Average Retiree Income by Age | How Do You Compare?

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  • Опубликовано: 19 янв 2025

Комментарии • 295

  • @HolySchmidt
    @HolySchmidt  Год назад +5

    Also Check Out: “Average Net Worth by Age 62” ruclips.net/video/fPIFU1woous/видео.html

    • @joecolbert62
      @joecolbert62 8 месяцев назад

      When you say "income" are you talking about gross income or net income? You do a good job of explaining the details but as far as income goes there is a big difference between gross and net

  • @howellwong11
    @howellwong11 Год назад +65

    I'm 91 years old and retired when I was 68. I have a federal pension and SS amounting to $47,000 a year. I live alone. I own my home and have no mortgage. I have no debts. My living expense is less than $40,000 a year. I'm doing better than the average person. Planning your life is critical.

    • @anthonyrthomasuk
      @anthonyrthomasuk Год назад

      What do you spend 40 grand on.

    • @howellwong11
      @howellwong11 Год назад +6

      @@anthonyrthomasuk Food 5K, Household 5K, Medical 5K, insurance 10K, Tax 5K, Gift 7K, Entertainment 3K. Being old means more money spent on medical and insurance. Gift ls mainly assistance to kids.

    • @williewonka6694
      @williewonka6694 Год назад +3

      Well done!

    • @shareurtube
      @shareurtube 10 месяцев назад +1

      Never work in the private sector. Get a Federal job. It is like stealing candy from a baby.

    • @howellwong11
      @howellwong11 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@shareurtube My pension is from Federal Civil Service, but 20 of my 45 working years was in the private sector. 5 years in military, 20 in civil were in the public sector.

  • @Kennybooy9
    @Kennybooy9 Месяц назад +1

    I’m retired. My wife is retired. 9 years ago she started a travel business out of boredom. Today she turns over millions of dollars. How lucky am I. And I know it.

  • @Amelia-Elizabeth
    @Amelia-Elizabeth Год назад +164

    It's amazing to see AMC doing well after all the doomsday analyses from naysayers. The stock market is a device for transferring money from the impatient to the patient - warren buffet. It's good to remind people of this right now; you buy on fear and sell on greed or just hold through it all for the long term. It’s easy but lots of people forget.

    • @MaryOlson7
      @MaryOlson7 Год назад

      @AustinWalker67 I have been thinking about how to grow my reserve by 100% or more within months. I will be grateful if you can give tips or anything on how to make good market picks and how I can get my portfolio diversified and balanced to meet up my target...

    • @MaryOlson7
      @MaryOlson7 Год назад

      @AustinWalker67 That's great. How do I reach her, you got any possible means of getting more info on her services?

    • @MaryOlson7
      @MaryOlson7 Год назад

      @AustinWalker67 I just looked up this person, and surprisingly she seems proficient. I thought this was just some overrated BS, I appreciate this.

    • @Patricia-Margaret
      @Patricia-Margaret Год назад

      @@MaryOlson7 Alice Marie Coraggio is quite popular on Bloomberg I doubt if there is anyone who is serious about stock trading that doesn't know her. She has helped me quite a few times in growing my portfolio and it was blissful without any setbacks. she is a tough person in an industry that demands clairvoyance

    • @minoozolala
      @minoozolala Год назад +1

      Scam alert

  • @1dash133
    @1dash133 3 месяца назад

    I agree with your assessment that household incomes are more than double single incomes because household incomes may include more than two individual's incomes. Also agree on the synergistic effect: 2 can live as cheaply as 1.

  • @owggarage723
    @owggarage723 Год назад +24

    Looking at your figures for median income. I'd say my income falls in the small to tiny category. On the bright side, my plan to work until I expire looks completely achievable! 😢

    • @lisajel52
      @lisajel52 Год назад

      I’m sorry 😢

    • @thatguyoverthere8355
      @thatguyoverthere8355 Год назад +1

      Been working 40yrs, looking at 10 more. Happy boomers ahead of me paved the way for their retirements. Now they vote against unions to pad their dividends. Don't mention means testing for Social Security or they freak out.

