Does the 4% Withdrawal Rule Work For an Early Retirement (And What To Do Instead)? ᴴᴰ

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  • Опубликовано: 9 сен 2024

Комментарии • 33

  • @CalmerThanYouAre1
    @CalmerThanYouAre1 Год назад +6

    Extremely valuable content right here. Those steadfastly following the 4% rule are likely leaving a lot of "life" on the table and passing down a larger estate than they'd have liked to.
    The retirement spending "smile" is often disregarded too. Personally, I think we should all plan to push the spending limits in our 50s and 60s when we are the healthiest and most mobile/active. Most people 75+ stick pretty close to home the majority of the year and lead fairly simple, easy (and relative to their 50s, inexpensive) lives.

    • @earlyretirementari
      @earlyretirementari  Год назад +1

      Well said @tommyron251
      Couldn’t agree more. Thanks for sharing.

  • @johngill2853
    @johngill2853 Год назад +1

    You definitely could spend more than 4% if the market is doing well. 4% isn't a rule and you won't be punished for not following it
    4% plus inflation adjustments was the safe max(historically safest highest withdrawal rate). It was information we didn't have before the study. Absolutely groundbreaking research that not once in study says rule

  • @RandomJane104
    @RandomJane104 Год назад +3

    You're great! I enjoy listening to your advice.

  • @mrbuttons2065
    @mrbuttons2065 11 месяцев назад +3

    I think using 4% Gross w/drwl is a base guideline (some years could be better ... live it up).

  • @johngill2853
    @johngill2853 Год назад +2

    Taxes are part of your expenses. What other catogeies are you also leaving out if you don't think taxes are expences
    Time stamp 1:38

    • @bradk7653
      @bradk7653 Год назад +1

      Agreed, the 4% rule is 4%. It is not what your living expenses are, it is what you can safely withdraw from you nest egg. If you have other income, such as rental income, pension, and/or Social Security, then your spending will be higher than 4% and should be higher, the 4% is only what you are taking out of your retirement nest egg, not your retirement income/spending.

  • @donaldcedar7574
    @donaldcedar7574 11 месяцев назад +2

    What if we're 100% s&p500 and willing to live like monks and go down to 2% or even less if there is a 30-50% downturn in the market? Would that work? How much could we take out during bull markets?
    The diversified approach is probably better... I'm just really curious.

    • @az21bob666
      @az21bob666 9 месяцев назад

      Good question. And remember it could be when you take the money out. What about voo and vym split. That be about 2.5 percent divided

  • @larriveeman
    @larriveeman 11 месяцев назад +1

    fortunately I have a great federal pension and no debt, no need to take SS until FRA and don't need to touch IRA/TSP

    • @earlyretirementari
      @earlyretirementari  11 месяцев назад

      Love it. That’s due to your hard work to be in that great position.

  • @CalmerThanYouAre1
    @CalmerThanYouAre1 8 месяцев назад

    Great content! 👏🏻

  • @andyojones
    @andyojones Год назад +2

    Excellent, thoughtful content. I find it unnerving that Ari blinks less than Hannibal Lecter.

    • @earlyretirementari
      @earlyretirementari  Год назад +1

      Ha! My editor cuts it well- I promise I blink Andy! Thanks for the kind words.

    • @dforrest4503
      @dforrest4503 Год назад +1

      I’m a teacher and I also blink seldom. It can freak kids out, haha

    • @earlyretirementari
      @earlyretirementari  Год назад

      @@dforrest4503 ha! So is my partner.

  • @mikebrault9164
    @mikebrault9164 8 месяцев назад

    Great content! What exactly are the, “Set of guidelines”?

  • @swright5690
    @swright5690 Год назад +1

    What are your fees? Cant find it on your website?

    • @earlyretirementari
      @earlyretirementari  Год назад

      They’re on the Rootfinancialpartners.com home page if you scroll down!

  • @edhcb9359
    @edhcb9359 Год назад +1

    If you want to retire young don’t use the 4% rule, use your public sector pension.

    • @earlyretirementari
      @earlyretirementari  Год назад

      Even better if you have one!

    • @CalmerThanYouAre1
      @CalmerThanYouAre1 8 месяцев назад

      A public sector pension is a great income source in retirement, but it’s a terrible way to build real wealth and transfer that wealth to your kids, charities or other noble causes.
      Your pension dies with you. Real wealth compounds into eternity.
      Also, if you’re talented in your profession, you’re leaving a lot of earning and wealth creation potential on the table by sticking with the government for a full career.

    • @edhcb9359
      @edhcb9359 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@CalmerThanYouAre1 Wife is retiring with a public sector pension that will pay over $200k/year. Maybe she left talent on the table, I’m not sure but the work/life balance has always been great. Plus, we won’t touch my retirement savings or our other investments and they will stay fully invested at least until we have to start taking required distributions. So our kids can inherit that plus our properties.

    • @nutria12247
      @nutria12247 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@edhcb9359 I'm not sure what her job was, but my public sector teacher pension will be about $40,000 per year. So I guess she wasn't a teacher!

    • @edhcb9359
      @edhcb9359 7 месяцев назад

      @@nutria12247 You should have gone into the administration side.

  • @anthonylaiferrario
    @anthonylaiferrario Год назад +1

    Ari keep it up! For us younger folks your content is perfectly targeted. The normal root channel is still good but not as good as your channel

  • @70qq
    @70qq Год назад

    🤘🏻