Philly to the world...., Honestly this cannot be overemphasized, helping people mitigate unforseen circumstances and mistakes .It's always good to have a financial plan,
Tomorrow is not promised. Lost my wife to cancer at age 41 . I'm 51 and never went back to work so I can care for our 2 small children. Mental health is important
This was terrific. I did the same thing this week so I was curious. What I've seen all too often are people who have worried about retirement since they got their first job, they're in their 40s and they still have no clear idea of what they're doing. All the financial education they've had are Rich Dad Poor Dad trash, and 'financial planners' selling them insurance annuities... The meeting I had, confirmed that my basic understanding of my situation was good. I could've skipped the meeting and the expense. However, a few things I did wrong were clarified, and professionals confirmed that what I'd understood about budgeting, projections, etc... we're correct. Had I had that meeting five years ago I would now be in a better financial position. So I did figure it out on my own, but at a much higher cost. One key thing I did gain from the meeting was by clarifying my situation, any anxiety or doubts I had are taken care of. Good money well spent. And I like David. He's retiring for a good reason. I was teaching at a horrible school, kid had a gun in his bag (he wasn't going to shoot anyone, but stupid.) The principal said that if I didn't actually see the gun there was nothing he could do.... I said, "I won't be back." Retired then and there. If the financial planners this week had told me I was short for my financial plan, I could go back to work, teach somewhere else, do construction work.. Having options, not feeling trapped, and not being desperate because of not knowing; and being able to hire someone who does know and is fiduciary to my interests has given me a lot of confidence in my retirement.
I retired at 61 in January 2024. I receive $78,300+ per year with my pension and SS combined. I have a small 401K. No debt, except my mortgage. I was working 50 hours per week in an extremely high stress job and am now pre-diabetic. I’m focusing on my health for the first time. I have zero regrets about retiring; it was the best decision I ever made.
Im so glad to see a video with a scenario closer to my reality.... I'm never going to have the portfolio numbers that James usually runs scenarios on. Thank you!
Big fan of all of your content but this is, far and away, the best video you’ve done. Highly detailed without undue complexity, very relatable. You hit every significant topic I would have brought up if I were sitting in David’s chair. Thanks!
@@RootFP @RootFP Liked and Sunscribed James! I feel helping working middle class people like this are more true to life, as opposed to multi-million portfolio scenarios, help a greater audience.
First off, great video! To David - I would suggest you look at all your expenses in retirement. You have got to get that number correct. Your $2,000 (bare bones) living expenese seems really low. For me, even with no debt, I would not be able to retire on a bare bones retirement. For me, the purpose of retirment was to do the things I did not have time to do while working. If you were to model it - I would double your expense number. For me - I looked at the expenses every month for a year to see what I was living on. I dont think you will want to sit at home and do nothing. Best wishes on a happy retirement - thanks for sharing your situation with us.
Thank you David for sharing your situation with us. Thanks again, James for a helpful retirement session. I'm enjoying the variation of 'guests' on this long form review. Very helpful.
I was excited to see someone my age and in a similar financial situation. This was one of your most helpful videos. Easy to understand. I learned a couple of things. Think I'd better get a new roof while still working.
Thanks James! Finally someone who is very close to my situation, with similar questions. Yay East Coast people, the TRI-state traffic nightmare is very real.
Your best video yet, James! I learn more from videos like this, as opposed to videos on other channels that feature people who are worried that their $25 million portfolio may not be enough for their retirement. I like how David is fiscally responsible and has a pretty solid knowledge of the markets, their fundamentals, and withdrawal strategies. I think he will be just fine in retirement.
I’m 62 with just $100,000 saved but I’m saving $3,000 a month pretax and post tax now. What will help me is my house is paid for and it’s in a rural northern Wisconsin area where the taxes on it are under $1000 a year and I heat with free wood and I get my power mostly from solar. I have zero debt and I am drawing a $1000 a month pension now and hope to work till I’m 70 then draw social security at that age, but then I hope to have enough saved to live a comfortable life.
Great discussion. One thought not mentioned, and maybe it was because it's already off the table. Part time income. Every $1 made there is $1 not pulled from investments, and is $1 that can still grow. Something that's not stressful, something you'd enjoy, is close to you, and only few hours a week. Maybe something seasonal so it's not even all year. With expenses low, a small income can make a significant difference. Even something only 8-10 hours a week.
Wonderful to see a real person, who happens to be so knowledgeable and "caring" and interesting. Thank you James for introducing us to David and his retirement plan.
I absolutely loved this video and hearing the thought process throughout. Thanks to David for sharing his story and best of luck to him in retirement! Hope to see more of these types of videos. 😊
David, you look fantastic for 61 years old. Those plants are treating you very well! Best of luck in retirement. James is right about filling up that tax bracket with Roth conversions because the tax rates are rolling back in 2025 so they are most likely going to be higher when you hit RMD age.
Think about Roth Conversions the same as you would sequence of return risks. If you convert pre-tax to tax free, you have to pay tax today (or whatever year you do them) and that money is no longer growing at those compounded gains rates. Those voluntary taxes you pay can be thought of the same way as portfolio loses due to a downturn in the market. Say you pay $1000 in tax instead of investing it, you may be saving 200 basis points in future tax savings, but you may be giving up MUCH more capital gains because that money isn't in your account for decades, early in your retirement. I would think that at rather modest retirement savings, RMDs aren't going to be overly onerous. RMDs can be prudent income sources if they don't force you into several tax brackets higher.
