Yes, we're on track, and it's not by accident: We're not high wage earners, but we've always lived beneath our means and have made sacrifices so we could save. I've stayed in a low-paying job for the sake of my pension. I credit my husband for recognizing the power of compound interest when we were still very young. Our plan:
Continue saving 'til we retire at about 55.
Sell our current house and build a smaller retirement house, which will be designed with aging-in-place features like no-barrier shower and an upstairs appropriate for one of our children or a paid care giver to live.
Retire from our "real jobs" at 55 and use my pension, which is enough for necessities, but not extras.
We will both work part-time (or maybe seasonally) to bring in money for travel and other extras.
The part-time work will allow us to delay touching our savings.
Sometime 65-70, we'll begin collecting Social Security (maybe); this will hopefully replace the part-time work.
We can dip into savings at this point; however, I'm not clear on how one begins dipping into 401K money or how to determine how much is okay.
Concerns: Inflation and unpredictable medical costs.
We are on track. Like someone else said, our monthly "stuff" will be near non-existant in retirement. No college saving, no mortgage, no student loans, no daycare, etc. Currently, we could live on 1/4 our current income if it was not for those "things". So, we are aiming for 30% of our current income in retirement.
That will leave enough each month for fun, and enough for a few vacations each year, too
Yes, we spend less per month now than we did when we were younger. We no longer have a mortgage, and we only drive paid-for cars. We will downsize to one car once we're retired. Once our kids are out on their own and we are no longer saving for retirement, we will definitely need less each month to cover our necessities.
I don't know about you, but I think I'm pretty likely to run out - or my heart/liver/kidneys and brain function eventually will. I'm not interested in my money never running out. I'm interested in me running out BEFORE my money runs out. I'd like to have a little something left for the kids/charity - but the idea isn't to leave them with the amount I have on the day I retire.
Maybe I'm making the wrong bet and sometime before I'm 85 we will have solved the health problems in aging. But I don't think so.
Yes, I want to be sure that however long I live, I have enough to live comfortably! I may one day need to depend upon my children to help me with daily life, but I do not want them to have to reach into their own pockets to support me.
I'm not sure I agree, however, that health problems will be solved by the time I'm 85. We as a society continue to do all the wrong things -- eating burgers instead of salad, sitting in front of our computer screens instead of exercising -- and that's going to continue to counteract the medical advances.
The average social security wage in the US is a little under $15,000 a year. I certainly don't find it hard to understand why people would struggle on that amount.
15K is enough to live comfortably IF you have a modest, paid-for house; if you never travel; if you have good medical insurance. However, a person who didn't manage to save ANYTHING for retirement isn't likely to be set up for that low-cost lifestyle.
The real issue with Social Security is the people who are counting on it as their sole source of income for retirement.