Anonymous wrote:51 and 52 year old. $5.1 million current net worth. Doesn't include $60K/year planned pension.
Anonymous wrote:It goes up substantially as you age. My SIL/BIL were paying over $30k a few years ago for that same silver plan in Richmond. They are now old enough, thankfully, for Medicare.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We retired in our 40s. Since we still had youngish kids, I (the mom), seemlessly blended in with the SAHMs. No one bats an eye. I fill my time with tons of volunteering (even virtually and locally in my community), doing things for my kids and hobbies for myself. I read. I take courses.
A small part of me misses work but that part is very small.
I'm with you, sister. I don't miss work one iota.
In my 30s following this thread -- this is my plan, or at least would like this option, for 40s! What was your net worth when you pulled the trigger?
I can't remember exactly, but I'm gonna say about $4 million. Maybe a little bit more. I was 52. Kids were already out of college and fully launched, and I had continued access to my employer's group health insurance plan (provided I pay the full premium, obviously), so I felt pretty good.
I’m the italicized poster. We had about $8,000,000 when one of us retired. We had $20,000,000 when the other one retired (due to a large inheritance). Health insurance is brutal (almost $6,000 a month) for a PPO for the four of us.
I'm the one who retired at 52. $6000 for a PPO is a lot. We're paying $1300 for the two of us. But you can afford it!
There is a single (1) place to get a PPO in VA if you can’t get it from employment. It’s from Carefirst. They offer a gold or a silver plan. We have the cheaper silver plan. There are zero other PPO options. We could go with a cheaper hmo but I don’t want to do that and figure why should I change my doctors when I have the money not to? The downside to retiring early is that insurance, for us, is extremely expensive. To be fair, it’s around $5,600. Not quite $6,000.
It goes up substantially as you age. My SIL/BIL were paying over $30k a few years ago for that same silver plan in Richmond. They are now old enough, thankfully, for Medicare.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We retired in our 40s. Since we still had youngish kids, I (the mom), seemlessly blended in with the SAHMs. No one bats an eye. I fill my time with tons of volunteering (even virtually and locally in my community), doing things for my kids and hobbies for myself. I read. I take courses.
A small part of me misses work but that part is very small.
I'm with you, sister. I don't miss work one iota.
In my 30s following this thread -- this is my plan, or at least would like this option, for 40s! What was your net worth when you pulled the trigger?
I can't remember exactly, but I'm gonna say about $4 million. Maybe a little bit more. I was 52. Kids were already out of college and fully launched, and I had continued access to my employer's group health insurance plan (provided I pay the full premium, obviously), so I felt pretty good.
I’m the italicized poster. We had about $8,000,000 when one of us retired. We had $20,000,000 when the other one retired (due to a large inheritance). Health insurance is brutal (almost $6,000 a month) for a PPO for the four of us.
I'm the one who retired at 52. $6000 for a PPO is a lot. We're paying $1300 for the two of us. But you can afford it!
There is a single (1) place to get a PPO in VA if you can’t get it from employment. It’s from Carefirst. They offer a gold or a silver plan. We have the cheaper silver plan. There are zero other PPO options. We could go with a cheaper hmo but I don’t want to do that and figure why should I change my doctors when I have the money not to? The downside to retiring early is that insurance, for us, is extremely expensive. To be fair, it’s around $5,600. Not quite $6,000.
Anonymous wrote:Are there a lot of people reading but not posting because they're as psyched out by these numbers as I am?
53 years old with husband in 60s and total net worth including 529s and everything else is only $1.4M. We'll have one tiny pension bringing in $20K annually and whatever the top rate is for SS. I never realized how poor we were until I read this.
Anonymous wrote:52 years old.
Started working again after SAHM 9 years ago where I had $0.
After divorce settlement, real estate is worth about 1M (I really had to fight for this).
Pension/401 122K.
529s for 2 kids 83K.
Cash 21K.
No mortgage, no debt.
I let him keep all the jewelry and art.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. My sister thought she would work into her 60s - she did and passed at 67. Many such cases among family and friends. Also I see a lot of my patients deteriorate in health (some of you will recognize my posts) in their 60s. It's sudden. No dog in this fight. But think twice before making any decision and don't count on continued good health even if you are hale and hearty in your 40s or 50s.
Your point being what? Don't work any longer than you have to?
I am wondering the same thing. There is no one size fits all here. It seems everyone is giving advice solely based on their own lens. To be expected, yes, but most stating as if it is fact across the board.
NP. The PP was sharing his experience, not directing you to stop working at a certain age. Why getting all prickly?? Chill, dudes..
.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. My sister thought she would work into her 60s - she did and passed at 67. Many such cases among family and friends. Also I see a lot of my patients deteriorate in health (some of you will recognize my posts) in their 60s. It's sudden. No dog in this fight. But think twice before making any decision and don't count on continued good health even if you are hale and hearty in your 40s or 50s.
Your point being what? Don't work any longer than you have to?
I am wondering the same thing. There is no one size fits all here. It seems everyone is giving advice solely based on their own lens. To be expected, yes, but most stating as if it is fact across the board.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. A lot of you folks have a lot of $ saved up. I've been saving for a new roof for about 5 years. Not there yet. Age 52.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. My sister thought she would work into her 60s - she did and passed at 67. Many such cases among family and friends. Also I see a lot of my patients deteriorate in health (some of you will recognize my posts) in their 60s. It's sudden. No dog in this fight. But think twice before making any decision and don't count on continued good health even if you are hale and hearty in your 40s or 50s.
Your point being what? Don't work any longer than you have to?
Anonymous wrote:NP. My sister thought she would work into her 60s - she did and passed at 67. Many such cases among family and friends. Also I see a lot of my patients deteriorate in health (some of you will recognize my posts) in their 60s. It's sudden. No dog in this fight. But think twice before making any decision and don't count on continued good health even if you are hale and hearty in your 40s or 50s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We retired in our 40s. Since we still had youngish kids, I (the mom), seemlessly blended in with the SAHMs. No one bats an eye. I fill my time with tons of volunteering (even virtually and locally in my community), doing things for my kids and hobbies for myself. I read. I take courses.
A small part of me misses work but that part is very small.
I'm with you, sister. I don't miss work one iota.
In my 30s following this thread -- this is my plan, or at least would like this option, for 40s! What was your net worth when you pulled the trigger?
I can't remember exactly, but I'm gonna say about $4 million. Maybe a little bit more. I was 52. Kids were already out of college and fully launched, and I had continued access to my employer's group health insurance plan (provided I pay the full premium, obviously), so I felt pretty good.
I’m the italicized poster. We had about $8,000,000 when one of us retired. We had $20,000,000 when the other one retired (due to a large inheritance). Health insurance is brutal (almost $6,000 a month) for a PPO for the four of us.
I'm the one who retired at 52. $6000 for a PPO is a lot. We're paying $1300 for the two of us. But you can afford it!