Friendly Frog
DIS veteran with a mouse on her back.
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2005
- Messages
- 1,701
Double post
But the most interesting thing is what my neighbor, who is 60 , said. "a million dollars really isn't much money any more, it works out to what my wife and I make in 10 years, so with social security, it would only support our current life style for about 15 years, and I sure hope to live more than 15 years in retirement.
I think he's thinking about it wrong; you want to live off the interest on that million, not the million itself. That way it never runs out.
We are on track to have about $3M at retirement, which will gross about $150k a year in interest (less with taxes). We still have ~30 years until retirement.
I think he's thinking about it wrong; you want to live off the interest on that million, not the million itself. That way it never runs out.
We are on track to have about $3M at retirement, which will gross about $150k a year in interest (less with taxes). We still have ~30 years until retirement.
I think he's thinking about it wrong; you want to live off the interest on that million, not the million itself. That way it never runs out.
We are on track to have about $3M at retirement, which will gross about $150k a year in interest (less with taxes). We still have ~30 years until retirement.
I think he's thinking about it wrong; you want to live off the interest on that million, not the million itself. That way it never runs out.
We are on track to have about $3M at retirement, which will gross about $150k a year in interest (less with taxes). We still have ~30 years until retirement.
I should note I have left Social Security income out of my retirement planning. And, while I can not answer if social security will be there, my estimated Social Security benefit is only $300 a month less than my net pay per month working. And after handling my mom's expenses, I do have to wonder what expenses people have that they have such trouble getting by on social security.
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.