    • @JimPippin-wc7fq
      @JimPippin-wc7fq Год назад

      ​@@thatguyoverthere8355Who the hell do they think is going to fund their pension plans. One only has to look at the Teamsters Central States pension fund to see the results of an underfunded pension plan.

    • @jamescalifornia2964
      @jamescalifornia2964 Год назад +1

      ​@@thatguyoverthere8355/ Means test for SS , imagine that ... 😵‍💫💨

    • @July.4.1776
      @July.4.1776 10 месяцев назад

      @@thatguyoverthere8355…It is means tested by the bend points used to pay it out along with the way it is taxed at 0%, 50% or 85% on withdrawals..

  • @Eloso3135
    @Eloso3135 Год назад +13

    No matter how I sliced it, I’m now 63, the numbers didn’t work for a comfortable retirement, so: bought a house in Mexico (paid cash) selling my house in the U.S. and will bank the proceeds. In the end I can retire in Mexico with zero debt in a house that’s paid for. Live easily off social security, dip into my retirement 401k only in emergencies, and enjoy retirement.

    • @john-o1g9p
      @john-o1g9p 10 месяцев назад +1

      i'm going to off grid land in tn. i hear ya. let the world take of the world and live simple. we HAVE EARNED OUR TIME...

    • @john-o1g9p
      @john-o1g9p 9 месяцев назад

      @@tpowell3776 my version is a cash out of the market and off grid in TN. good luck to you and yours!! love the beach, but love my trees and mountains...

  • @glasslinger
    @glasslinger Год назад +1

    I'm single and your numbers are quite accurate! You see how much deep do-do I am in with this insane inflation!

  • @stephenpotter21
    @stephenpotter21 Год назад +278

    I've totally stopped believing in the S&P to deliver any significant return, especially this period. I'm thinking of redistributing my portfolio to other stocks, but I hardly know which ones will do well. Are there any ones positioned to grow?

    • @cloudyblaze7916
      @cloudyblaze7916 Год назад +4

      Truth is that the market ain't quite stable at the moment, but if you make the right picks, you could make killer riches very quickly, although such profit usually needs expertise, as in hedge funds or financial managers. I personally prefer the latter.

    • @victorlaranjahal
      @victorlaranjahal Год назад +3

      This is accurate. I worked as a financial advisor with Merrill Lynch and then as an independent financial manager. I have seen really great profits that can be made by picking the right stocks.

    • @stephenpotter21
      @stephenpotter21 Год назад +3

      Please, do you know anybody with whom I could work with?

    • @victorlaranjahal
      @victorlaranjahal Год назад +3

      I'm careful about making such recommendations. But one person I know who has established a good track record is Sharon Louise Count and I think she's got a contact website or something.

    • @n1west
      @n1west Год назад

      Most hedge funds under perform the index over time. Well documented. Google it.

  • @vinyl1Earthlink
    @vinyl1Earthlink Год назад +14

    You seem to have left out regular old investments as a source of income for retirees. For every $100K you have in your simple brokerage account, you will get about $4000-5000 in additional income, if you invest for income. Obviously most people who have money in a brokerage account are rather well-off, but it's fairly common. If you are one of these people, you income is likely to go up as you get older, not go down.

    • @HALWG51
      @HALWG51 Год назад +2

      You are correct. If you have $500,000 and let the interest compound, after 10 years you will have over $800,000.

  • @Riggsnic_co
    @Riggsnic_co Год назад +396

    We experienced the peak of our era, and now it is gone. Recession is tanking everything including 401K. My retirement equities portfolio of $750K is in the reds. I keep losing because of inflation. This world will fall to the corrupt rulers in the same way that Rome did. I'm sorry if you're thinking about retiring and you're worried that your pension won't be enough to meet the rising cost of living. Horrible foreign policies everywhere, bad regulatory policy, bad fiscal policy, and bad energy policy.

    • @bob.weaver72
      @bob.weaver72 Год назад +7

      For retirees and those close to retirement, I believe it's particularly challenging. All those years of labor only to lose it all to a problem you weren't responsible for, my regrets to everyone retiring during this time.

