Posted on 06/26/2017 7:45:52 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Edited on 06/26/2017 8:44:25 AM PDT by Admin Moderator. [history]
https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/personalfinance/retirement/2017/06/23/is-1-million-really-enough-to-fund-your-retirement/102924076/
Sure, money cannot buy happiness but it does buy a better brand of misery.
Happiness is whatever a person thinks it is. You mention travel, entertainment, etc. I personally have no interest in travel and my idea of entertainment is reading (3-4books weekly)and music while relaxing in what most would describe as a wet dream of a man cave.
My favorite form of exercise is my 4 mile walk each morning at 5 a.m., something I have done every day for 22 yrs never missing a day, rain, snow or whatever. I retired at age 52 and have cannot remember the last time I was sick even with a cold. Nor do I take any medication. I attribute this to strong genes and the grace of God.
Okay now that I bragged about my good health I’ll probably stand up to take my dog for a walk and fall down the stairs or I’ll trip on the curb outside and crack my skull open
Taking $600,000 from the pile and renovating my 8 unit apartment building in the hippest part of town. Will get $1250 a month per unit. 35% expenses, $78000 per year net, property appreciating.
Good on you.
There are also "surprises" that come along... medical bills, home repairs, kids' emergencies, etc.
The best answer to the "how much should I have saved" question is "as much as you can possibly manage".
Put $700,000 down on a well-located, well managed $2,000,000 apartment building with a good rental history and no rent control. A realistic rate of return of say, 8% cash on cash would provide about $56,000 a year income, added to your combined social security. What remains of the other $300,000 after closing costs and putting aside some "fun" money can be producing income in safe investments. You won't be rich, but well-off is quite nice. And you'll always have a place to live!
Or the building/buildings it bought for you.
Smart idea. I do like the idea of rent control. Clearly the apt house wouldn’t be around here but who knows which state I will end up in?
Had too look up remoras. Good one.
I’m of the mind that what one does (legally) with the money they earned (legally and ethically) is their business.
If someone wants to leave a million dollar to his cat that’s his business.
bkmk
The 2 million lost over a lifetime assumes that you invest the money that would have been spent on cigarettes in an account that earns 7 percent per year compounded annually.
Here is a simple chart
,
YEAR
,
Beginning of Year
,
annual deposits
,
interest
,
End of Year balance
1 0 + 3650 x 1.07 = $3,905.50
2 $3,905.50 + 3650 x 1.07 = $8,084.39
3 $8,084.39 + 3650 x 1.07 = $12,555.79
4 $12,555.79 + 3650 x 1.07 = $17,340.20
5 $17,340.20 + 3650 x 1.07 = $22,459.51
6 $22,459.51 + 3650 x 1.07 = $27,937.18
7 $27,937.18 + 3650 x 1.07 = $33,798.28
8 $33,798.28 + 3650 x 1.07 = $40,069.66
9 $40,069.66 + 3650 x 1.07 = $46,780.04
10 $46,780.04 + 3650 x 1.07 = $53,960.14
11 $53,960.14 + 3650 x 1.07 = $61,642.85
12 $61,642.85 + 3650 x 1.07 = $69,863.35
13 $69,863.35 + 3650 x 1.07 = $78,659.28
14 $78,659.28 + 3650 x 1.07 = $88,070.93
15 $88,070.93 + 3650 x 1.07 = $98,141.40
16 $98,141.40 + 3650 x 1.07 = $108,916.79
17 $108,916.79 + 3650 x 1.07 = $120,446.47
18 $120,446.47 + 3650 x 1.07 = $132,783.22
19 $132,783.22 + 3650 x 1.07 = $145,983.55
20 $145,983.55 + 3650 x 1.07 = $160,107.90
21 $160,107.90 + 3650 x 1.07 = $175,220.95
22 $175,220.95 + 3650 x 1.07 = $191,391.91
23 $191,391.91 + 3650 x 1.07 = $208,694.85