@@danoberste8146 Thank you for the suggest thinking, but can you explain it on an elementary level (ie, 200 basis points & giving up capital gains? I'm a scientist, but I don't understand the financial stuff very well.
Good video. I didn't see any provisions for possible future spending such as replacing a car, a child's wedding, a new furnace, replacing a roof, removing a large dead tree, expensive car repair, grandchildren expenses, non-covered medical expenses or prescriptions, etc. Budget doesn't seem to allow for unplanned life events. I would budget $500 per month just for these things. I could see all of these things happening easily in a 20 yr period. This is $120k over 20 years. Maybe he has better luck than I do, but this is normal life. A never ending series of one-time expenses.
It is close but better than my situation. I am 60 and have about 400k in various retirement accounts plus about 60k in bank. However there is still 125k left on mortgage. Maybe 2-3 more years will get me closer to situation discussed here. Thanks for bringing some real common scenarios of middle class.
I use to have a very similar commute here in the DMV. 35 miles took me almost 2 hours each way.. Right before COVID I was made 100% remote. I no longer have the commute, but commute or no commute, the option to retire asap is the goal.
@@RootFP Yes, It would be welcome for those of us that can't meet the 2 Million requirement for an account, to have more of these videos. Definitely appreciated and as a lot of viewers have said, best video yet for those of us that don't qualify.
Expecting people to save $2 million for retirement is absolutely insane. The younger generations can’t even afford their rent or house payment or student loans. Something has to change.
I commend James for taking his time to do this review. Despite the low retirement assets and way below their $2mill threshold for investment advice he chose to help this guy out. These kids (James and Ari) are going to do well. Breath of fresh air from what I have been seeing lately. Integrity and selflessness over personal gain.
This is a great followup video relative to my comment on the last one, where I replied to some commenter complaining that an estimated $12,000/mo withdrawal rate was not going to be enough. This is a much more common retirement scenario and it's good to have explained that by making smart choices modest retirees who are diligent with their finances can still do very well in retirement.
Why not take social security as soon as you can and invest the money if it isn’t needed? My investments were up 22% last year and 17% so far this year. I realize markets can go down but if markets are doing well it seems you might get a better return on SS if it is invest the money.
Thank you for this video! It was very helpful. I'm trying to make this decision myself right now and I appreciate seeing a more realistic retirement example that I can relate to! There are so many examples out there that use the 'retiring married couple with millions of dollars'--which is not applicable for many of us.
Very good. I retired in March, 2022 with 430k. I was 62 in 2021. I took S.S. at 62 - but as my wife is older she was able to increase her S.S. to get Spousal benefit (1/2 of my full retirement) which added over 700 a month. I avoided the 2022 drawdown in Stocks and Bonds by going short term in first week of Jan, 2022 and went short term T.Bills etc. My budget includes everything: Gas/Food/Long term Insurance/ gifts/ various repairs on vehicles/ electricity/ insurance/ real estate taxes/ charity etc. I didn’t cut anything. I kept about 5% stock fund and kept gold (about 15% portfolio) which was bought 2008 (growing at about 7% a year since then) First year for health insurance I stuck with Cobra - but never paid. That premium built - but since never used - it expired without my paying a dollar. I got Obama insurance which was $200 a month since then. Medicare will kick in this year. I have so far very good health - no medication etc. Ok. I budgeted 16-20k a year for any short fall. I have used about 8-9k. I have more now after 2.5 years later even with a 16k New well dug in Jan 2024. My house and vehicles are paid for. No debt. To really know IF you have enough - you must know where every dollar goes before you retire. EVERY Dollar. That means a week too week, month to month, year to year. Little things like dog food, bird feed over a year really adds up. I don’t count my house, my cars, my Collectibles. Anything - besides actual Cash equivalent as part of my retirement. At present I’m taking nothing out of retirement monies - interest etc is paying everything (even after a 15k New well)
So many expenses that aren’t being considered. What about a new car or even a transmission, tires, etc.? Or what about a new washer, dryer, refrigerator? What about pets? New roof, windows, furnace, paint job. I could go on and on. and what vacation costs $1000?
Our roof was replaced the year before retirement, so maybe we'll get another 15/20 years out of it since it's a thicker material. Appliances have lasted over 10 years and generally it's one at a time. Investments have grown at a good enough rate to cover any of this and we'll probably have several years worth of emergency funds to cover anything too. So I'd say it's doable.
I also have ACA for healthcare. My income is low enough that my coverage (a silver plan) is only about 120.00 a month. Thankfully ACA goes by your income and not your net worth because although my income may be a lot less, my net worth continues to increase. My income is low enough to maximize the subsidies but still high enough to enjoy life which does include traveling.
Great video, James, and wonderful dialogue with David! David: I hope you can soon spend less hours in your car and more hours doing all that you love! I hope there is a sequel, so we can know how it is going.
A follow up in a year or 2 would be a great idea to see how his actual spending compared to his plans plus actual market performance effect on his portfolio & withdrawals.
Very informative video. Approximately six months ago I started viewing loads of retirement videos… that and after downloading new retirement software, I feel very confident about when I can retire, etc. I’m 58 and considering retiring early and I’m in a position to do that. We shall see . Thanks for the education!
