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What year and with how much money do you hope to retire?
Me; 2035 with about 7 mil.
Me; 2035 with about 7 mil.
What year and with how much money do you hope to retire?
Me; 2035 with about 7 mil.
What year and with how much money do you hope to retire?
Me; 2035 with about 7 mil.
On track for $2 million plus my .mil pension (worth $2 million or so) plus two paid off houses at age 55, at which point I will be able to retire and quit entirely, but probably won't since I like this job. But I don't know, a lot can and probably will change over the next 15 years.
$7 million in 2013 dollars is a lot, $280K/year at a 4% SWR. Much, much more if you get into principal as you age and stiff your ungrateful heirs.
On track for $2 million plus my .mil pension (worth $2 million or so) plus two paid off houses at age 55, at which point I will be able to retire and quit entirely, but probably won't since I like this job. But I don't know, a lot can and probably will change over the next 15 years.
$7 million in 2013 dollars is a lot, $280K/year at a 4% SWR. Much, much more if you get into principal as you age and stiff your ungrateful heirs.
Having another anesthesia MD as your partner w/ no kids and living in a less desireable location makes retirement with big numbers very doable. I don't want to post on an internet forum the numbers, but lets just say retirement is coming a lot faster than I ever thought possible. The problem is, I love what I do, and will likely work conderably longer than I need to... dare I say academics??? 🙄
You guys are forgetting Obama has taken care of 1 of the 2 most important factors as people approach their late 50s and early 60s...healthcare costs.
Maybe we ought to wait for the ACA dust to settle before declaring old-age health care a solved problem ...
I keep moving the goal posts back on myself. I passed the number that I thought that I would need when I finished residency 20 plus years ago. There are just too many variables in predicting what might be a 25+ year retirement.
I feel like some of you are just tossing out huge numbers without thinking too much about it, but I could be wrong. For those without children, who have no student loan debt, and who inherited a boat load, 7-10 mil is perhaps attainable, but the very large majority of physicians won't see anywhere near that number. Maybe I'm way off base, but most of the physicians I know don't meet the criteria above.
I'm in my mid-30s, fresh out of residency, married with 2 kids (wife stays home), I have a ton of student loan debt, and no inheritance to lean on. We'll be doing great if we slow down/retire with 2 million in retirement savings. And that's only if we continue to live a very financially conservative lifestyle.
I don't really have a lot of confidence we'll retire/slow down with that much, as I see the US/international markets going into a very prolonged recession at some point in the next decade. I hope I'm wrong though.
$2 million is insufficient. Sorry. But, you will need at least double that amount if not triple by the time you retire in 3 decades. The key is to start saving early and as much as possible. Let compounding be your friend.
I agree with you doze. We both know the amount needed for retirement is much higher than being stated in these threads.
$2 million is insufficient. Sorry. But, you will need at least double that amount if not triple by the time you retire in 3 decades. The key is to start saving early and as much as possible. Let compounding be your friend.
$2,000,000 paying an average 3.5% dividend yields $70,000 per year plus $20k social security provides comfortable retirement in my mind.
$4,000,000 yielding $140,000 per year would yield a pretty cush retirement even if social security isn't available if the house is paid for and kids are taking money anymore.
$2,000,000 paying an average 3.5% dividend yields $70,000 per year plus $20k social security provides comfortable retirement in my mind.
$4,000,000 yielding $140,000 per year would yield a pretty cush retirement even if social security isn't available if the house is paid for and kids are taking money anymore.
That's why I don't understand why people can't just cut expenses. My friends are still spending 10-15K a month easily.
It's not what you make. It's what you keep at the end of the day.
Come on over Sevo. The water is great. And 1 call a month ain't so shabby either.👍
There are a good number of academic faculty that either made money elsewhere, or have money from other sources. I guess that's not a real surprise.
You can also negotiate no first or second call and 80% time as a condition of your joining the team. (With a pay cut of course.)
My target is >4m with 2m in property. This is separate from my wife's retirement and any inheritance which should be coming from both sides. You can't count on any of that though when it comes to your individual planning. Divorce, theft, greed, Madoff, devastating illness, etc. We should be more than fine. Having said that I'm very conservative with my planning. If I end up with twice that, all the better.😉
I tell people this.
