Millionaires next door.
now just wait a second!JDCAG (NOT Colin) said:ea1060 said:Depends on what your definition of middle class life is. Im about to have a million net worth in my mid 30's working for the man. If I maintain my savings/investment rate then I will likely have $5+MM by the time I retire. Not super wealthy, but thats a pretty good retirement. Im actually shooting for $10MM, but will probably land somewhere in the middle of $5MM-10MM. .Dan Scott said:
This countries tax code and economic system benefits investors and entrepreneurs. You can't make it big working for somebody. You can have a nice middle class life but that's it.
A lot of my friends and coworkers are in the same boat as me. Ive had bosses retire with $10-20+MM in the bank.
Its not hard: make a good income, save/invest a high percentage of your income. You should be a millionaire in ten years by doing this. And yes, this is very achievable by working for somebody.
This feels a bit TexAgs B&I board to me.
$1M in 10 years is roughly $6k/month at 8% annually.
To the average person, putting away $6k/month isn't "easy". To many, seeing $6k/month after taxes isn't easy.
It sounds like you've made some great choices and have a great plan in place, but this board is often way too quick to assume things that really only apply to a small subset of people.
That's not to say that folks generally prioritize the right things or make good decisions - just to say that there is often a middle ground between the people yelling out "this is impossible" and saying it is "easy" to accumulate $1M in 10 years.
Well that's the difference between a multimillionaire and a millionaire.....Hungry Ojos said:
Yeah, I mean, let's say someone has $20k in cash, $100,000 in retirement/investment accounts and $900k in home equity.
Versus a guy who has $175k in cash, $1.5 million in retirement/investment accounts and $900k in home equity.
To call them both "millionaires" seems off.
Hungry Ojos said:
Yeah, I mean, let's say someone has $20k in cash, $100,000 in retirement/investment accounts and $900k in home equity. This guy/gal is a millionaire.
Versus a guy who has $175k in cash, $1.5 million in retirement/investment accounts and $900k in home equity. This guy/gal is a millionaires.
To call them both "millionaires" seems off.
Also, if we don't factor in home equity for net worth, would we also throw out mortgage debt in the argument? Or just zero it out as long as you aren't underwater?htxag09 said:Well that's the difference between a multimillionaire and a millionaire.....Hungry Ojos said:
Yeah, I mean, let's say someone has $20k in cash, $100,000 in retirement/investment accounts and $900k in home equity.
Versus a guy who has $175k in cash, $1.5 million in retirement/investment accounts and $900k in home equity.
To call them both "millionaires" seems off.
More ample comparison would be $20k cash, $100K in retirement/investments, and $900k in home equity vs. $20k cash, $900k in retirement/investments, and $100k in home equity.
They're both millionaires. Millionaire doesn't mean you're set for retirement....
Personally, if looking at networth I include home equity. When looking at retirement I only look at my retirement and earmarked investment accounts.
You are in the top 1-2% of the country.Medaggie said:
Given inflation, cost of living, more stuff to spend money on...... a millionaire today is essentially lower to middle class.
I am in the 5-10M range and do not feel super rich more like upper middle.
Medaggie said:
Given inflation, cost of living, more stuff to spend money on...... a millionaire today is essentially lower to middle class.
I am in the 5-10M range and do not feel super rich more like upper middle.
Medaggie said:
Given inflation, cost of living, more stuff to spend money on...... a millionaire today is essentially lower to middle class.
I am in the 5-10M range and do not feel super rich more like upper middle.
5 million would give me somewhere in the range of 200k/yr in retirement. With a paid for house and kids grown, I would have to work really hard to spend that much money.Medaggie said:
Given inflation, cost of living, more stuff to spend money on...... a millionaire today is essentially lower to middle class.
I am in the 5-10M range and do not feel super rich more like upper middle.
Brian Earl Spilner said:
It amazes me how some people can be so idiotic.
https://www.marketwatch.com/picks/im-paycheck-to-paycheck-i-make-350k-a-year-but-have-88k-in-student-loans-170k-in-car-loans-and-a-mortgage-i-pay-4-500-a-month-on-do-i-need-professional-help-01664544530
$350k income and still living paycheck to paycheck is only possible by being completely financially inept.
$170k in car loans, $4.5k/month mortgage, and they write up a woe is me story expecting people to feel sorry for them?
Brian Earl Spilner said:
It amazes me how some people can be so idiotic.
https://www.marketwatch.com/picks/im-paycheck-to-paycheck-i-make-350k-a-year-but-have-88k-in-student-loans-170k-in-car-loans-and-a-mortgage-i-pay-4-500-a-month-on-do-i-need-professional-help-01664544530
$350k income and still living paycheck to paycheck is only possible by being completely financially inept.
$170k in car loans, $4.5k/month mortgage, and they write up a woe is me story expecting people to feel sorry for them?