If there wasn’t such severe and widespread age discrimination, it would be great if he could work full-time two more years but close to home. He’s not burned out on working, he’s burned out on driving in traffic.
Great interview, gives a great eprspective and real life scenario. I am only 47 but your videos have really enahnced my knowledge and preparation. 14 more years to go!
I’m 61 and retiring in two months, also with just over $500k. I have three years of expenses in high yield savings, which is what I’ll live on to hedge against sequence of returns risk.
Great Video. I want to retire at 60 and no debt. This really helped. I loved it all, but the talk about delaying SS if the market is good was a great discussion that I haven't thought about. Thank you James
It's essential to have multiple streams of income in retirement, like Social Security, pensions, investments, and real estate. This diversification helps reduce the risk of relying on any single income source that may fluctuate or lose value over time
Since the medicaid expansion went through the ACA, they don't count assets just income. If you keep your income low enough you will either get medicaid or the essential plan which are both zero premiums, so basically you are getting free health care. Once your income goes above that, you can go on the exchange and get subsidies. I live in New York and I'm 60 with over one million in my IRA and this is my current situation. I retired last year.
Ill be 57 in a couple weeks with a comparable portfolio as this gentleman now. I plan to work til 62 - 65, it’s nice to see a realistic portfolio and know I’m on track and a little closer. Thanks.
You are an amazing an very wise advisor James. My former advisor could not speak to me in layman's terms, so I fired him. This work session shows your compassion toward your clients but allows you to share your technical training. Koodos to you James. I love this!
Great video, but those numbers look so low to me. I am not sure where you can travel for $1000 (10K over 10 years) with hotels at almost $150/ night in the middle of the country and $300/night in big cities. That doesn’t even include transportation costs to get there, food, yet alone entertainment when you get there. Also with the current inflation we are seeing, eating out has almost doubled in cost in 3 years.
I can't help but wonder, has he spoken to his employer about possibly shifting to a part-time role for 2-3 years as a transition to retirement? It buys him a little time, gives him less commutes and more time, would be a nice transition to retirement, and potentially helps his employer also. It sounds as if he's a valuable employee who they wouldn't want to lose. This could be a win-win for all involved. I'd be interested to know if this has been considered or is a possibility. One would think he should at least inquire about such arrangement. Of course, thatassumes he'd even be interested in that; he may want to be done, especiallywith his tutoring gig.
MORE normal realistic people like this guy and I will subscribe. I am a single woman, almost 63, with about the same portfolio and my EDJones rep did a scenario where will likely fail if I retire now, and 65 is iffy, but I feel like she's being REALLY conservative. My SS won't be a lot of money, though.
I did that same commute, and it sucks. I also left the house at 5am, but I was able to leave work around lunchtime and work the rest of the day at home. Even then, it took anywhere from an hour to three hours to get home. The Schuylkill is a mess at the best of times, and always a stressful commute.
Another option: If feasible, rent a tiny studio in-town and only commute on long weekends back home. Could perhaps squeeze out another year or two of work with reasonable satisfaction before full retirement.
The comments should tell you that people want to see more normal people like David, not the guys with a couple million worried about retiring. I could live off that interest alone, what are they worried about? Most people can't relate to people like that. I had a lot in common with David. About a year old, and a little more money but well under a million. Retiring here in about 10 weeks. Thanks for the great video.
This is so helpful! As someone with a similar situation, but who wants to travel as I’m physically able, this is reassuring. I need to run my own figures of course.
With $500K an investments he could earn almost $25K in dividend income. He would lose none of this principle. Has 80k in cash so that's more than enough to bridge the gap.
Not sure how this one slipped past me, this is a fantastic video! I love seeing real numbers...and you can tell they're real just from the sheer number of accounts at the beginning. 😂Great stuff!
Yes! David can retire because he has things paid off! His spending is under control. Even if he puts that $500,000 into VOO, VGT and SCHD equally he will be fine. Split 3 ways. Remember the 4 per cent rule? Even if he pulls 6 out and gets a 13 per cent return he will be fine! Yes, there will be a few years of market drops but look at the return of just the S and P the last 50 years??❤️ Cheers!
Keep listening to other episodes and you’ll start to catch on and understand more. That’s what I’m doing and it’s all starting to come together in my mind.
@@RootFPyes. This is more in tune with the average retiree. Most of us will never have over a million in an IRA. My husband and I retired with a similar amount in our IRA except I am on disability so I got my full SS early 1750 a month- and my husband at 65 got about 2800 a month from his SS. Plus a 500 a month pension. We found a good accountant and FP. But it’s nice to see someone average!
Great video! David's scenario is somewhat similar to my situation, but I'm 55 with about $400k in assets and I'd like to retire at 60. Given my high savings rate and expected rate of return, I hope to hit 1 million by then. However, I want to be able to spend significantly more than David is planning to and I want to delay SS until FRA or later, and pulling nearly 7% from my portfolio for 7+ years would probably stress me out a bit.
Thank you for discussing a far more realistic amount for retirement. Too many people doing analyses with $1M when that’s not today’s reality for most people.
