View Poll Results: ?? | |||
$1M | 29 | 26.36% | |
$3M | 30 | 27.27% | |
$5M | 32 | 29.09% | |
$10M+ | 19 | 17.27% | |
Voters: 110. You may not vote on this poll |
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01-11-2023, 05:06 PM | #67 | |
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My 76 y/o mother has a $800/mo house payment and has an income of around $3500/mo with SS and a small pension from my deceased father. She rarely spends all of the money every month and she has plenty in saving/investments as well. Lives in a really nice, new and modern home too.
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01-11-2023, 05:16 PM | #68 | |
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2023 BMW X7 xDrive40i
2023 BMW M3 6MT 2024 Mini Cooper S Convertible '20 BMW m340i... '20 BMW X5 40i... '16 Infiniti Q50 RS 400... '10 Lexus RX 350... '08 Lexus IS 350... '00 Nissan Maxima... '93 Nissan Maxima |
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01-13-2023, 02:50 PM | #69 | ||
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Federal taxes on $100k, MFJ: $8.6k (my current state does not tax retirement income. If it did add another $4.8k) Property taxes: $10k Home/Auto/Umbrella Insurance: $5k Medicare A+B+D+G, for 2 people: $16.5k (not paying this right now, obviously) So $40k/yr is already out the door, right from the jump. And I haven't paid my utilities, bought any food, done any home improvements/maintenance, bought any toys, gone on any trips, or done any car-related things. And since we're on a board dedicated to $100k cars, let's say we want two of those in the driveway/garage. Even if we only replace them every 5 years, there's another $20k/year right there (assuming 50% depreciation). So now there's "only" $40k left for all that other stuff. I don't think we'll actually do this, but just to illustrate how quickly stuff adds up. I don't know about you, but after working all these years, I intend to enjoy the shit out of having sole ownership of 168 hours per week. I also make no assumptions as to what degree SS benefits will be funded in 25 years. So whatever we get from that (which will also be taxed) is just gravy. Last edited by geko29; 01-13-2023 at 03:06 PM.. |
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01-13-2023, 03:39 PM | #70 |
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01-13-2023, 04:54 PM | #71 | |
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I too look at SS as gravy, but it will be there. They've been saying SS might disappear since the 1980s. Nothing as changed. If SS wasn't there, a vast majority of Americans would in serious trouble seeing that most people retire with less than $200K in retirement savings thus most retirees are dependent on it. Once most are in their 70s, they are driving their last car. Sad, but true. Point being, you've only a small window of buying cars when retired. Same with insurance and property tax. Many in their 70s will sell their homes and cars and enter retirement communities or elderly care so your insurance and property tax costs disappear. To me, less is more and that's what probably sets me apart from many on a forum like this and why I think needing $100K per year to live is a bit bonkers. I love cars and have two amazing rides at 48. But I have no desire for super expensive cars and more importantly a big house, a second home, etc. Once our kids are out in 4 years, my wife and I are building or renovating a ~1,200-sq ft 3 bedroom, energy efficient, easy to maintain home on some land that needs minimal maintaining and has lots of outdoor living space. We'll travel a lot too. My wife and I are done with managing "stuff" which consumes so much of one's life. Again, the linked retirement calculator below has been so useful in helping me project out when I can retire. Once we hit $2 million in investment assets and I'm over 52, I'm done working. The house is already paid off and the kids college costs are fully funded and then some. The odds are we'll hardly touch our principal in retirement and kiddos will be quite well off when we're gone and hopefully they can continue to pass it down to their kids and so on. https://engaging-data.com/will-money-last-retire-early/
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01-13-2023, 06:40 PM | #72 |
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What I have noticed is my expenses just seem to increase the more $$ I make. Even when I don't feel like I'm spending more or doing anything I didn't do before. Then again my health insurance being self employed is now almost $700/mo just for me. They keep raising that shit every year and it's not even that good.
I also think how much you hate your job plays a big roll. If I had to go back to my first job after college which I despised I could probably make it happen right now so I can retire. |
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01-13-2023, 07:36 PM | #73 | ||||
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I took average costs from here. Edit: So I am off by about $3k, which doesn't dramatically change the example. I took the actual amounts that my FIL is currently paying for D ($785) and G ($3151), and then added the fixed B premiums for an individual with $100k MAGI ($2770), and the total is $6706. So for two people that would $13,412 Quote:
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Don't get me wrong--it's a VERY nice place. But from a financial perspective, the property taxes and insurance I'm paying now are way, WAY cheaper. Last edited by geko29; 01-14-2023 at 06:49 AM.. |
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01-13-2023, 07:51 PM | #74 |
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It would be interesting to know the average price paid by board members. Breaking owners' car purchase prices out by series and model codes might be the most informative.
In today's dollars, the most I've ever paid for a car was $120.0K. That was in June, 1985 for a grey market M6. Including the discount from MSRP, my new 2017 M240i cost me $45.7K in today's dollars ($38.8K in June, 2018). The cars are remarkably similar to this owner of both, and the check for the M240i was 12% less than the one I wrote for the M6. Progress - you've got to embrace and celebrate it! Another data point: the M240i is at 28.8 mpg since new (89 fill-ups).
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01-14-2023, 05:09 AM | #75 |
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Since I've been retired for many years already, it'd only take twenty bucks for me to go! OK, OK, if you want to quibble, a nickel.
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01-14-2023, 07:03 AM | #76 |
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I was just going on the basis that this is the G8X section of Bimmerpost, and those models cost between $75k for a base 6MT sedan with no options, up through $124k for a fully kitted convertible. Port-installed options (like Msport carbon bits) can drive these up even further. So $100k seemed like a reasonable midpoint. I admit I may be biased, as my own base M3 will be just over $93k, with sales tax bringing that to about $101k.
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01-14-2023, 11:12 PM | #77 | |
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02-21-2024, 11:47 AM | #79 |
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To retire today, I'd say at least $5m, preferably $10m. I'm only 35. If all goes to plan, I'd like to retire around 55-60, so I'd need a larger amount to bridge that 20-25 year gap.
Anything less than $5m and I wouldn't quit my day job.
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