Oil and filters?Nope, I would blow through a million in a week.
Oil and filters?Nope, I would blow through a million in a week.
You hit it on the head. I would imagine this is why so many people have so little in reserve.Nope, I would blow through a million in a week.
Most people who win the lottery have nothing left in 5 years. And yet one of the most common retirement plans in Canada is "winning the lottery". Many people have essentially no savings.You hit it on the head. I would imagine this is why so many people have so little in reserve.
That'd be fine--if you knew you'd only live for another 10-20 years. If you "screw up" and live for 30... then what?I always find it interesting that most people say only draw enough to keep your original investment untouched. But why not slowly spend it down over 10-20 years?
That nicely articulates my thinking when I decided to wait.If you have an expectation of a reasonably long life span, delay collecting Social Security to age 70. And if you guessed wrong and die early, you won't regret it. Because you will be dead, and dead people have no regrets.
On the other hand, if you start collecting at 62 and have a long life with insufficient income, you will regret it, likely very much.
If I had that much I would absolutely donate 80% of it…when my wife and I die.Seriously --- some people have just tooooo much time on there hands. Donate 80% of that money & you could/should still live comfortable.
Financial planners generally recommend that you plan your finances as though you're going to live to age 95. Not many people live to age 95 but some do. [Side comment: I had many patients who were age 95 and older, most in good health both physically and mentally.]I always find it interesting that most people say only draw enough to keep your original investment untouched. But why not slowly spend it down over 10-20 years?
It's a gamble. For everyone one of them there are 10 that died before reaching that age or are too feeble to worry about spending money and left money on the table.Financial planners generally recommend that you plan your finances as though you're going to live to age 95. Not many people live to age 95 but some do. [Side comment: I had many patients who were age 95 and older, most in good health both physically and mentally.]
How would you like to be one of the lucky ones who lived to age 95 (in good health and with all your marbles) but you had spent all your money in the first 10 or 20 years of retirement? It's not so lucky to be 75, 85 or even 90 years old and broke. That's why.
In normal times a 4% (indexed) withdrawal rate will not exhaust the initial amount after 35 years, 95% of the time. For the record, the most likely outcome is that you'll likely have way more money than you need even after 35 years.
$1M is enough to survive but not what I'd call living and obviously cost-of-living matters.I read an article and almost fell out of my chair that this was even a topic. Of course 99% of people could live well on that.
Now back to reality, do you think 1 million is still enough to live comfortably in retirement when you include SS?
What's the point of working hard to reach retirement unhealthy but wealthy if you can't enjoy life?Most financial planners want you to spend almost nothing and keep working and investing. In turn they make more money but many of them retire at 66 or less. Ha! Go figure. I retired at 66 and have no regrets. Once you hit 80 years old that is considered the "stay at home years" if you are lucky enough to live that long. I don't care what others do in retirement but I like not having to go to work.
Watch out, just found out the IRS lumps in certain tax-exempt income in the calculation of the taxable portion of your Social security income. This surprisingly includes tax exempt Muni Bonds.Been retired now for 3+ years. I have not had a month where my SS payment hasn't met expenses. This includes money doled out for useless trinkets ect. My retirement IRA has not been touched and is guaranteed 5% interest every year. It is a locked in rate. Had a choice a 15 years ago to play the float at 8.5% variable, or 5% forever as long as I renew the annuity with the Catholic Church every 3 years. Recently bought some 4% CD's and the income from those is used for taxes and insurances. Would anyone here know where and how to buy I-Bonds? Someone said recently that they pay 6-8%.