I’m concerned he doesn’t have enough “cash” on hand, and the ability to accumulate more for home repairs, replacement of a vehicle, paying for a good supplemental Medicare coverage plan, once he is no longer working. A new roof alone is going to be $20,000, which could need to happen in a down market year.
I had the same question. Replacing a vehicle, even with a used car, is likely 25-30K. Add on other surprises, new roof, new HVAC, broken fridge or washer/dryer; then it seems like he'll be very pressed for cash. In practical terms, it seems like this is just a year too early.
Looks like he’ll be doing tutoring and the long term projection indicates that he can absorb. He did mention changing portfolio to also help accommodate. I think he can do it especially if having much money isn’t that important to him at time of death.
If the Affordable Care Act is taken down how are you going to afford health insurance? Also the Social Security trust fund is running out in 10 years - currently it will mean a 25% decrease from FRA.
I'm currently 42 and planning to retire in 3 years at 45. By then, I’ll have a state pension of about $5,000 a month, plus $7,000 a month from a rental property, which has a $4,900 monthly mortgage. I also have around $300,000 in a 457b plan and some additional assets in a brokerage account. Social Security won’t kick in for another 20 years, so I'm considering working part-time after retirement. If I retire in 3 years with 23.5 years of service, I’ll receive 58% of my best three years' salary, averaging to $106,000 a year. However, if I stay at my job longer, my pension percentage increases each year. For example, if I work 25 years, I would receive 63%, which would raise my pension to roughly $5,500 a month. I'm weighing whether it’s worth staying longer for the increased pension even though i want to b done decisions, decisions, decisions.
I'm sure he's checked his numbers but I'm wondering how his bare bones cost of living can be so low at 2000k per month. His high property taxes and health insurance would take at least half of that. That leaves 1000 dollars. Utilities and groceries would take most of that but then car ins. gas for car, internet , cell phone, incidental repairs on car or home, etc. Upkeeping a home is more expensive than one realizes.
Very nice to see. I am in a very similar situation. [60, frugal, just paid off mortgage, $500k in total retirement, plan to retire at 61; I even work in science!]
You can retire comfortably on WAYYYYYYYYYYYYY less than 500k, if you have a modicum of self discipline. Stop the obsession with owning every damned thing that hits the market - or having 8 of everything. Get rid of the streaming services, 3rd vehicle, 2nd home. Stop buying new cars as soon as the payments end on your 'old' car. Blink and you'll be 70 and barely able to get around.
I agree I like your videos but come on! There is no way you can get by on $2000 a month. Not a chance unless you want to spend all your time at home and pinch every penny. I would say at least $4000/month is more realistic.
I retired this year at 60 with about $600k. $4k/mo is what I’m drawing but I’m still paying almost $1000 mortgage, $600 car payment, $209 solar loan. So, it really depends on where you live, what you’re buying and paying for utilities. He should have added SOME basic living expenses to those gifts and trips costs
Philly to the world...., Honestly this cannot be overemphasized, helping people mitigate unforseen circumstances and mistakes .It's always good to have a financial plan,
Tomorrow is not promised. Lost my wife to cancer at age 41 . I'm 51 and never went back to work so I can care for our 2 small children. Mental health is important
Refreshing to see someone who doesn't have a boatload of money and how planning is approached.
This was terrific. I did the same thing this week so I was curious. What I've seen all too often are people who have worried about retirement since they got their first job, they're in their 40s and they still have no clear idea of what they're doing. All the financial education they've had are Rich Dad Poor Dad trash, and 'financial planners' selling them insurance annuities...
The meeting I had, confirmed that my basic understanding of my situation was good. I could've skipped the meeting and the expense. However, a few things I did wrong were clarified, and professionals confirmed that what I'd understood about budgeting, projections, etc... we're correct. Had I had that meeting five years ago I would now be in a better financial position. So I did figure it out on my own, but at a much higher cost. One key thing I did gain from the meeting was by clarifying my situation, any anxiety or doubts I had are taken care of. Good money well spent.
And I like David. He's retiring for a good reason. I was teaching at a horrible school, kid had a gun in his bag (he wasn't going to shoot anyone, but stupid.) The principal said that if I didn't actually see the gun there was nothing he could do.... I said, "I won't be back." Retired then and there.
If the financial planners this week had told me I was short for my financial plan, I could go back to work, teach somewhere else, do construction work.. Having options, not feeling trapped, and not being desperate because of not knowing; and being able to hire someone who does know and is fiduciary to my interests has given me a lot of confidence in my retirement.
Exactly what I was thinking! I always those videos with people who have $2 million dollars and are worried if they have enough to retire!!
@@NipItInTheBud100 ... $2 million, low expenses like David, and still worried.😂
Very true - especially since Root Financial doesn't usually entertain clients with
Yet his assets are higher than the average American.
I retired at 61 in January 2024. I receive $78,300+ per year with my pension and SS combined. I have a small 401K. No debt, except my mortgage. I was working 50 hours per week in an extremely high stress job and am now pre-diabetic. I’m focusing on my health for the first time. I have zero regrets about retiring; it was the best decision I ever made.
Always enjoy your videos, but these Retirement Makeover videos with a live client are the best. Thanks, James!
I really appreciate David making his finances transparent so we can follow along and think about our own circumstances. Thank you David.
Im so glad to see a video with a scenario closer to my reality.... I'm never going to have the portfolio numbers that James usually runs scenarios on. Thank you!