I've managed to save (in both retirement and taxable accounts) over 1 million my 9 years I've been out of residency.
And I've never made anywhere close to 500K. I've probably averaged about 325-350K income the past 9 years. Plus I lived in a high state income tax (tax rate close to 9%) for half that time PLUS lost 250K in housing real cash lost. My current house I've gotten close to 50% equity since I put a sizable down payment and paying it off faster. That equity is outside of my net worth as well.
This is with a non working spouse and 2 kids folks.
And we've gone through our fair share of luxury cars (all paid with cash). Audis, BMW, and Hummers plus take at least 2 huge vacations each year plus quite a few mini vacations throughout the year.
Again, very simple: My goal has been the 1/3 rule. I've managed to save 1/3 of my self employed income almost every year. That's why I am over 1 million.
I've paid off my student loans (over 120K as well).
My pace, I'm seriously going to consider retirement as I get to about age 55 when both my kids will be well into college or close to being done. Age 60 is my target goal
My dad retired at age 65, died at age 67 of cancer. I want to enjoy my retirement years for a while.
Is that before or after taxes? Because putting away 1/3 of one's gross income seems almost impossible.
Saw this quote today on the Bogleheads forum. I agree completely.
"The future is unknown, both the markets and your personal needs. I feel it pointless running more and more and more numbers through more and more complicated black boxes, as if the resulting conclusions will be more exact.
Save as much as you can, not the minimum some advisor tells you. Takes rational withdrawals in retirement, and adjust as the world turns. Nothing is promised as a certainty."
+1 Doze.
Last year I spent 7% of my gross. The rest went into long and short term investments.
@ almost 40 Years old I'm yet to buy a brand-new car.
My last truck went to 255,000 miles. My expenses in BFE are negligible.
+1 Doze.
Last year I spent 7% of my gross. The rest went into long and short term investments.
@ almost 40 Years old I'm yet to buy a brand-new car.
My last truck went to 255,000 miles. My expenses in BFE are negligible.
What do you guys recommend for the new generation of ultra high debt graduates (other than not to go into medicine/anesthesia, which is too late for us)? My wife (internist) and I will be done in June and unfortunately have a combined 780k of medical school debt @ 7.3% average (no other liabilities). Looking at W2 jobs with a combined income of 570-600k in a state with 8% income tax.
My plan was for each of us to take out our 51,000 tax deferred for each of our 401k's off the top and then basically live like we have been as residents (rent <2k/mo, minimal vacations, cheap cars-paid off) and funnel everything to the loans after putting away at least 50k in an emergency savings account. Even with this strategy it will still take us 4-5 years to pay off the debt by my math but at that point we will at least have a healthy start to our retirement and be debt free. Thoughts?
Wish I would have had the foresight to pick the cheapest possible medical school but I wouldn't have met my wife that way. At least we are young (both 29 when we are done), but it sucks to be that deep in debt.
What do you guys recommend for the new generation of ultra high debt graduates (other than not to go into medicine/anesthesia, which is too late for us)? My wife (internist) and I will be done in June and unfortunately have a combined 780k of medical school debt @ 7.3% average (no other liabilities). Looking at W2 jobs with a combined income of 570-600k in a state with 8% income tax.
My plan was for each of us to take out our 51,000 tax deferred for each of our 401k's off the top and then basically live like we have been as residents (rent <2k/mo, minimal vacations, cheap cars-paid off) and funnel everything to the loans after putting away at least 50k in an emergency savings account. Even with this strategy it will still take us 4-5 years to pay off the debt by my math but at that point we will at least have a healthy start to our retirement and be debt free. Thoughts?
Wish I would have had the foresight to pick the cheapest possible medical school but I wouldn't have met my wife that way. At least we are young (both 29 when we are done), but it sucks to be that deep in debt.
