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Meet the Fokkers
Actually, it is not so much how much you save in the last few years before retirement than it is the extra years of draw from your portfolio and the extra health care costs prior to retirement age. Depending on your employment/health insurance situation, you could encounter exceptional costs prior to certain age breakpoints, say age 62 or 65. When you can meet your income goals for your likely expected lifespan and costs, you can pull the plug and retire. Those last few years of saving for me did not hurt at all, but didn't make all that much difference. There was some investment growth, but mainly it was health insurance costs and extra years of income draw that delayed retirement a few years for me. Plus the fact I actually enjoyed my work, although I wasn't planning on doing it forever, or even until my SS retirement age. A good financial planner can help examine these issues and make some probability projections about the likelihood of your portfolio lasting long enough. You can try to do this yourself, but you won't know everything, like structuring income to minimize future risk and tax burden, etc.
Well said, and my thought exactly.
It's my dilemma at 55. Just too long of a gap between now to SS and medicare coverage.
Of course, if I didn't want to do many of the things I want, (like fly/own, travel, etc.) I would be better positioned.
But I wouldn't retire to sit around and wish I was doing things. I do that all day at my desk lol.