No one cares, work harder.
@@As_A________Commenter Rude much??
Philly in the house and he’s not lying about that commute
Big fan of all of your content but this is, far and away, the best video you’ve done. Highly detailed without undue complexity, very relatable. You hit every significant topic I would have brought up if I were sitting in David’s chair. Thanks!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Agreed!!
@@RootFP @RootFP Liked and Sunscribed James! I feel helping working middle class people like this are more true to life, as opposed to multi-million portfolio scenarios, help a greater audience.
First off, great video! To David - I would suggest you look at all your expenses in retirement. You have got to get that number correct. Your $2,000 (bare bones) living expenese seems really low. For me, even with no debt, I would not be able to retire on a bare bones retirement. For me, the purpose of retirment was to do the things I did not have time to do while working. If you were to model it - I would double your expense number. For me - I looked at the expenses every month for a year to see what I was living on. I dont think you will want to sit at home and do nothing. Best wishes on a happy retirement - thanks for sharing your situation with us.
Thank you David for sharing your situation with us. Thanks again, James for a helpful retirement session. I'm enjoying the variation of 'guests' on this long form review. Very helpful.
This is one of the better videos I've seen lately. Thank you for putting this out there!
I was excited to see someone my age and in a similar financial situation. This was one of your most helpful videos. Easy to understand. I learned a couple of things. Think I'd better get a new roof while still working.
I love this format! A real life scenario with questions and answers back and forth! I learned a lot!
Thanks James! Finally someone who is very close to my situation, with similar questions. Yay East Coast people, the TRI-state traffic nightmare is very real.
Your best video yet, James! I learn more from videos like this, as opposed to videos on other channels that feature people who are worried that their $25 million portfolio may not be enough for their retirement. I like how David is fiscally responsible and has a pretty solid knowledge of the markets, their fundamentals, and withdrawal strategies. I think he will be just fine in retirement.
Thank you, Todd. I wish one of use could learn to accurately predict the future. Then I'd feel even better 😊
@@MatrixMatchedthen we’d all be rich! That’s boring! Ha ha! 😉
Good luck in retirement David. I hope the market cooperates and lets you pull SS at 70
Thank you so much. It's scary, but I am so excited!
I’m 62 with just $100,000 saved but I’m saving $3,000 a month pretax and post tax now. What will help me is my house is paid for and it’s in a rural northern Wisconsin area where the taxes on it are under $1000 a year and I heat with free wood and I get my power mostly from solar. I have zero debt and I am drawing a $1000 a month pension now and hope to work till I’m 70 then draw social security at that age, but then I hope to have enough saved to live a comfortable life.
Good stuff to see how all of this works.
Thanks to both of you.
Great discussion. One thought not mentioned, and maybe it was because it's already off the table.
Part time income. Every $1 made there is $1 not pulled from investments, and is $1 that can still grow. Something that's not stressful, something you'd enjoy, is close to you, and only few hours a week. Maybe something seasonal so it's not even all year. With expenses low, a small income can make a significant difference. Even something only 8-10 hours a week.
Thank you. This is always an option, and I like the way you presented the idea. I will definitely consider.
Wonderful to see a real person, who happens to be so knowledgeable and "caring" and interesting. Thank you James for introducing us to David and his retirement plan.
Well done this was informative. Sipped a Coors light and enjoyed the projections. I hope David can soon stop that long 90 minute commute!
I absolutely loved this video and hearing the thought process throughout. Thanks to David for sharing his story and best of luck to him in retirement! Hope to see more of these types of videos. 😊
Thank you for the kind wishes. I hope the future is bright for all of us! Careful planning and living within my means.
This was incredibly insightful & the numbers were achievable. It’s always beneficial to have a more realistic scenario.
David, you look fantastic for 61 years old. Those plants are treating you very well! Best of luck in retirement. James is right about filling up that tax bracket with Roth conversions because the tax rates are rolling back in 2025 so they are most likely going to be higher when you hit RMD age.
Thank you, Susan, for the advice and the compliment. The hair dye keeps me happy, but I'm not fooling anyone.😊
Think about Roth Conversions the same as you would sequence of return risks. If you convert pre-tax to tax free, you have to pay tax today (or whatever year you do them) and that money is no longer growing at those compounded gains rates. Those voluntary taxes you pay can be thought of the same way as portfolio loses due to a downturn in the market. Say you pay $1000 in tax instead of investing it, you may be saving 200 basis points in future tax savings, but you may be giving up MUCH more capital gains because that money isn't in your account for decades, early in your retirement.
I would think that at rather modest retirement savings, RMDs aren't going to be overly onerous. RMDs can be prudent income sources if they don't force you into several tax brackets higher.
@@MatrixMatchedlol you’re welcome! 😊
@@danoberste8146 Thank you for the suggest thinking, but can you explain it on an elementary level (ie, 200 basis points & giving up capital gains? I'm a scientist, but I don't understand the financial stuff very well.
Good video. I didn't see any provisions for possible future spending such as replacing a car, a child's wedding, a new furnace, replacing a roof, removing a large dead tree, expensive car repair, grandchildren expenses, non-covered medical expenses or prescriptions, etc. Budget doesn't seem to allow for unplanned life events. I would budget $500 per month just for these things. I could see all of these things happening easily in a 20 yr period. This is $120k over 20 years. Maybe he has better luck than I do, but this is normal life. A never ending series of one-time expenses.