    • @martingiavarini
      @martingiavarini Год назад +3

      I'm very worried about the future and where we're all heading, especially in terms of money and how to get by. I'm considering making my first investment in the stock market, but how can I do so given that the market has been in a mess for the majority of the year?

    • @hermanramos7092
      @hermanramos7092 Год назад +3

      After the pandemic, things became extremely difficult, which is precisely when I sought a consultant's counsel. I've been investing on my own for nearly 3 years and have built up a stagnant reserve of $280K to $570K in just over 24 months.

    • @bob.weaver72
      @bob.weaver72 Год назад +4

      I’m in dire need of guidance so i can salvage my portfolio due to the massive dips and come up with better strategies. How can I reach this advisor?

    • @bob.weaver72
      @bob.weaver72 Год назад +2

      Thanks for sharing this. I did my own little research, and your advisor looks advanced and experienced. I wrote her and dialed her twice but she didn't pick up so I scheduled a phone call.

  • @whatsup3270
    @whatsup3270 Год назад +6

    One reason the houses are more than double is the singles often have to spend 100% of their income, while couples ( and some triples which have a parent in there) simply dont spend all the income, and thus they grow post retirement investment accounts. When you met a 70ish couple with $110k income is a paid off home they just dont use all that money they may use $60k and thus they buy $50k in stocks and bonds which raise future income an additional $$6k/year.

    • @billmulvihill8452
      @billmulvihill8452 Год назад

      Paid off home still means you have to pay the monthly escrow, which in many cases, is a lot more than a mortgage payment!

    • @kathyann9643
      @kathyann9643 Год назад

      @@billmulvihill8452 By escrow do you mean taxes??

    • @Chris_at_Home
      @Chris_at_Home Год назад +1

      I agree. We don’t drive near as much and only use about half our income for everything from utilities, food and taxes. We get a big property tax break where we live because of our age. We have a small rental that pays for things like property taxes and utilities but we can survive well without anyone living there. We don’t owe the bank anything. Now I’m going to go pick produce from the garden for our evening meal of sockeye salmon I caught last week.

  • @katisugarbaker7349
    @katisugarbaker7349 Год назад +2

    Wow. I feel lucky. Thanks for the data.

    • @craftsmanctfl3493
      @craftsmanctfl3493 Год назад

      Thanks for patting yourself on the back. Some of us haven’t been so lucky, through absolutely no fault of our own.

  • @mathrocks7591
    @mathrocks7591 Год назад +5

    Good data, however, is that how much you earn, it is how much you spend

    • @livingontheedge8680
      @livingontheedge8680 Год назад +1

      Since he uses the word "income", I take that to mean the amount of $ each respective example recieves/draws from investments/SS/PT work.

    • @edennis8578
      @edennis8578 Год назад

      ​@@livingontheedge8680You missed the point.

    • @livingontheedge8680
      @livingontheedge8680 Год назад

      @@edennis8578 How so? Income does equate to spending.

  • @JBoy340a
    @JBoy340a Год назад +3

    Geoff. Is there a way to report these scammers that pollute the comments sections of your and other great financial videos with threads that end with recommendations for a specific financial advisor?

    • @gmale2624
      @gmale2624 Год назад +1

      You can report those comments to youtube but i don't know if youtube will actually do anything about them. Just point your mouse over the comment you want to report. You will see three little dots show up to the right of the comment. Click on those three dots.

  • @raymccarty4612
    @raymccarty4612 Год назад +5

    This may not be typical, but what about veterans pensions or VA disability? Perhaps you can do a video on the comparative market value of the non taxed disability checks.

    • @Ev3_6
      @Ev3_6 Год назад

      No one ever includes us in these videos

    • @commonsense6967
      @commonsense6967 Год назад +1

      SSD is not applicable to retirees, as it automatically turns into retiree Social Security at age 62.

    • @stevennevins6643
      @stevennevins6643 Год назад +1

      ⁠@@commonsense6967 Veterans’ disability pensions have nothing to do with SSD.

  • @jdtravels5140
    @jdtravels5140 Год назад

    Finishing year two of retirement. Haven’t needed to touch any of my investments. Nice pension plus high social security. Still make enough to invest a little each month. I’m heavily invested in lithium, both hard rock and DLE. When the companies start production I expect the stocks to go 4x to 20x. EVs are the future…might as well capitalize on them. Look at what happened to Piedmont when they started production…PLL went from $5 all the way up to $80.

