Aston04 said:
Classic e-p**** thread by op.
Excuse me. The adults are discussing something.
Aston04 said:
Classic e-p**** thread by op.
Old RV Ag said:Trying to make it big in the land of cookie cutter houses. Yikes!infinity ag said:Scotts Tot said:infinity ag said:Scotts Tot said:
I have a hard time understanding how people need so much money to live at a pretty high standard. I live in a decent house in a nice neighborhood in a large city with a wife and 2 kids, take nice trips, eat out, etc, and we spend about $120k/yr. I could easily envision spending $150k or more, but anything over $200k feels pretty splurgy.
Anyone who is unsure if they're able to retire with $15M is either trolling or has issues.
I am looking for a goal to shoot for. $15M seems very safe to me. $10M seems just about right. $5M seems like I am on the edge. I am just curious if the 40+ folks here have a number in mind before they retire.
My friend just moved to Dallas and will retire there in 3 months. He is 57. I didn't ask but he seems comfortable. They just sold their $600k house in my sub-div. Kids settled, one in med school, other working.
Of course $15M feels safe, because that's an incredibly high number. As others here have said, for many people $5M would feel safe (depending on age). Is the $15M number based on any kind of analysis, or just a number that feels good?
It's a number based on where I am now and where I think I can get as a "reach" before I retire assuming nothing catastrophic happens. I am still working on improving my projections and I do it in Google Sheets so I don't lose it. When I discussed the number with some friends who are in the same age/salary range as myself, they said $10M is a better goal to aim for. One friend said "My only goal is to pay off my house". That does me no good as I reached that goal in 2018 and he has the same model house as I have.
infinity ag said:Old RV Ag said:Trying to make it big in the land of cookie cutter houses. Yikes!infinity ag said:Scotts Tot said:infinity ag said:Scotts Tot said:
I have a hard time understanding how people need so much money to live at a pretty high standard. I live in a decent house in a nice neighborhood in a large city with a wife and 2 kids, take nice trips, eat out, etc, and we spend about $120k/yr. I could easily envision spending $150k or more, but anything over $200k feels pretty splurgy.
Anyone who is unsure if they're able to retire with $15M is either trolling or has issues.
I am looking for a goal to shoot for. $15M seems very safe to me. $10M seems just about right. $5M seems like I am on the edge. I am just curious if the 40+ folks here have a number in mind before they retire.
My friend just moved to Dallas and will retire there in 3 months. He is 57. I didn't ask but he seems comfortable. They just sold their $600k house in my sub-div. Kids settled, one in med school, other working.
Of course $15M feels safe, because that's an incredibly high number. As others here have said, for many people $5M would feel safe (depending on age). Is the $15M number based on any kind of analysis, or just a number that feels good?
It's a number based on where I am now and where I think I can get as a "reach" before I retire assuming nothing catastrophic happens. I am still working on improving my projections and I do it in Google Sheets so I don't lose it. When I discussed the number with some friends who are in the same age/salary range as myself, they said $10M is a better goal to aim for. One friend said "My only goal is to pay off my house". That does me no good as I reached that goal in 2018 and he has the same model house as I have.
Well yeah. I live in a sub-div where many models are just like mine. I have nothing to be ashamed off, I paid off my 500k house in 8 years.
PlanoAg98 said:Quote:
The $5,000 you spend in month 1 of a 30 year retirement is going to go a hell of a lot further than the $5,000 you spend in the final month 30 years later.
Hopefully your retirement savings is in some type of conservative funds that will match the yearly cost of living increase.
John Francis Donaghy said:Onceaggie2.0 said:
most americans dont sniff six figure income..OP lying
You sound like you suck at Capitalism.
on the general board.infinity ag said:Aston04 said:
Classic e-p**** thread by op.
Excuse me. The adults are discussing something.
CowtownAg06 said:
If you're talking about downshift into a secondary career, I think anything north of $5M is good at most ages. Big caveat is that $5M of liquid/trading assets, not net worth. If you want to own an second home/land or even look at your home equity, that doesn't count in this calculation.
