I'm 55 and planning to retire in 2-3 years. I'll likely do something part-time just to keep me going. I'm a terrible procrastinator and if I don't have anything vying for my time whatsoever, I know I'll put off doing things I enjoy, just because I can "do it tomorrow." I want to retire while I can still go and do things we enjoy while I still can. I had some pretty bad injuries in the Army due to line of duty non-combat injuries, which will likely one day preclude getting around well. I am about to get an ankle fused so I can hopefully walk without pain for a few years.
I keep talking to my investment manager and ask, "When can I retire?" and his response is always, "When do you want to retire.? Early on, when I said, tomorrow, he didn't bat an eye and said we can make that happen... When I told him 5-6 years (a few years ago), he said, "even better."
Due to being a military retiree with the equivalent to 30 year (disability/tax-free) retirement I have a fairly substantial pension. It also provides health insurance my wife and I very cheaply. That is a huge factor for many folks I know...and many in this thread have said the same. For the last 15 years, I have a 401k from my current job. I also have a large investment portfolio due to stock options issued before company stock exploded. My only debt is a very low rate mortgage, which I will have paid off in two years or less.
My wife, 51, is a public school teacher with 25 years experience. Because of Department of Defense Dependent Schools teaching and State of Oklahoma which pays SS and no teacher retirement system, coupled with both Texas and Tennessee teacher retirement, she will be eligible for both. Neither will be huge, but they are still good income sources.
Both daughters have finished undergraduate degrees (in 4 years, Summa Cum Laude with 4.00 and 3.99 GPAs, yes just bragging on them a bit). Older is married, working and off the payroll. Younger is starting grad school this month, but has a GA position which covers most tuition and her stipend pays rent/utilities. She also still has about 3 semesters worth of VA Educational Benefits which go a long ways.
All the above said, I'm still on the fence about being able to retire and have enough money. I know it all looks good on paper, but I have the heebie-jeebies about actually making the leap. I've had a full-time paying job since 18. The idea of no longer having a payroll income is scary. Assuming I'm 58 1/2 when I pull the handle, I'll only have one year before I start drawing on my 401k. I need that to last until I'm 67 and can start drawing SS, but would rather wait until 70 to max it out...and I've paid in max the last decade plus.
I am hoping what everyone says about having enough money is true since airplanes and wives are expensive
This is truly the unknown...