Countdown to retirement

wannabee

DIS Veteran
Joined
Jun 8, 2005
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701
DH and I are planning to retire at the end of 2027. Three years that I'm sure will go fast but feels so far away. My job is stressful but I make a good salary. Anyone else counting down the days? What did you do to help pass the time? Not wanting to wish my life away but so tired of the corporate crap. Anyone in the same place as me?
 
Yup, I'm retiring in September 2026. I'm old enough now but my mortgage and home equity loan rule otherwise! Every Single Day I wonder how I'm going to go another two years! I have a friend who was killed in a car accident last week, and more and more I wonder if the extra social security money for holding on until I'm 70 is really worth it.
 
DH and I are planning to retire at the end of 2027. Three years that I'm sure will go fast but feels so far away. My job is stressful but I make a good salary. Anyone else counting down the days? What did you do to help pass the time? Not wanting to wish my life away but so tired of the corporate crap. Anyone in the same place as me?
I've been counting down for 20 years, lol.
I'm getting to the home stretch, but tbh the thought of no income stresses me out.
 

We retired three years ago. I was 64, my wife was four months from her 64th birthday.
Really the countdown for us was the last 10 years of work. Started with deciding whether to down size, or remodel our house. We decided to remodel, and we did that 8 years before we retired. Our house was 34 years old at the time, we had lived in it 30 of those years. It was exactly as built. We remodeled the bathrooms, the kitchen, replaced all the flooring, and doors, removed the popcorn ceilings, and put a new roof on. We set aside money for a new HVAC and water heater. Water heater died six months before we retired and the HVAC six months after.

A big concern was health insurance as we would not be old enough for Medicare yet. Our original game plan was to buy private insurance, and we budgeted for that based on what it cost before the Affordable Healthcare Act went into effect. Not a very accurate name as it has really made healthcare insurance unaffordable IF you don't qualify for subsidies. We don't. (The Affordable Healthcare act however has been a life saver for those who previously did not have access to health insurance) So that pushed back our retirement to 18 months before we qualified for Medicare because we would be using COBRA coverage from my wife's work. Early on in our planning, private health insurance was cheaper that COBRA coverage, that flipped after the AHA passed.

Three years before we retired bought our retirement car, the plan being it would be paid off when we retired and that it would last the rest of our lives. We are easy on cars, and the car it replaced we had 31 years, so that is a realistic expectation.. We had it paid off in 2 years, and then decided we were comfortable taking on a car payment in retirement, so we replaced our second car with a new one. That old car was a little over 20 years old and had close to 160,000 miles on it and in good shape, but this way we have two cars that will likely last the rest of our lives. And our first retirement car is a seven passenger Ford Flex suv that is perfect for the 400 mile trips to see our Granddaughters, with room for them and their stuff. Our other car is a Toyota Camry Hybrid, perfect for running around town and trips that my wife and I go on by ourselves.

And the final consideration, and biggest,....... income in retirement. We were private sector workers, where pensions are rare. Although I did discover AFTER I retired that I did in fact have a pension. But $28 a month doesn't go very far. We waited until this year to start our Social Security. We both hit our full retirement age of 66 1/2 this year. So our Financial Planner focused on our 401k/IRA money. My wife maxed out her 401K for 40 years. I had a rollover IRA from my first job that I worked in for 10 years, an IRA rollover from my second job that I maxed out for 16 years, and an IRA rollover from my last job 401k that I maxed out. We designed that last rollover as our source of income. It covered all the bills for 3 years, and has now been depleted. It ran out just as our Social Security kicked in. And our combined Social Security is $2,500 a month more than we were living on the past three years, so we have breathing room now. Reading some of the other posts, I forgot about mortgages. We have been in our house 41 years, and it has been paid for for 25 years. Refinanced twice with the goal of paying off the house as soon as possible. A 15 year mortgage made that possible

So the top priorities for us before retiring was to make sure you have adequate money, health insurance and transportation in retirement.
 
4700 or so calendar days left for me.

That should work out to about 2950 work days to go.
 
I'm just trying to stay busy and not stress too much about work. After a particularly stressful week, I purchased an annual pass and have 4 disney trips scheduled from April 25 to April 26. Then I will have just over a year and a half left. Also, working on being healthier in general. Trying to eat better and do more exercise. Love to hear what others are doing to get thru those tough last years of work.
 
I will be eligible to retire with a pension (55 with 21 years) at the end of this school year. I'm considering one more year (gotta call & compare how it'll affect the numbers). DH has been retired for 2.5 years now with two pensions plus social security. We've had the mortgage paid off, no debt, savings, making home repairs (new roof, gutters, painting, etc.) DH has Medicare/Tricare for life and I still have Tricare Prime. I've had us on a retirement "budget" for about 4 years now.
I feel myself getting more receptive to the idea of retirement by the day. :hourglass
 
19 working days. I'm 55 and see no reason to work longer. If I get bored I can always change my mind.
2 years into retirement my wife got a part time temporary job offer from her former employer, basically to preserve all the work she had done for 40 years digitally. She figured if she didn't like it, she could quit 10 months into what was projected to be a 6 month project she retired again a few weeks ago. She accomplished 90% of what she set out to do, but due to circumstances beyond anyone's control, the last portion will probably take a year. She wasn't sticking around that long. And they have taken on additional projects that she had no interest in. Retirement was more interesting.
 