Exclude the ski chalet and island too.planoaggie123 said:CowtownAg06 said:
If you're talking about downshift into a secondary career, I think anything north of $5M is good at most ages. Big caveat is that $5M of liquid/trading assets, not net worth. If you want to own an second home/land or even look at your home equity, that doesn't count in this calculation.
Just one home in retirement? Do people really live that poorly?
/Texags
Old RV Ag said:infinity ag said:Old RV Ag said:Trying to make it big in the land of cookie cutter houses. Yikes!infinity ag said:Scotts Tot said:infinity ag said:Scotts Tot said:
I have a hard time understanding how people need so much money to live at a pretty high standard. I live in a decent house in a nice neighborhood in a large city with a wife and 2 kids, take nice trips, eat out, etc, and we spend about $120k/yr. I could easily envision spending $150k or more, but anything over $200k feels pretty splurgy.
Anyone who is unsure if they're able to retire with $15M is either trolling or has issues.
I am looking for a goal to shoot for. $15M seems very safe to me. $10M seems just about right. $5M seems like I am on the edge. I am just curious if the 40+ folks here have a number in mind before they retire.
My friend just moved to Dallas and will retire there in 3 months. He is 57. I didn't ask but he seems comfortable. They just sold their $600k house in my sub-div. Kids settled, one in med school, other working.
Of course $15M feels safe, because that's an incredibly high number. As others here have said, for many people $5M would feel safe (depending on age). Is the $15M number based on any kind of analysis, or just a number that feels good?
It's a number based on where I am now and where I think I can get as a "reach" before I retire assuming nothing catastrophic happens. I am still working on improving my projections and I do it in Google Sheets so I don't lose it. When I discussed the number with some friends who are in the same age/salary range as myself, they said $10M is a better goal to aim for. One friend said "My only goal is to pay off my house". That does me no good as I reached that goal in 2018 and he has the same model house as I have.
Well yeah. I live in a sub-div where many models are just like mine. I have nothing to be ashamed off, I paid off my 500k house in 8 years.
Good point!Aston04 said:on the general board.infinity ag said:Aston04 said:
Classic e-p**** thread by op.
Excuse me. The adults are discussing something.
planoaggie123 said:
This is just a tad crazy.
$10M - $15M will have you living well beyond 99.99999% of the world....in retirement.
It honestly cannot be a legit question. It just cant.
CowtownAg06 said:
If you're talking about downshift into a secondary career, I think anything north of $5M is good at most ages. Big caveat is that $5M of liquid/trading assets, not net worth. If you want to own an second home/land or even look at your home equity, that doesn't count in this calculation.
90% of the US probably doesn't even have $15k in cash.planoaggie123 said:
I guess maybe but the initial post was just like "Is $15M enough".
Let's exclude the rest of the world and you are still doing better than 90% of the USA.
IIIHorn said:
And ...
Another thread that reeks of leased BMW's
DuncanLEO said:90% of the US probably doesn't even have $15k in cash.planoaggie123 said:
I guess maybe but the initial post was just like "Is $15M enough".
Let's exclude the rest of the world and you are still doing better than 90% of the USA.
I will say no matter what....these threads make me log into my online accounts and do a quick double check!!infinity ag said:DuncanLEO said:90% of the US probably doesn't even have $15k in cash.planoaggie123 said:
I guess maybe but the initial post was just like "Is $15M enough".
Let's exclude the rest of the world and you are still doing better than 90% of the USA.
If that is so, it is very sad and which is why threads like this are needed so people save for retirement and not mooch off the system.
Scotts Tot said:
One issue I have with shooting for a target that's way higher than your needs is the impact on career planning. Unless you love your job so much that you would rather do it than just about anything else, why shoot for $15M when you could stop at $10M (or much less) and pretty much do whatever you want with the rest of your life?