  • @mindcache5650
    @mindcache5650 Год назад +9

    From Bard : The median cost of living for a couple aged 65-75 in the United States in 2023 is $52,141 per year. This includes housing, food, transportation, healthcare, and other expenses. The exact cost will vary depending on the couple's location, lifestyle, and health needs.
    Here is a breakdown of the median cost of living for a couple aged 65-75 in the United States in 2023:
    Housing: $22,100
    Food: $10,000
    Transportation: $7,000
    Healthcare: $13,000
    Other expenses: $2,000
    The cost of housing is the largest expense for most retirees. The median cost of rent for a two-bedroom apartment in the United States is $1,500 per month. The cost of homeownership is also high, with the median price of a home.

    • @diggernash1
      @diggernash1 Год назад +9

      Why would you not have a paid for home at retirement?

    • @chessdad182
      @chessdad182 Год назад +8

      @@diggernash1 Poor health, bad luck, spending habits, the big D, are just a few of the reasons.

    • @diggernash1
      @diggernash1 Год назад +7

      @@chessdad182 I'd say mostly bad choices.

    • @Chris_at_Home
      @Chris_at_Home Год назад +4

      @@diggernash1I agree. I have seen many people refinance their homes to take equity to blow on stupid stuff. I only had a few new vehicles over my work career and now have a duplex I live in and a recreational cabin. No mortgage, bought a new vehicle with cash before retirement along with a few motorized toys. Life is good and with motorhome prices falling that might happen next.

    • @whatsup3270
      @whatsup3270 Год назад

      @@diggernash1 Realtors tell horror stories about couples and homes sadly I have seen it personally. Millions of retirees and near retirees surprisingly losing their home typically by a loved ones or supposedly loved one. Heck murders occur regularly in families over property.

  • @MCigarz
    @MCigarz Год назад +6

    The Single incomes are also lower due to divorces.

    • @glendacastillo6504
      @glendacastillo6504 Год назад +1

      I have more money after the divorce. No, I didn't r receive alimony.

    • @psdaengr911
      @psdaengr911 9 месяцев назад

      Depends how you define "single". A large percentage of all marriages end by the death of a spouse.

  • @richardf6932
    @richardf6932 Год назад +3

    Any chance you can use the Trimmean function in excel to remove the outliers.... $750K is a lot and I think that could be skewing your average

  • @edhcb9359
    @edhcb9359 Год назад +13

    Whenever I see a senior working I always wonder if they are working because they want to or because they have to work.

    • @ShamileII
      @ShamileII Год назад +6

      Mainly because they have to.

    • @kevinh5349
      @kevinh5349 Год назад +7

      I'd say it is because they have to to make ends meet. Some of those folks I see in Walmart definitely look like they'd be better off in their rocker. Sad but true.

    • @lindazibluk8099
      @lindazibluk8099 Год назад

      I often think the same!

    • @glendacastillo6504
      @glendacastillo6504 Год назад +3

      Some enjoy being around with other people. They get lonely and feel useless at home.

    • @SusanHolbert
      @SusanHolbert Год назад +1

      They have to. Because of pride they will tell you that they're working because they get bored.

  • @billkallas1762
    @billkallas1762 Год назад +2

    People who live in a well-maintained house, with a paid off mortgage, need MUCH less "income" than people still paying on a mortgage, or paying rent.
    Buy a house, pay off your mortgage, and set up a Trust, are the three keys to winning the Retirement Game.

    • @pagosabob10
      @pagosabob10 8 месяцев назад

      And I'll add ,if I may. Do not invest in any one thing that might become a Ponzi scheme.

  • @richardt1792
    @richardt1792 Год назад +3

    I'll be 70 in December. I am starting my social security then. My first payment is $4230 So I'll get the mean income for my age and its inflation adjusted. I decided to wait because I wanted to consider my social security my old age insurance. My mother lived to 88 and my father to 92. I should have enough with savings to cover me including long term care.