24 $208,694.85 + 3650 x 1.07 = $227,208.99
25 $227,208.99 + 3650 x 1.07 = $247,019.12
26 $247,019.12 + 3650 x 1.07 = $268,215.95
27 $268,215.95 + 3650 x 1.07 = $290,896.57
28 $290,896.57 + 3650 x 1.07 = $315,164.83
29 $315,164.83 + 3650 x 1.07 = $341,131.87
30 $341,131.87 + 3650 x 1.07 = $368,916.60
31 $368,916.60 + 3650 x 1.07 = $398,646.26
32 $398,646.26 + 3650 x 1.07 = $430,457.00
32 $430,457.00 + 3650 x 1.07 = $464,494.49
33 $464,494.49 + 3650 x 1.07 = $500,914.61
34 $500,914.61 + 3650 x 1.07 = $539,884.13
35 $539,884.13 + 3650 x 1.07 = $581,581.52
36 $581,581.52 + 3650 x 1.07 = $626,197.72
37 $626,197.72 + 3650 x 1.07 = $673,937.06
38 $673,937.06 + 3650 x 1.07 = $725,018.16
39 $725,018.16 + 3650 x 1.07 = $779,674.93
40 $779,674.93 + 3650 x 1.07 = $838,157.67
41 $838,157.67 + 3650 x 1.07 = $900,734.21
42 $900,734.21 + 3650 x 1.07 = $967,691.11
43 $967,691.11 + 3650 x 1.07 = $1,039,334.98
44 $1,039,334.98 + 3650 x 1.07 = $1,115,993.93
45 $1,115,993.93 + 3650 x 1.07 = $1,198,019.01
46 $1,198,019.01 + 3650 x 1.07 = $1,285,785.84
47 $1,285,785.84 + 3650 x 1.07 = $1,379,696.35
48 $1,379,696.35 + 3650 x 1.07 = $1,480,180.59
49 $1,480,180.59 + 3650 x 1.07 = $1,587,698.73
50 $1,587,698.73 + 3650 x 1.07 = $1,702,743.15
Every day I see people at the local convenience store dropping 5 to 10 bucks on lottery tickets. Same people all the time. If they put that same 10 dollars away in a savings account and once they have saved 1500 bucks they should invest it in a good S&P 500 index fund from vanguard at the next market drop. Then if they deposit the money they spend on booze, cigarettes, dinning out. etc. into the index fund, this is what they’d have after 50 years. That’s only 10 dollars per day.
Once you get a couple hundred thousand you can create your own index fund by buying individual stocks through a discount brokerage like vanguard. Reinvest the dividends and your return should average greater than 7 percent if you don’t make dumb choices.
You should have 100,000 bucks saved by the age of 34.
It takes about 10 years for your money to double with a 7 percent rate of return.
I put more than 50 dollars a day (average over my life) away per year for 37 years and retired at 56 years of age.
It’s called the miracle of compound interest. It’s eighth grade math! The Marxists in public schools don’t teach it because the want you sucking on the government teet for life!
50 dollars per day for 37 years at 7 percent is about 3.6 million.
The secret is to be as debt free as possible and to live realistically.
If i only had 1 mill have to quit country club
Can’t retire on one million buckaroo’s if you are 40 yrs old...and not making that million work for you.
Describe what you mean....by that statement.
Thanks!
TexasFreeper2009 wrote: “But when your eating cat food to survive, dont go begging to the government to rob those who didnt blow their money on your behalf.”
“I personally wish to amass enough principal to live off the interest/earnings alone. And then leave the principal to my children so that they can do the same.”
That’s a very good objective. In my case I’ve invested well and I have multiple pensions and annuities and investments.
My annuities and pensions are more than enough for a very comfortable retirement without tapping my retirement investments. I worked hard, maximized my savings, and avoided spending on new cars, vacations, etc. Now, my investment and savings accounts are my ‘fun money’. I do intend to enjoy life.
BTW, I can assure you that if I’m ever forced to eat cat food, it will be premium cat food.
I meant rental income not rent control, sheesh.
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