Yes, you can. Collect SS at age 62, and a bit from your retirement account. Living a simple life is the key.
It is close but better than my situation. I am 60 and have about 400k in various retirement accounts plus about 60k in bank. However there is still 125k left on mortgage. Maybe 2-3 more years will get me closer to situation discussed here.
Thanks for bringing some real common scenarios of middle class.
Thank you for this example using a modest portfolio/spending! And single!
I use to have a very similar commute here in the DMV. 35 miles took me almost 2 hours each way.. Right before COVID I was made 100% remote. I no longer have the commute, but commute or no commute, the option to retire asap is the goal.
Best video yet! This was eo relatable to my personal situation. Love this!
So glad!
@@RootFP Yes, It would be welcome for those of us that can't meet the 2 Million requirement for an account, to have more of these videos. Definitely appreciated and as a lot of viewers have said, best video yet for those of us that don't qualify.
Expecting people to save $2 million for retirement is absolutely insane. The younger generations can’t even afford their rent or house payment or student loans. Something has to change.
I commend James for taking his time to do this review. Despite the low retirement assets and way below their $2mill threshold for investment advice he chose to help this guy out. These kids (James and Ari) are going to do well. Breath of fresh air from what I have been seeing lately. Integrity and selflessness over personal gain.
This is a great followup video relative to my comment on the last one, where I replied to some commenter complaining that an estimated $12,000/mo withdrawal rate was not going to be enough. This is a much more common retirement scenario and it's good to have explained that by making smart choices modest retirees who are diligent with their finances can still do very well in retirement.
Thank you
Why not take social security as soon as you can and invest the money if it isn’t needed? My investments were up 22% last year and 17% so far this year. I realize markets can go down but if markets are doing well it seems you might get a better return on SS if it is invest the money.
- SS if you invest the money.
Thank you for this video! It was very helpful. I'm trying to make this decision myself right now and I appreciate seeing a more realistic retirement example that I can relate to!
There are so many examples out there that use the 'retiring married couple with millions of dollars'--which is not applicable for many of us.
Very good.
I retired in March, 2022 with 430k.
I was 62 in 2021. I took S.S. at 62 - but as my wife is older she was able to increase her S.S. to get Spousal benefit (1/2 of my full retirement) which added over 700 a month.
I avoided the 2022 drawdown in Stocks and Bonds by going short term in first week of Jan, 2022 and went short term T.Bills etc.
My budget includes everything: Gas/Food/Long term Insurance/ gifts/ various repairs on vehicles/ electricity/ insurance/ real estate taxes/ charity etc.
I didn’t cut anything.
I kept about 5% stock fund and kept gold (about 15% portfolio) which was bought 2008 (growing at about 7% a year since then)
First year for health insurance I stuck with Cobra - but never paid. That premium built - but since never used - it expired without my paying a dollar. I got Obama insurance which was $200 a month since then. Medicare will kick in this year. I have so far very good health - no medication etc.
Ok.
I budgeted 16-20k a year for any short fall. I have used about 8-9k.
I have more now after 2.5 years later even with a 16k New well dug in Jan 2024.
My house and vehicles are paid for. No debt.
To really know IF you have enough - you must know where every dollar goes before you retire. EVERY Dollar. That means a week too week, month to month, year to year. Little things like dog food, bird feed over a year really adds up.
I don’t count my house, my cars, my Collectibles. Anything - besides actual Cash equivalent as part of my retirement.
At present I’m taking nothing out of retirement monies - interest etc is paying everything (even after a 15k New well)
Good job!
So many expenses that aren’t being considered. What about a new car or even a transmission, tires, etc.? Or what about a new washer, dryer, refrigerator? What about pets? New roof, windows, furnace, paint job. I could go on and on. and what vacation costs $1000?
He has almost 90K in his emergency fund. I agree the vacation amount is ridiculously low.
Our roof was replaced the year before retirement, so maybe we'll get another 15/20 years out of it since it's a thicker material. Appliances have lasted over 10 years and generally it's one at a time. Investments have grown at a good enough rate to cover any of this and we'll probably have several years worth of emergency funds to cover anything too. So I'd say it's doable.
I also have ACA for healthcare. My income is low enough that my coverage (a silver plan) is only about 120.00 a month. Thankfully ACA goes by your income and not your net worth because although my income may be a lot less, my net worth continues to increase. My income is low enough to maximize the subsidies but still high enough to enjoy life which does include traveling.
Great video, James, and wonderful dialogue with David!
David: I hope you can soon spend less hours in your car and more hours doing all that you love!
I hope there is a sequel, so we can know how it is going.
A follow up in a year or 2 would be a great idea to see how his actual spending compared to his plans plus actual market performance effect on his portfolio & withdrawals.
Thanks David and James for sharing this helpful information!
You bet!
James, i love these deep dives. It provides good examples of when, why and what adjustments can empower us to retire as early as possible.
So helpful to see this type of content.
Very informative video. Approximately six months ago I started viewing loads of retirement videos… that and after downloading new retirement software, I feel very confident about when I can retire, etc. I’m 58 and considering retiring early and I’m in a position to do that. We shall see . Thanks for the education!
Very helpful video. It's good to see an example of competent retirement planning with a qualified financial planner.