    • @DrSchor
      @DrSchor Год назад

      should have enough? do you think guessing is a good idea

    • @richardt1792
      @richardt1792 Год назад +1

      @@DrSchor I am also going by the Fidelity chart that shows I should have enough, even in a below average stock market to last to age 95. At that point, there should still be 1.3 million left in my account. Most of money is in cash or a 401K & ROTH that is in the S & P 500 so nothing too risky. I am a frugal person so I always live below my means and carry zero debt. Even in worse case scenario, I have funds that would cover a high quality nursing home. I feel I can take care of myself and won't be a burden on anyone. I've seen how lacking senior care is if you have to rely on Medi-Cal.

    • @kathleenphillips7145
      @kathleenphillips7145 Год назад

      Net or gross? It’s unfortunate that SSA benefits are double taxed with once when deducted from our pay checks and again when we receive SSA benefits.

    • @richardt1792
      @richardt1792 Год назад

      @@kathleenphillips7145 That’s before taxes

  • @haroldconner2645
    @haroldconner2645 Год назад +8

    I’m in better financial shape than I thought!

    • @Donkeyearsa
      @Donkeyearsa Год назад +4

      That all depends on your spending habits. If you spend half of your income no matter what it is you will be doing very well. If you spend double your income well things won't end well.
      What you make is only half of the equation.

  • @Alex-bt9uu
    @Alex-bt9uu Год назад +1

    Are the income examples gross or net? Thank you, I enjoy your channel!

  • @bridgecross
    @bridgecross Год назад +1

    Thank you for clarifying mean vs median. People get so fixated on the average (mean), when what they're really looking for is the typical (median)

  • @mikemc330
    @mikemc330 Год назад +6

    I’m surprised the median income for 65+ is so high.

    • @graceweber2822
      @graceweber2822 Год назад +1

      Agree. I am in that age bracket and my income is below that and I still work part time.

    • @glendacastillo6504
      @glendacastillo6504 Год назад

      In Round Rock TX, 54000 a year is for a single person, without a lot of debt.

  • @ClementRusso2
    @ClementRusso2 Год назад +1

    I'm nearing retirement in three years, and despite having solid companies in my portfolio, my profits have stagnated in this uncertain market. Are there any calculated profit opportunities in this recession?

    • @TheTangoAlfa1
      @TheTangoAlfa1 9 месяцев назад

      Buying individual stocks is risky. I stuck with index funds and have not only recovered from the market downturn but am up significantly.

  • @1Skeptik1
    @1Skeptik1 7 месяцев назад

    Interesting! I prefer to think in terms of disposable (entertainment) income. I own (4) modest paid-for rental houses that provide a comfortable retirement cash flow. My properties appreciate about $50,000 annually which I do not consider income. Bottom line: We have about $40,000 ($800 weekly) disposable/entertainment income. We make a Country Club (resort) home by the Gulf Coast, my Benz and Town and Country are not new but paid for, my toy box is full and my wife enjoys the leisure and lifestyle here. We live below our means out of habit and are better off than 90% of Americans. Money is coming in faster than it is going out. Our retirement was planned and we expect to leave our kids and grandchildren a leg up. Cheers! (We started SS at age 62, no regrets.)

  • @prairiemark4084
    @prairiemark4084 9 месяцев назад +1

    Very interesting vlog Geoff. So single retirees have substantially less than half of the income of married households? Perhaps a significant factor for is that a lot of times the ONAC (Ornery North American Chick) throws out her husband right before retirement and cuts his assets in half? Hello hot dogs and pork and beans! Someone told me that can happen. Then the ex-wife goes on a vacation to Europe and buys a new car when she gets back. Bang....both have reduced retirement income.

  • @mrxman581
    @mrxman581 Год назад +2

    Good informative video. BTW, are these figures gross or net? Because that can make a big difference when it comes to the money you can actually spend. If these figures are before taxes, then it's even worse. Thanks.

    • @craftsmanctfl3493
      @craftsmanctfl3493 Год назад +1

      These figures appear to be gross, before taxes.