Say it takes another 10 years of grinding in your career to go from $10M to $15M. That's 10 years you'll never get back, when you could have been engaging in something far more fulfilling than your career, for the sole purpose of making an already-excessive nest egg even bigger. At that point all you're doing is adding to your kids' inheritance.
riverrataggie said:Scotts Tot said:
One issue I have with shooting for a target that's way higher than your needs is the impact on career planning. Unless you love your job so much that you would rather do it than just about anything else, why shoot for $15M when you could stop at $10M (or much less) and pretty much do whatever you want with the rest of your life?
Say it takes another 10 years of grinding in your career to go from $10M to $15M. That's 10 years you'll never get back, when you could have been engaging in something far more fulfilling than your career, for the sole purpose of making an already-excessive nest egg even bigger. At that point all you're doing is adding to your kids' inheritance.
Best advice anyone can give. Reason I want to be 45 with 5M and no debt. I'll continue to work no doubt but having FU money and FU mentality is a dream I look forward too
Don't forget to live and enjoy life now. You may never reach 75.infinity ag said:planoaggie123 said:
This is just a tad crazy.
$10M - $15M will have you living well beyond 99.99999% of the world....in retirement.
It honestly cannot be a legit question. It just cant.
It's not.
One cannot compare oneself to someone in Sudan or Pakistan and be happy that one is doing better than them. The question is more like how much do we need to have before one drops one's job and can live the same lifestyle until one dies while doing things like travel and others while also paying for optional obligations like kid's college and other things.
Topic came up again with the friend yesterday (same guy who has the same model house as me) on our 5 mile walk in the evening. He said $2M and he would be happy. I think that is not enough. He said he would not mind moving back to his town house. That I don't want to do. I am also deathly scared of finding out at 75 that I am running out of money so I would rather be CLEAR over the finish line if possible.
It seems to me now that $10M should be good. Probably a better way of figuring out is to only look at one's liquid assets and use that to figure out how much one needs. House value cannot be used to live off.
Quote:
It seems to me now that $10M should be good. Probably a better way of figuring out is to only look at one's liquid assets and use that to figure out how much one needs. House value cannot be used to live off.
IIIHorn said:
And ...
Another thread that reeks of leased BMW's
Old RV Ag said:Don't forget to live and enjoy life now. You may never reach 75.infinity ag said:planoaggie123 said:
This is just a tad crazy.
$10M - $15M will have you living well beyond 99.99999% of the world....in retirement.
It honestly cannot be a legit question. It just cant.
It's not.
One cannot compare oneself to someone in Sudan or Pakistan and be happy that one is doing better than them. The question is more like how much do we need to have before one drops one's job and can live the same lifestyle until one dies while doing things like travel and others while also paying for optional obligations like kid's college and other things.
Topic came up again with the friend yesterday (same guy who has the same model house as me) on our 5 mile walk in the evening. He said $2M and he would be happy. I think that is not enough. He said he would not mind moving back to his town house. That I don't want to do. I am also deathly scared of finding out at 75 that I am running out of money so I would rather be CLEAR over the finish line if possible.
It seems to me now that $10M should be good. Probably a better way of figuring out is to only look at one's liquid assets and use that to figure out how much one needs. House value cannot be used to live off.
Yes, you will need $15 million for future repairs.infinity ag said:IIIHorn said:
And ...
Another thread that reeks of leased BMW's
I have a BMW but I bought it in 2014 on loan and paid if off by Aug 2015 :-)
Still have the car and it's running well.
Never leased a car, don't think I will.
It's not. 10-15 million can be VERY conservatively invested into a multi-6 figure income per without touching the principal. Ex) 10 million times 2% = $200,000 per year.planoaggie123 said:
This is just a tad crazy.
$10M - $15M will have you living well beyond 99.99999% of the world....in retirement.
It honestly cannot be a legit question. It just cant.
canagian said:
according to the google...
lotsofhp said:
The humble brag threads used to be way more subtle than this BS