If there wasn’t such severe and widespread age discrimination, it would be great if he could work full-time two more years but close to home. He’s not burned out on working, he’s burned out on driving in traffic.
This is incredibly thorough and informative.
Great interview, gives a great eprspective and real life scenario. I am only 47 but your videos have really enahnced my knowledge and preparation. 14 more years to go!
Thank you to David! So interesting and helpful to see real life numbers.
Fine, thoughtful, and through discussion James. I enjoyed it.✊
Glad to hear it!
I’m 61 and retiring in two months, also with just over $500k. I have three years of expenses in high yield savings, which is what I’ll live on to hedge against sequence of returns risk.
This was very helpful for my own planning. Cant wait to see what else is on your channel. Subscribed.
Great Video. I want to retire at 60 and no debt. This really helped. I loved it all, but the talk about delaying SS if the market is good was a great discussion that I haven't thought about. Thank you James
It's essential to have multiple streams of income in retirement, like Social Security, pensions, investments, and real estate. This diversification helps reduce the risk of relying on any single income source that may fluctuate or lose value over time
I usually zone out after awhile but this really held my attention and made me think of things I hadn’t thought of yet. Thank You!
Since the medicaid expansion went through the ACA, they don't count assets just income. If you keep your income low enough you will either get medicaid or the essential plan which are both zero premiums, so basically you are getting free health care. Once your income goes above that, you can go on the exchange and get subsidies. I live in New York and I'm 60 with over one million in my IRA and this is my current situation. I retired last year.
Ill be 57 in a couple weeks with a comparable portfolio as this gentleman now. I plan to work til 62 - 65, it’s nice to see a realistic portfolio and know I’m on track and a little closer. Thanks.
GREAT video James! Very applicable to many of us.
You are an amazing an very wise advisor James. My former advisor could not speak to me in layman's terms, so I fired him. This work session shows your compassion toward your clients but allows you to share your technical training. Koodos to you James. I love this!
Great to see how detailed this analysis is.
Glad you liked it!
I’m retiring in NJ in a few months with and this was a good confirmation of my planning.
Thanks David
Great video, but those numbers look so low to me. I am not sure where you can travel for $1000 (10K over 10 years) with hotels at almost $150/ night in the middle of the country and $300/night in big cities. That doesn’t even include transportation costs to get there, food, yet alone entertainment when you get there. Also with the current inflation we are seeing, eating out has almost doubled in cost in 3 years.
Great video approach. Real situation with real questions.
I can't help but wonder, has he spoken to his employer about possibly shifting to a part-time role for 2-3 years as a transition to retirement? It buys him a little time, gives him less commutes and more time, would be a nice transition to retirement, and potentially helps his employer also. It sounds as if he's a valuable employee who they wouldn't want to lose.
This could be a win-win for all involved. I'd be interested to know if this has been considered or is a possibility. One would think he should at least inquire about such arrangement. Of course, thatassumes he'd even be interested in that; he may want to be done, especiallywith his tutoring gig.
Thank you! We will have this conversation within the next two weeks.
MORE normal realistic people like this guy and I will subscribe. I am a single woman, almost 63, with about the same portfolio and my EDJones rep did a scenario where will likely fail if I retire now, and 65 is iffy, but I feel like she's being REALLY conservative. My SS won't be a lot of money, though.
Great video, Finally a reasonable video on could you retire. Most show something with millions of dollars.
Love the Right Capital examples.
This is very helpful thanks for sharing
Good for David in saying "I don't like this anymore--can I do something else?" He's frugal and sounds like he'll have a good retirement. Kudos!
Seeing those healthcare costs...mind blowing. I'm heading to Europe for retirement.
I live in Philly and often drive that 76 commute. I feel David's pain, lol.
I did that same commute, and it sucks. I also left the house at 5am, but I was able to leave work around lunchtime and work the rest of the day at home. Even then, it took anywhere from an hour to three hours to get home. The Schuylkill is a mess at the best of times, and always a stressful commute.
Love these!! Good luck David!
Thank you so much. I wish I had 100x times more assets than I do, but I am so happy that now is the time to begin my next journey!
Another option: If feasible, rent a tiny studio in-town and only commute on long weekends back home. Could perhaps squeeze out another year or two of work with reasonable satisfaction before full retirement.
I am there. I am 61 and so ready to retire.
Love it!!! Good luck David!
Thank you...let's stay hopeful for the future (and prepared for whatever comes)
Good stuff here and right in the financial medium. I like this, thanks James for the vlog.
This plan so closely approximates my own investment portfolio in terms of amount of investment funds. I'm about ready to retire as well. Thank you!
Great video. I had a feeling we don't all need millions to retire. Personally I'd prefer a bigger buffer. Its nice to see the numbers.
The comments should tell you that people want to see more normal people like David, not the guys with a couple million worried about retiring. I could live off that interest alone, what are they worried about? Most people can't relate to people like that. I had a lot in common with David. About a year old, and a little more money but well under a million. Retiring here in about 10 weeks. Thanks for the great video.
This is so helpful! As someone with a similar situation, but who wants to travel as I’m physically able, this is reassuring. I need to run my own figures of course.
Good stuff. Thanks, James.
With $500K an investments he could earn almost $25K in dividend income. He would lose none of this principle. Has 80k in cash so that's more than enough to bridge the gap.
