions to society.
Other big ticket items for us are insurance premiums and medical care - that's through my husband's current employer ($12K), a nice car and insurance ($8K), dining out and entertaining ($25K), groceries/house supplies, personal care ($20K). It all adds up! And yes, you can obviously live on way less, but the OP wanted to know projections in the area. I don't think our numbers are out of range for a HCOL comfortable retirement.
What's your net worth outside of primary residence?
About 10, not including property we currently own or will inherit.
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.
What about the other $100K in the budget?
Kind of sad to spend more on the empty part of a giant house than on philanthropy. With $50K/yr travel, are you even at home(s) more than half the year?
We live in DC, and our house isn't giant - 2,000 square feet plus a finished basement. Property taxes are $12,000 a year, our utilities, cable, phone and internet are $7,500. Landscaping is $4,000. Cleaning is $6,000. Insurance is $4,000.
We'd like to travel comfortably in retirement, especially when we're older, and pay for our kids to join us. $50K means we would be away from our "giant" home maybe a month a year.
For philanthropy, this number is outside what we've already contributed to endowed funds and donor advised funds/foundations. To get $250,000 in income, we'd pay $125,000 in taxes with current rates so I'm pretty comfortable with our contributions to society.
Other big ticket items for us are insurance premiums and medical care - that's through my husband's current employer ($12K), a nice car and insurance ($8K), dining out and entertaining ($25K), groceries/house supplies, personal care ($20K). It all adds up! And yes, you can obviously live on way less, but the OP wanted to know projections in the area. I don't think our numbers are out of range for a HCOL comfortable retirement.
What's your net worth outside of primary residence?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Husband and I are 53 and 50. We make about $250k combined. A few years ago it was more like $150k.
We have about 1.7m in savings, and about 600k in equity on a $1m house.
Our goal is 3.5m, with the house paid off and the two kids done with college. (We have separate 529s for that). That gives us about $125k a year.
Approximately early 60s retirement. The wildcard for us is no healthcare (neither of us is fed) so we may not be able to retire u til 65 depending on the cost of private care and our health in 10 years.
At first I thought this was us! Except the ages are a little off. And our savings amount is more like $1.4M with a goal of $2M by retirement at 62. House and college are the same. But one of us is a fed, so we have the health insurance option and we have the pension, so we hope to approach $200K in 2023 dollars.
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.
What about the other $100K in the budget?
Kind of sad to spend more on the empty part of a giant house than on philanthropy. With $50K/yr travel, are you even at home(s) more than half the year?
We live in DC, and our house isn't giant - 2,000 square feet plus a finished basement. Property taxes are $12,000 a year, our utilities, cable, phone and internet are $7,500. Landscaping is $4,000. Cleaning is $6,000. Insurance is $4,000.
We'd like to travel comfortably in retirement, especially when we're older, and pay for our kids to join us. $50K means we would be away from our "giant" home maybe a month a year.
For philanthropy, this number is outside what we've already contributed to endowed funds and donor advised funds/foundations. To get $250,000 in income, we'd pay $125,000 in taxes with current rates so I'm pretty comfortable with our contributions to society.
Other big ticket items for us are insurance premiums and medical care - that's through my husband's current employer ($12K), a nice car and insurance ($8K), dining out and entertaining ($25K), groceries/house supplies, personal care ($20K). It all adds up! And yes, you can obviously live on way less, but the OP wanted to know projections in the area. I don't think our numbers are out of range for a HCOL comfortable retirement.