    • @mrxman581
      @mrxman581 Год назад

      @@craftsmanctfl3493 Thanks for clearing that up

  • @brianbunk9057
    @brianbunk9057 Год назад

    Great Video, Question are theses pre tax or after tax amounts?

  • @steveblake4187
    @steveblake4187 10 месяцев назад

    Oil and gas partnerships usually are MLPs. And they are not what I would consider rare.

  • @1wheeldrive751
    @1wheeldrive751 10 месяцев назад

    Using average income is a suckers bet. There are a small number of high income individuals that push the average up dramatically. If you really want to know what other people are doing, you want to know the median. But I’m not at all sure why people want to know what other people are doing, because it won’t help you if you run out if money in your retirement with a lot of other people.

  • @ecuador9911
    @ecuador9911 Год назад

    This is a great video, but I would liked a single chart at the end of the video with all of the numbers. Also, when you say “annual income” are you talking “adjusted gross income” (part of which may exclude things like tax free investments and non taxable (ROTH) retirement accounts.

  • @mstreich
    @mstreich Год назад +1

    Surprised you even bother with the mean values. You should use median, and maybe a range around it. Perhaps 1 or 2 standard deviations. 5:08

    • @whatsup3270
      @whatsup3270 Год назад +2

      The issue is most reports cite average. btw standard deviation are calculated off means (average) and dont work on medians. a 40%-60% quantile can be used

  • @sabrinasmith4164
    @sabrinasmith4164 Год назад

    I’m 63 and went through a divorce I currently work full-time and a on call job . I only have saved 35.000 part of that is in a 403 account 25,000 of it which is losing money right now. I also have a older sister living with me the pays no expensive because she hardly ever work throughout her life also have a younger sister, who depends on me to buy her thing, she’s also on Social Security disability. I have lots of medical issues right now, but I am currently working on getting healthier. My question is what can I do to cut down my expenses I am still paying for my condo. I owe 95,000 on it is currently worth about 289,000. I have a car payment which I owe 22,000 on my car. I plan on working answer 67 and maybe keeping it on call job since I don’t see my two sisters going anywhere or ever helping me what help can you give me our information?

  • @AlbertGReene-p8w
    @AlbertGReene-p8w 9 месяцев назад

    I wanted to hear an expert's opinion on this as well. Currently retired and I have most of my 401k contributions of $200K going into small cap and utility funds, because these seem to be at a "discount" right now.I'm hoping this is a valid thought process?

  • @2wheelfish
    @2wheelfish Год назад +1

    Kinda surprised that passive income through property rentals isn't something that is more prevalent. I wish I had that situation, but I know a few retirees that have that income as part of their retirement.

    • @myvenusheeler
      @myvenusheeler Год назад +1

      And then there is the headache of dealing with rent properties and a couple of friends of mine could write a book about those woes.

    • @kb3byu
      @kb3byu Год назад

      Since so many landlords took a hit from tenants who weren't required to pay during COVID, I suspect that people have soured on investment properties.

    • @fdm2155
      @fdm2155 Год назад

      This will be my situation. A few rental units will replace my income. I have a management company because it's worth it to avoid the direct management headaches!

  • @lailaalfaddil7389
    @lailaalfaddil7389 Год назад

    This is financial advice and I never give financial advice: DONT LEAVE DURING THE BEAR. If you don’t want to invest…learn. If you don’t want to learn…build. If you don’t want to build observe. DO SOMETHING…other than leave. There is so much opportunity here. Take advantage!

  • @leonieharry2941
    @leonieharry2941 21 день назад

    are these numbers brutto (before taxes= ir entto (after taxes)?

  • @rephill54
    @rephill54 Год назад +1

    Always found it interesting when people panic because their stock market investments tank for some reason. The only money they may actually lose is the amount they contributed. Any other loss is stock value that they did nothing to earn, and for them only exists on paper. Remember, you can’t lose any more than you actually paid in yourself.

    • @Tom-xm9oj
      @Tom-xm9oj Год назад +1

      And it isnt a loss until you sell it

  • @digitizer101
    @digitizer101 Год назад

    Curious why the income would go down over retirement age. Now I need to re-watch the video to see if you mention this.