Not sure how this one slipped past me, this is a fantastic video! I love seeing real numbers...and you can tell they're real just from the sheer number of accounts at the beginning. 😂Great stuff!
Yes! David can retire because he has things paid off! His spending is under control. Even if he puts that $500,000 into VOO, VGT and SCHD equally he will be fine. Split 3 ways. Remember the 4 per cent rule? Even if he pulls 6 out and gets a 13 per cent return he will be fine! Yes, there will be a few years of market drops but look at the return of just the S and P the last 50 years??❤️ Cheers!
I'm almost in the same scenario as David, except I still have a mortgage. I wish I had the capacity to understand this in one sitting.
Keep listening to other episodes and you’ll start to catch on and understand more. That’s what I’m doing and it’s all starting to come together in my mind.
What do you not understand? His expenses are very low, and thus his portfolio withdrawal percentage is very low.
Enjoy having guest with real examples.
Thank you for the feedback
@@RootFPyes. This is more in tune with the average retiree. Most of us will never have over a million in an IRA. My husband and I retired with a similar amount in our IRA except I am on disability so I got my full SS early 1750 a month- and my husband at 65 got about 2800 a month from his SS. Plus a 500 a month pension. We found a good accountant and FP. But it’s nice to see someone average!
Wow! $5K property tax in NJ! I pay $14K per year in NH (but no income tax). The property tax is a big concern in my plan.
Best of luck to you David
Outstanding conversation. Subscribed!
Looking good for 61
Great video! David's scenario is somewhat similar to my situation, but I'm 55 with about $400k in assets and I'd like to retire at 60. Given my high savings rate and expected rate of return, I hope to hit 1 million by then. However, I want to be able to spend significantly more than David is planning to and I want to delay SS until FRA or later, and pulling nearly 7% from my portfolio for 7+ years would probably stress me out a bit.
Thank you for discussing a far more realistic amount for retirement. Too many people doing analyses with $1M when that’s not today’s reality for most people.
I thoroughly enjoyed this video. Thank you James. And job well done David. Good luck in retirement.
I’m concerned he doesn’t have enough “cash” on hand, and the ability to accumulate more for home repairs, replacement of a vehicle, paying for a good supplemental Medicare coverage plan, once he is no longer working. A new roof alone is going to be $20,000, which could need to happen in a down market year.
I had the same question. Replacing a vehicle, even with a used car, is likely 25-30K. Add on other surprises, new roof, new HVAC, broken fridge or washer/dryer; then it seems like he'll be very pressed for cash. In practical terms, it seems like this is just a year too early.
Agree, and in a townhome sometimes you can’t time those kind of expenditures.
Looks like he’ll be doing tutoring and the long term projection indicates that he can absorb. He did mention changing portfolio to also help accommodate. I think he can do it especially if having much money isn’t that important to him at time of death.
Thank you for the critical eye. Please share any other concerns you may have...now it the time for me to consider everything.
He's in a townhouse, so his HOA dues will cover that.
This was very helpful to me! Thanks
If the Affordable Care Act is taken down how are you going to afford health insurance? Also the Social Security trust fund is running out in 10 years - currently it will mean a 25% decrease from FRA.
I'm currently 42 and planning to retire in 3 years at 45. By then, I’ll have a state pension of about $5,000 a month, plus $7,000 a month from a rental property, which has a $4,900 monthly mortgage. I also have around $300,000 in a 457b plan and some additional assets in a brokerage account. Social Security won’t kick in for another 20 years, so I'm considering working part-time after retirement.
If I retire in 3 years with 23.5 years of service, I’ll receive 58% of my best three years' salary, averaging to $106,000 a year. However, if I stay at my job longer, my pension percentage increases each year. For example, if I work 25 years, I would receive 63%, which would raise my pension to roughly $5,500 a month. I'm weighing whether it’s worth staying longer for the increased pension even though i want to b done decisions, decisions, decisions.
I'm sure he's checked his numbers but I'm wondering how his bare bones cost of living can be so low at 2000k per month. His high property taxes and health insurance would take at least half of that. That leaves 1000 dollars. Utilities and groceries would take most of that but then car ins. gas for car, internet , cell phone, incidental repairs on car or home, etc. Upkeeping a home is more expensive than one realizes.
Very nice to see. I am in a very similar situation. [60, frugal, just paid off mortgage, $500k in total retirement, plan to retire at 61; I even work in science!]
You can retire comfortably on WAYYYYYYYYYYYYY less than 500k, if you have a modicum of self discipline. Stop the obsession with owning every damned thing that hits the market - or having 8 of everything. Get rid of the streaming services, 3rd vehicle, 2nd home. Stop buying new cars as soon as the payments end on your 'old' car. Blink and you'll be 70 and barely able to get around.
I agree I like your videos but come on! There is no way you can get by on $2000 a month. Not a chance unless you want to spend all your time at home and pinch every penny. I would say at least $4000/month is more realistic.
I retired this year at 60 with about $600k. $4k/mo is what I’m drawing but I’m still paying almost $1000 mortgage, $600 car payment, $209 solar loan. So, it really depends on where you live, what you’re buying and paying for utilities. He should have added SOME basic living expenses to those gifts and trips costs
You really don't want to see my paychecks 🫣😂