The vast, vast majority of it is acceptably safe. You know the old "if it bleeds it leads" theory of journalism? Now multiply that by the international border and all the US sees of mexico is the violence that's been twice filtered.Genuinely curious whereabouts in Mexico one feels safe to live these days? Especially if there are safe areas where a modest amount goes a long way.
I wouldn't mind having a place there (and enjoy the lower COLA) one day if I could get comfortable with the area not being saturated with violent crime.
Or retire 10 years early...Here I’ll put a number in. I’ll say 10x your currently annual income for most people.
For me it would be enough to buy vacation homes in a few places and leave a car for my use when there. Then upgrade to a twin with FIKI capability… my go to is a DA-62. Then in general just start hiring people to do labor I currently do myself around home like mowing, trying to control the brush, general home and auto repairs, etc.
My father was a Plastic Surgeon - he owned a Duke, but never had time to fly that pig. My parents encouraged me to be a College Professor - Business, I make good money but not Plastic Surgeon money. I own a Warrior and I was able to fly it over 100 hours this summer. My parents said you should do this - it's a good life, you'll have time to enjoy the things you like to do.You reach a point in life where more time is more valuable than more money.
It’s got to be around 25X annual salary so you can pull 4% most likely indefinitely, assuming you’re invested so you have an annual return of at least 4% plus inflation.Here I’ll put a number in. I’ll say 10x your currently annual income for most people.
For me it would be enough to buy vacation homes in a few places and leave a car for my use when there. Then upgrade to a twin with FIKI capability… my go to is a DA-62. Then in general just start hiring people to do labor I currently do myself around home like mowing, trying to control the brush, general home and auto repairs, etc.
Your father in law suggested I switch to cocaine because it's cheaper. Just sayin'
And here's the proof:
View attachment 120398
I’ve always had a soft spot for that airframe. It would be in my stable as a daily driver.…SF-260...
Nope. Sage advice though it may be. I'm sticking with airplanes until the money runs out.Well, did you?
Nope. Sage advice though it may be. I'm sticking with airplanes until the money runs out.
I hate this argument. The person who wins feels pretty good about the two bucks they laid out. If you can’t afford a losing lottery ticket, bro no bad at math isn’t your issue.Because you're bad at math?
Exactly. My husband laughs at me for getting irked over a couple dollars' difference in price of one thing while I easily pay 100s for something else. I keep telling him, the reason I can do the latter is that I've done the former all my life (BTW, we haven't been married very long because we were both widowed, so these are habits I established on my own, not with him).
A few weeks ago, SWMBO and I were at dinner with another couple. Like us, they're comfortably retired. Not rolling in wealth, but comfortable. But we started talking about how we still had the same habits as when we were younger and forced to be frugal. Like dinner that evening - we had clipped BOGO coupons out of the local shopper to buy our dinners. We still shop sales, use grocery coupons, don't buy expensive clothing, etc. The habits that put some money in the bank through the years are now permanent.
A few years ago I bought him a Corvette for Christmas/birthday (in his case, they're only a couple of weeks apart). Seeing the joy he gets from that car has been well worth the expense.
You are a very good person...... A few years ago I bought him a Corvette for Christmas/birthday (in his case, they're only a couple of weeks apart). Seeing the joy he gets from that car has been well worth the expense.
Money can buy time. Once you have enough to live off your investments, you do not have to work. That's 40-48 hours a week of time gained. That's my goal for the next two years.You reach a point in life where more time is more valuable than more money.
boy...that's something that has been nagging at me for a few years now....figuring out when the pile of money is big enough to retire....Also, to those are thinking about retiring early, just do it. In this group, I think anyone who is thinking about that can probably do it. I retired at 60 and only later realized I probably could have retired at 55 and still been comfortable. That leap is a big one, but I guess it's pretty common for people to think they can't retire yet when they can.
I hear ya. Heard that in life one too many times, know way too many people in that situation, which is the reason I stayed to an active duty retirement in the military, at a great FAE-delta from say airline pilot (as an income hypothetica) in the same amount of longevity/time period. De facto Medicare at 46-49 (depending on what year beyond 20 active I decide to pull the trigger) is transformative for me. I rejected early on (as in my 20s) the premise of having to keep toiling just for health coverage. And it certainly became a done deal once I gained dependents on life-sustaining medication; this isn't an academic hypothetical for me.I still have kids at home though, and insurance is through my work. We're all healthy enough but we do have some health expense....
Then there' the size of the pile of money to live off of.... that one is hard to figure.