Must be nice to live in BFE! I'm a W-2 academic in a high (the highest) tax state, living in a city with a real estate boom/bubble that is INTENSE. A 1500 sq ft condo in a good neighborhood can be 1.5 mil, so we rent. I manage to max out the 401K and on top of that take 20% of my gross and take it off my net into a handful of tax-advantaged investment strategies (I have an advisor). I don't have a target number in mind, but I'm going to keep doing the 20% for 20 years, keep driving the Mazda, and hope for the best. Probably have to retire somewhere else.
I wouldn't say nice...😉 There is a reason it's called BFE. The lack of culture and things to do can be depressing. Funny how many 50 y/o I see in electric wheel chairs outfitted with O2 tanks and nasal cannulas pulling up to gas stations puffing away on their cancer sticks. I presume to get a new carton of Marlboro's. The gloomy days during the winter def. give me a taste of seasonal affective disorder. I need to drive 1.5 hours to hit the indoor tennis courts (45 min. each way). Walmart and Mccdonalds and friends are big hits here. Wholefoods will never make it. 🙁 It's not all peachy my friend.
I take 12-13 weeks off a year... 90% of those trips, I go to my investment property in Colorado... it keeps me from going insane.
I hear you though. My parents live in Los Altos, CA and own one of those 1500 sq. ft. homes. They pay 20k+ in property taxes every year. Must be hard.
I've said it before and I'll say it again.
Work in BFE, get that FU account up and running, set yourself up, and move to the beach or the mountains when the time is right.
I think it's a good strategy... Sacrifice early and reap the benefits later in life. You only need 6-10 years to set yourself up nicely....unless you have kids and want them to grow up in a better schooling system.
Beat me to it. I'd love to be able to save 30% of my income, but I want my kids to go to good schools and I don't want to die of boredom either.
I live in a very desirable city where housing gets expensive in the best school districts, and I can only save 12-14% per year + 6-7% 'savings' in home equity each year.
Even at my savings rate I should be able to retire after 20 years, while enjoying those years and letting my kids get well prepared for college.
I'm somewhat jealous of those who can save more, but also not that jealous. The BFE route isn't a bad idea for some, but people living in cities get to retire too.
What do you people need, butt-wipers and servants to feed caviar when you retire?
What do you people need, butt-wipers and servants to feed caviar when you retire?
Why don't you tell us what you think that you will need to finance a 25 year retirement?
Being old used to mean being poor and just scraping by. The crashing of the entitlement house of cards, (whenever it comes) will mean that again for lots of folks. Most people cannot expect the same comfortable retirement that many retirees have enjoyed over the last 20 or so years. It will get harder and more expensive for all.
TIming is everything. Just ask a fresh grad as opposed to one that finished about 5 years ago. Let alone one that finished 25 years ago.
Why don't you tell us what you think that you will need to finance a 25 year retirement?
Being old used to mean being poor and just scraping by. The crashing of the entitlement house of cards, (whenever it comes) will mean that again for lots of folks. Most people cannot expect the same comfortable retirement that many retirees have enjoyed over the last 20 or so years. It will get harder and more expensive for all.
TIming is everything. Just ask a fresh grad as opposed to one that finished about 5 years ago. Let alone one that finished 25 years ago.
I think balance is key. I considered the BFE route, but at the end of the day decided that I'd already spent the last 8 years in delayed gratification mode and I didn't want to spend another 5-10 years doing the same thing. Plus I know plenty of people who went the BFE route and got stuck there (either bc they met a nice girl or got their practice established, etc.)
Also remember, there's no guarantee that your gonna have a 25yr retirement or even make it to retirement in the first place. Remember UTSW. :cry:
Don't get me wrong, I'm not advocating being stupid with your money. I just think you have to make sure you are enjoying your life and not simply waiting to enjoy your life once you retire. Personally, I almost think I'd rather take more time for my family now while my kids are young, and I'm young. I'll happily spend more time in the OR once my kids are in college/moved out and my knees and back hurt to bad to surf/snowboard anymore.
I think as long as you have:
ONE good job
ONE wife
ONE mortgage
only ONE expensive hobby
and MAXIMALLY fund your 401K/IRA/etc.
you will come out OK.