Retire Early at 50 or before 59.5 || Retirement Strategy Using 72T

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  • Опубликовано: 1 фев 2025

Комментарии • 39

  • @yourfinancialekg
    @yourfinancialekg  2 года назад +2

    **To schedule your virtual retirement and investment consultation with Drew, please select a day & time that works best for you: calendly.com/pearlwealthgroup/discoverycall ** ☎

  • @christine-jx4fh
    @christine-jx4fh Год назад +5

    Great video! That guy is my idol. 56k in expenses with a 2 million portfolio at 50. Very impressive.

  • @darbyohara
    @darbyohara Год назад +3

    This was a good example using a real world situation

  •  7 месяцев назад +1

    great video. I retired early at 55 (my 2nd retirement), when I am 59.5 I will be golden.

  • @brianmcg321
    @brianmcg321 3 месяца назад +3

    With $404k in a taxable, why even bother with a 72T at all?

  • @damis2372
    @damis2372 10 месяцев назад +1

    I found your channel a couple of weeks ago and i love the content. Thank you for brining us information.

  • @gin170
    @gin170 Год назад +3

    Thanks, this is very helpful.

  • @bigtoeknee11
    @bigtoeknee11 Год назад +2

    What about Roth conversions during the low income years?

  • @MrDarkBM
    @MrDarkBM Год назад +2

    Do you have to adjust the 72T each year or is it a set it and forget until 59 1/2 or 5 years?

    • @yourfinancialekg
      @yourfinancialekg  Год назад +3

      The payments are a fixed payment but the custodian normally won’t distribute the funds automatically. You have to go in a pull the money.

    • @travishall67
      @travishall67 Год назад

      @@yourfinancialekg I work with Edward Jones and they set mine (72T) up for me and deposit a check in my account once on the 1st of each month and once on the 15th of each month. 👍

  • @michaelwayne7887
    @michaelwayne7887 11 месяцев назад +1

    I'm not understanding listing the 72t as an asset. The Rule of 72t is simply a designated set of conditions one must meet in order to qualify as a penalty free withdraw from an IRA... What does the $552.000 represent, another IRA? This suggests there is such a thing as a "72t account" to which he has contributed on the same footing as an IRA, but.... I don't get it. What exactly is a 72t account you're assigning this money to? Where does the 552,000 sit at the moment, without the "72t" attached to it?

  • @GuruRangerAlpha9er
    @GuruRangerAlpha9er 20 дней назад

    Your 72t withdraw amount seems low. $552,000, 5% amortization rate, age 50; yearly SEPP is $33,292, or $2827/ month.

  • @damis2372
    @damis2372 10 месяцев назад +1

    How do you predict the "Account balance" on your IRA if you are 100% invested in stocks and value of IRA changes daily?

    • @yourfinancialekg
      @yourfinancialekg  10 месяцев назад +2

      12/31 value

    • @brianmcg321
      @brianmcg321 3 месяца назад

      It’s not a prediction, you use your last statement.

  • @zapryanov6
    @zapryanov6 3 месяца назад

    Not sure why you would mess with 72t in this case. You have enough to bridge the gap with non qualified assets and stay in low capital gains bracket. You are just risking more unnecessary tax implications. I would be questioning this strategy if I was the client.

  • @brandon8531
    @brandon8531 Год назад +1

    If you are still available in 10 years… I’ll be contacting you with a very very similar scenario. 😂👍👌

    • @yourfinancialekg
      @yourfinancialekg  Год назад +1

      I'll still be here!

    • @damis2372
      @damis2372 10 месяцев назад

      @@yourfinancialekg You will be here with 10 million subscribers.

  • @wesleywilliams1186
    @wesleywilliams1186 Год назад +1

    Whats the point in having a roth and a traditional ira if you can only contribute the max limit total through BOTH accts. Why not just contribute the max to 1 acct?

    • @yourfinancialekg
      @yourfinancialekg  Год назад +1

      Great question, normally it's when you are trying to balance out taxes or doing roth conversion planning.

    • @brianmcg321
      @brianmcg321 3 месяца назад

      Options.

  • @christine-jx4fh
    @christine-jx4fh Год назад +1

    Any chance you could do an indepth analysis on how he obtained such a large portfolio at 50? Buy and hold strategy? Inheritance? He definitely doesn't spend much so that's huge.

    • @yourfinancialekg
      @yourfinancialekg  Год назад +1

      He is single, saved aggressively, and lived by his budget. Hope that helps!

    • @yourfinancialekg
      @yourfinancialekg  Год назад +1

      @@originalmicdrop Maybe...

  • @FinanceNation
    @FinanceNation Год назад

    Hey how you doing...I am 41

  • @karennz1099
    @karennz1099 Год назад

    For real… you’re examples are so rich… so unrealistic than most Americans

    • @yourfinancialekg
      @yourfinancialekg  Год назад +3

      Thanks for the comment. All my examples are taken directly from someone who contacted me for a Financial EKG. What kind of examples would you rather see?

    • @beatricerights
      @beatricerights Год назад +1

      @@yourfinancialekg I'm 52 year old single teacher with a little over one million. 650k are in retirement accounts. 500k has a guaranteed return of 7%. (This is available only to NYC educators).II will receive a pension. If I leave now I will get 40k at 55 with free health care. If I wait until 55 it will be 65 to 70k half my pay. I can't do teach anymore I would like to retire in June. Can I retire.?

    • @yourfinancialekg
      @yourfinancialekg  Год назад +1

      @@beatricerights Congrats on saving! There are many variables to determine if you can retire, including expenses, taxes, and where you'll be living or doing in the next 10-20 years. Contact us if you would like to discuss creating a Your Financial EKG plan for you. Thanks for watching!

    • @bigtoeknee11
      @bigtoeknee11 Год назад +1

      ​​​@@beatricerights All depends on expenses but if you have little to no debt you will be fine. I would try n wait it out the 3 more Years for the extra -25k.