That's the frustrating thing. I mean at this rate nobody will ever retire. You follow the gurus like MM, DR and Suzy. You save until you have a gabillon dollars and then the next day you read a report that it's not enough because now you need a Long term health plan, then it's not enough because the older you get the higher your risk for a debilitating disease. ON and On.
That's not the impression I get from reading these "gurus". In fact, just last weekend we just happened to be watching Suze and a 22-year old was saying she was just out of college, what should she do to start out well. The advice to her was 1) put aside just $100/month until she's 62 (that'd be 40 years), and it'd turn into a million dollars. My 20-year old was listening, and she said, "Wow, once I'm out of school and working, I should easily be able to put aside $200/month -- once I'm married, the two of us should easily be able to put aside $400/month, especially if we do it from the very beginning. That'll work out great for us -- if we start young." She gets it. Her greatest asset is time.
One of the things an early retirement guru will point out is that you don't need 80% of your INCOME - you need 80% of your SPENDING
Absolutely! This "you need 80% thing" implies that you current spend every penny you earn and will continue to spend at that rate after retirement, dropping only your work expenses. That's just not what most of us are going to do.
Speaking only for me and my husband, we're already in a paid-for house, and by the time we retire we'll be done raising and educating our children (though we hope to have grandchildren to spoil). We'll no longer be saving for retirement. We'll downsize to one car (which is a monumental savings), and that also means spending less on insurance, maintenance, and gas. On the other hand, we'll have more time available to garden and preserve food. We'll have more time to comparison shop. Even with more travel and higher medical bills, I anticipate we'll spend less than we do today!
nother thing they'll point out is that a lot of them have side hustles. They aren't fully retired at 40, they just don't hold a job any longer - they might sell a little real estate, or do a little consulting. A lot of them own rental property - and owning rental property is a job - unless you hire a property manager. They buy at garage sales and sell on eBay or Craigslist. Maybe they dog sit.
Again, agree. We'll retire in our mid-50s, but we will do something either seasonal or part-time -- something entirely unlike our current professional jobs -- and that'll allow us to travel and avoid dipping into our savings too early.
Retiring from your full-time job doesn't necessarily mean earning 0 for the rest of your life.
30 something chiming in here - mortgage secured, happy to do my part.

But if you hope my generation thinks we can get away with reaching that 3rd or 4th mortgage in our lifetimes I would say think again. We aren't crazy enough to think we're going to be able to live like the boomers
I don't doubt that plenty of individual 30-somethings are living like you, but I'm not convinced that it's all that widespread amongst your age group.
My upper 20s/young 30s co-workers are thrifty in some ways (i.e., living with a roommate), but in other ways they're much more spendy than I am: They tend to eat out more, buy more clothes, trade cars more often, and a new trend that's popping up: A girls' Bachelorette trip (or guys' Bachelor trip) before a wedding. I see some pretty spending people in your age group. A common sentiment I hear is, "I'll be in debt forever anyway, so why shouldn't I spend?"
Most seniors I know have "some skin in the game", worked hard all their lives and have contributed to social security and paid their taxes. More than I can say for all the welfare receipiants and illegal immigrants who have not paid one cent into the system, yet get more benefits than our seniors and veterans combined.
Yeah, my Mom worked for years and deposited money into Social Security. She's not greedy or entitled to think she should collect benefits now. In contrast, my Dad didn't live long enough to collect a penny -- no one ever seems to mention people like him when they're talking about those greedy seniors expecting a check every month.