Speaking of flexible schedules, I struggled with this once the weef rejoined the workforce, given she's 8 years younger than me. The thought never crossed my mind as we were busy just surviving the toddler years, but here we are. There's been a lot of changes associated with her return to work, which has affected many things to include the future status of my aircraft ownership, but I will say I've pretty much settled into the fact we're on different life timelines and if we intend on staying together as a couple, schedule expectations in retirement are going to have to adjust for me.but maybe or maybe not to do a lot of travel and such...especially since she still enjoys her job and isn't itching to get out like I am, so we wouldn't totally be draining the pile of money as we ease into a more flexible time schedule.
@Ed Haywood unless you own a business to sell for a multiple of earnings, how do you get there?
At, say, 5% return, it takes a meaningful chunk to replace my income (without touching principal). How do I get the time back? (Seriously seeking wiser input). I feel like I only work. No time for me.
@Ed Haywood starter at 16 with $50/month in a mutual fund. 401k from 25 forward hitting the IRS maximum since 30.
My math says I need $7mm to maintain this income but I'm not assuming 10.7%.
I agree with everything you typed. I am just not confident I can walk away.
Also, to those are thinking about retiring early, just do it.
^^^^This. The vast majority of the retired people I spoke with before retiring early said the same. Had I believed them at the time I would have retired 2 years earlier myself. As to how much money you need is very specific to the person. While general recommendations get you in the ballpark, they are far from gospel. For example, the amount "recommended" for me by the "experts" was about $2 million. I retired with less than $1M and a mortgage.I retired at 60 and only later realized I probably could have retired at 55 and still been comfortable.
How true. The first time we engaged a "financial planner" (ha) they said we really needed to give them about double my total pre-tax earnings every month, then we might be able to retire by the time I was 65 or 70. They were of course high on crack. We did it as a favor to a classmate of my son, working for one of the big name firms as a summer intern. Of course their version of "retirement planning" was a big steaming pile of insurance and annuity products. The next time we talked to a planner, which was a couple years back, their news was not as dire - but still saying I'd need to work until I was 70 in order to retire comfortably. Maybe that would have been true if I'd turned everything over to them...As to how much money you need is very specific to the person. While general recommendations get you in the ballpark, they are far from gospel. For example, the amount "recommended" for me by the "experts" was about $2 million. I retired with less than $1M and a mortgage.
Yes, that. I was pretty disappointed by the well-meaning advice we'd been getting and had identified several deep flaws in their models. I built my own pretty complete spreadsheet based on what I knew to be true to figure things out. Investment performance, taxes, medical costs, our current monthly burn rate, travel plans, vehicle purchases, gifts, charitable giving, social security, all of it. I can adjust the inflation rates, retirement age, pre- and post-retirement investment performance, travel budget, and a bunch of other things and see what the long-term effect would be. Then I started running Monte Carlo simulations on the numbers I have to see whether what I built was sane or not. I'm pretty confident that I have a good post-retirement picture.One of the biggest misconceptions I've seen some people make is accurately determining how much they are currently living off. Most people simply add up their check stubs. However, if you count the actual expenses to the nickel, one may be surprised especially if the life you plan to retire to is not very extravagant.
If 65 only option is Medicare with supplement. Less than 65 the better option in most states is to get a policy off the ACA Marketplace, ie, obamacare. And if you have a diverse set of assets you can even qualify for certain ACA subsidies. I use an ACA medical policy with subs as I'm still several years from Medicare eligibility.In retirement do folks just use Medicare or a personal blue cross policy?
After seeing what BC covered for my parent's medical bills, in addition to Medicare, I think it is worth it. I was not involved in paying the bills when my dad was alive but for mom it is $366mo for Plan F. Dad died of multiple myeloma and mom has been in the hospital several times but there have been verry little out of pocket cost.@DaleB whats your plan for medical? In retirement do folks just use Medicare or a personal blue cross policy?
Less than 65 the better option in most states is to get a policy off the ACA Marketplace, ie, obamacare.
I built my own pretty complete spreadsheet based on what I knew to be true to figure things out. Investment performance, taxes, medical costs, our current monthly burn rate, travel plans, vehicle purchases, gifts, charitable giving, social security, all of it. I can adjust the inflation rates, retirement age, pre- and post-retirement investment performance, travel budget, and a bunch of other things and see what the long-term effect would be.
True. But as you mentioned your case is more the exception than the norm. Have several friends with similar plans. Out of curiosity, at want age did you retire from Lockheed, and if you care to share what was premium you paid?My point is that people should explore all their options, not just leap blindly to ACA.