Becoming a millionaire seems like a surefire way to live comfortably. However, if you are no longer working, just how long will a million dollars last in retirement?
The answer is about 20 years, according to Brent Lipschultz, partner with accounting and advisory firm EisnerAmper in New York City. To come to that conclusion, Lipschultz used data from the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics, which shows those age 65 and older have average annual expenses of approximately $50,000. He also assumed inflation would be 2.9%, investments would earn 4% each year and a person's state and federal tax rates would be 30% combined.
"A million dollars seems like a lot, but in today's world, it's not a lot of money," Lipschultz notes. He calculates a retiree needs to save an additional $765,000 to fully fund a 35-year retirement.
However, these are average figures, and your personal situation
True...it seems like a lot when you are a kid.... [Reply]
Originally Posted by BWillie:
I think I could do it with 3M. Assuming I don't live past 70, which I wont.
If you get a 5% return thats 150K. Think about what 150K was when you were a kid and what 150K is now. You can assume a similarish trend. Then look at health care costs, which will exponentially increase as you age.
I think a guy could do it. But I wouldn’t feel confident at all. Last thing you want to do is go back to work at 60 because fuck, you ran out. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Buehler445:
If you get a 5% return thats 150K. Think about what 150K was when you were a kid and what 150K is now. You can assume a similarish trend. Then look at health care costs, which will exponentially increase as you age.
I think a guy could do it. But I wouldn’t feel confident at all. Last thing you want to do is go back to work at 60 because ****, you ran out.
Meh. I'd just watch Murder She Wrote & Wheel of Fortune. I don't really care what my quality of life is once I'm 60. It's going to suck regardless. [Reply]
Originally Posted by BWillie:
Meh. I'd just watch Murder She Wrote & Wheel of Fortune. I don't really care what my quality of life is once I'm 60. It's going to suck regardless.
Believe me. I know poor people that are too old to work. You don’t want that noise. [Reply]
Originally Posted by BWillie:
How much money does one need to retire before 40? What's the number you guys are looking for to "retire" and how does it change based on age?
A lot depends on your expenses. I did an extensive analysis last year, and to retire at 60, and taking into account inflation and social security and assuming a conservative investment philosophy, I would need 28 times my household expenditures to live at my current lifestyle into my 90s. To retire at 40, you'd need more than double that, plus your social security payments would be smaller. My hunch is that you'd need about 65 to 70 times your annual expenses. [Reply]
Originally Posted by BWillie:
How much money does one need to retire before 40? What's the number you guys are looking for to "retire" and how does it change based on age?
If you bought 1 million dollar worth of (MAIN) it pays a monthly dividend of .205 per share at $41 /share it would give you a monthly income of $4885
a 2 million dollar stake would get you $9770 [Reply]
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
A lot depends on your expenses. I did an extensive analysis last year, and to retire at 60, and taking into account inflation and social security and assuming a conservative investment philosophy, I would need 28 times my household expenditures to live at my current lifestyle into my 90s. To retire at 40, you'd need more than double that, plus your social security payments would be smaller. My hunch is that you'd need about 65 to 70 times your annual expenses.
Along the same thought lines here. I’d say 60x your annual gross income because remember at a young age you’ll be living off “income” that’s all taxed as you can’t tap things like a ROTH yet.
On the same note for people retiring early, do what you can to make earned income in the year to max your ROTH. Just $6k or $7k if over 50. This will allow you to draw on something not taxable once you hit the right age. Is a great way to drop tax brackets when you’re older. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Hog's Gone Fishin:
If you bought 1 million dollar worth of (MAIN) it pays a monthly dividend of .205 per share at $41 /share it would give you a monthly income of $4885
a 2 million dollar stake would get you $9770
Dividends are great until they aren’t.
AT&T about to cut theirs in half. Also, if you still lag a market index because they pay a dividend but the stock price rarely moves, you’re coming out behind. Dividends are paid off the share price, they aren’t something “extra.” A stock paying 5% dividend with a share price that never moves is worse than owing an index. Plenty of these are out there but people get so fixated on a dividend like it’s “free money.” [Reply]
Originally Posted by lewdog:
Dividends are great until they aren’t.
AT&T about to cut theirs in half. Also, if you still lag a market index because they pay a dividend but the stock price rarely moves, you’re coming out behind. Dividends are paid off the share price, they aren’t something “extra.” A stock paying 5% dividend with a share price that never moves is worse than owing an index. Plenty of these are out there but people get so fixated on a dividend like it’s “free money.”
If your view is a relatively sideways market for a while, what do you think of a strategy of selling ITM covered calls on stocks with dividend dates coming up and just rolling those over until the market picks up? [Reply]
Originally Posted by banyon:
If your view is a relatively sideways market for a while, what do you think of a strategy of selling ITM covered calls on stocks with dividend dates coming up and just rolling those over until the market picks up?
Originally Posted by lewdog:
Along the same thought lines here. I’d say 60x your annual gross income because remember at a young age you’ll be living off “income” that’s all taxed as you can’t tap things like a ROTH yet.
On the same note for people retiring early, do what you can to make earned income in the year to max your ROTH. Just $6k or $7k if over 50. This will allow you to draw on something not taxable once you hit the right age. Is a great way to drop tax brackets when you’re older.
He said 65-70x annual expenses. You said 60x annual income. Those are two extremely different numbers... [Reply]
Originally Posted by lewdog:
Along the same thought lines here. I’d say 60x your annual gross income because remember at a young age you’ll be living off “income” that’s all taxed as you can’t tap things like a ROTH yet.
On the same note for people retiring early, do what you can to make earned income in the year to max your ROTH. Just $6k or $7k if over 50. This will allow you to draw on something not taxable once you hit the right age. Is a great way to drop tax brackets when you’re older.
Can you do that if you aren't traditionally employed? (The ROTH thing) [Reply]
Originally Posted by -King-:
He said 65-70x annual expenses. You said 60x annual income. Those are two extremely different numbers...
Oh you’re right.
I’d adjust mine to 50x annual income.
Someone making gross $100k/year would likely need 5M (50x income) to retire in their early 40’s and have their money last 40-50 years. You’d still need to be generating money from investments and not trying to live large. [Reply]