My husband had a job with some pension and the ability to keep health care benefits reasonably, so he retired the minute he was eligible at 56. Even then, he counted down! I was planning on working longer because I took a bunch of years off with kids but had ended up retiring early too to care for elderly parents. For us the decision was based on working and reworking the numbers to see if it worked - and the minute we were really confident it did we were out! (We were fortunate with a modest paid off home, some pension money, investments, etc. that made it possible.)

When I say working and reworking the numbers - we were obsessed and still are. I keep a budget. We know all our numbers. On any given day I could probably accurately recite our entire financial picture. (I say that because I'm sometimes surprised when talking about retirement how many people I talk to that are of that age that haven't really sat down yet and crunched the numbers. I think fear keeps some of us from wanting to know. For us it helped us feel ready.)
 
My husband had a job with some pension and the ability to keep health care benefits reasonably, so he retired the minute he was eligible at 56. Even then, he counted down! I was planning on working longer because I took a bunch of years off with kids but had ended up retiring early too to care for elderly parents. For us the decision was based on working and reworking the numbers to see if it worked - and the minute we were really confident it did we were out! (We were fortunate with a modest paid off home, some pension money, investments, etc. that made it possible.)

When I say working and reworking the numbers - we were obsessed and still are. I keep a budget. We know all our numbers. On any given day I could probably accurately recite our entire financial picture. (I say that because I'm sometimes surprised when talking about retirement how many people I talk to that are of that age that haven't really sat down yet and crunched the numbers. I think fear keeps some of us from wanting to know. For us it helped us feel ready.)
Yup. We pulled $4,000 a month out of my IRA for 3 years. Netted us $3,000 a month after Federal and State withholding. That was our budget. Still is, but our social security is double that amount, so now we are living high on the hog.
 
DH and I stepped down rather than retire cold turkey. He went to 75% for several months, then 50%, then 25% and finally a one year consulting-as-needed agreement for an hourly amount. That gave him time to fully train a replacement - it was a fairly complex job with a lot of "once a year" responsibilities. It kept his brain in the game.

I retired from my full-time position but kept my very part-time consulting position working with my profession on it's professional exam. I did that for about 10 more years. I liked the people I worked with (all younger than me), the travel involved, and it kept my brain from rotting.

We both continue volunteer work for NFPs that can use our knowledge but we do it on our time.
 
DH and I are planning to retire at the end of 2027. Three years that I'm sure will go fast but feels so far away. My job is stressful but I make a good salary. Anyone else counting down the days? What did you do to help pass the time? Not wanting to wish my life away but so tired of the corporate crap. Anyone in the same place as me?

Yea! Retirement is great! I’ve been retired 2.5 years but did that countdown for the last 3 or 4 years before retirement. I think I annoyed my coworkers I talked about it so much lol. You will be amazed how quickly that time is going to go. Once I got to 2 years I started talking in weeks. I was an RN working part time 12 hour shifts, so I even had an idea of how many actual work days I had left by then too. Hang in there, it’ll be here in no time!! :flower3:
 
Yup, I'm retiring in September 2026. I'm old enough now but my mortgage and home equity loan rule otherwise! Every Single Day I wonder how I'm going to go another two years! I have a friend who was killed in a car accident last week, and more and more I wonder if the extra social security money for holding on until I'm 70 is really worth it.
Three years ago I retired a tad early (about 4 - 5ish months out) and the difference $ wise was so worth it, lol) Five months seems like I should have "hung in there", but really work was taking a toll on me and the difference was negligible. I heard somewhere, "The time in front of us is so much shorter that what is behind us" and that certainly is sadly true! I would definitely use that retirement calculator for all the scenarios to make that decision. ❤️ Of course I did not love my job, and that can certainly make a difference in a countdown. My husband is still working 3ish days a week and loves what he does. He takes time off whenever he pleases (self- employed) and that works for us!
 
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I can retire and start pulling a full pension in just under two years, but since I will only be 54, I will find another job with health insurance as I don't want to pay for insurance for 11 years. I haven't decided yet if I'm going to try to find a similar level job so that we can do a bunch of travel with the moeny we'd have from my income plus pension for several years, or if I want to do something less stressful at a lower salary that in combination with my pension would still pull in what I'm making now. Our daughter finishes school and our house is paid off at the exact same time I can retire, so that will give us a little more freedom of choice in what we do.

I alternate between excited and nervous at the thought of moving to a different job. My job has become very stressful but I have been there a long time and, among other things, I get great vacation time.
 



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