arminnie
<font color=blue>Tossed the butter kept the gin<br
- Joined
- Aug 22, 2003
- Messages
- 9,064
C.Ann said:So I think when people are considering "how much is enough" in terms of retiring, the first thing they have to do is to determine the "kind" of retirement they want and then make their decisions based on that - not the numbers that financial planners place on the "average" family that they don't know squat about.. If you want a "rich" lifestyle, then you're going to have to be "rich" - if you want an "average" lifestyle then you're going to have to be "average" - and if you want a simple, low-key comfortable lifestyle then that is what you will need..
It's all about priorities and what you really need and/or want..![]()
I SO agree with you on this. All of those "average" type numbers are really not that helpful.
The 80% of current income figure is often referred to in retirement planning. That is not gospel. Depending on your priorities and what you need/want (C.Ann's advice) you might need way less or way more.
If you live in a low cost area of the country, but have plans to retire to a large home someplace VERY expensive like Pebble Beach you are probably going to be spending a lot more on housing. Maybe you just want to move near grandkids, and they live someplace expensive.
The same with travel. If it is important for you in your retirement to travel internationally and domestically while staying in 5 star hotels, then your retirement needs may be more than your current income.
Many people these days are having children later in life and may plan to pay tuition for Stanford or Harvard for their children while they are in retirement.
Those are some of the "upscale" scenarios. Maybe more realistic is the couple saving a large portion of their income now, paying off a house in 15 years (big payments), and paying tuition for children pre-retirement. Maybe at retirement they will have none of those expenses and could live on 30% of current income.
I left the San Francisco area so my living expenses were dramatically reduced. The condo that I now own cost approximately 30% of similar CA housing. My vet bill for the same procedure was $400 in CA and $100 in Arkansas (and I go to the most expensive and best vet in AR).
The tab at a top restaurant in New Orleans is less than 50% of a similar meal in San Francisco. Gas is about 50 cents a gallon cheaper. Car insurance is much less.
I don't spend all of my current income so technically I am saving, but I no longer have to make contributions to a 401K.
My income is not 80% of what I had before, but I have WAY more disposable income. I could live on my social security benefits alone if I had to.
My advice is to do what C.Ann said - make a realistic determination of what kind of expenditures will be required for the lifestyle that you are planning. Subtract social security and expected pension benefits (if any) and that is the minimum amount of after tax income that you need to generate from your investments.
Starting early with savings helps so much, but for those of you who have not done that let me tell you. I was flat broke in my early 40s because of real estate losses in Texas (even had to liquidate 401K and IRAs). I just had to work harder to catch back up.