    • @davidpowell3347
      @davidpowell3347 Год назад +2

      Inflation. Most pensions don't fully keep up with inflation,so pensions that started paying many years ago tend to be smaller than today's starting pension. Hopefully the older pensioner owns their house which would to some extent act as an inflation "hedge".

  • @josephkelleher8820
    @josephkelleher8820 Год назад

    In my opinion retiree income is important but the most important number in retirement is total net worth.

  • @irishvoyageur
    @irishvoyageur Год назад +1

    Is the income before or after taxes?

  • @tomj528
    @tomj528 Год назад

    Interesting to see the different income levels, especially the variation between mean and median. Not gonna lie, I first saw the mean and thought I was behind until I quickly figured out that it wasn't the median...whew! Ultimately, it's a little meaningless as income, especially in retirement, is somewhat malleable...we all decide how much additional income to take and in the case of Roth IRAs, distributions aren't even taxable. Personally, we don't need much income so no need to increase our income and in fact we're still sporting a 50+% savings rate as we're still accumulating for the tax savings alone mostly at this point and we've got 15 years to go until FRA.

  • @Andrew-zs5tc
    @Andrew-zs5tc 11 месяцев назад

    I don't see the value of the simple mean and median income numbers. It doesn't address the question: how much is needed. Is it too low for more than half and most people are struggling?
    I also assume that anyone drawing down from their 401(k) is drawing what they need which would be their income from that source. A person with 10 million and needs $100,000 will draw down $100,000 and a person with $500,000 and needs $100,000 may draw down the same $100,000. (assuming no RMD requirement.)
    I was hoping to see the breakdown of the three sources, the first and third quartile, some calculation of how much is enough and so on.

  • @Paulschultz-ny6hz
    @Paulschultz-ny6hz Год назад

    Your on screen amount need to be left on the screen longer or else how do we know what you are sayin?

  • @davidvines6498
    @davidvines6498 11 месяцев назад

    Partner with the government with 401k and IRA’s is the number 1 reason jobs keep leaving our Shores. Down size and you’ll find you don’t need the same income in retirement that you had while working. And you’re not a taxpayer for the rest of your life, which is what partnering with the government makes you

  • @tahirisaid2693
    @tahirisaid2693 Год назад

    I realized that the secret to making a million is making better investment. I bought my 1st home at 21 for 87k sold for 197k, 2nd home 170k and sold for 320k, 3rd 300k and sold for 589k and buyers paid all closing costs expenses etc Not making up to a million before retirement is unfulfilled retirement.!!

  • @Comm0ut
    @Comm0ut Год назад

    Why average and not median?

  • @pensacola321
    @pensacola321 Год назад +2

    If you do this again, I would suggest that you use percentiles by age groups. The numbers as presented were just too broad.

  • @steveallen2681
    @steveallen2681 Год назад +1

    Thank you

  • @polksie
    @polksie Год назад +1

    I usually like your videos. However, this one I disagree with you. You should never compare yourself to others, we are each different and on a different life journey. When you start comparing yourself to others you risk a lot to your emotional health. What works for one is probably not going to work for you. Comparisons like this are either good or bad for a person.

  • @kennethvaughn5967
    @kennethvaughn5967 Год назад +1

    LOL. People typically don’t have all three. Anyone who has worked as they should either has social security or a pension that replaces social security. Everyone that wants to work can work. So everyone has at least two of the 3 and most likely all three if they wanted all 3. The requirements are low to qualify for social security and anyone can work.

  • @jamescalifornia2964
    @jamescalifornia2964 Год назад +5

    I'm sure that many of us now feel poor ... 😢💸'"

    • @glasshalffull2930
      @glasshalffull2930 Год назад +2

      It all depends how much you spend. If you live in San Diego, your expenses will be a lot different than if you live in Crane, Indiana.

  • @priola7587
    @priola7587 Год назад

    Are these income figures pretax or net?

    • @whatsup3270
      @whatsup3270 Год назад +4

      incomes are always pre-tax

  • @kevinh5349
    @kevinh5349 Год назад +9

    The bulk of my retirement income comes from dividends generated by stocks (BDCs, MLPs, CEFs, and REITs) in my private brokerage account. That, combined with my SS, means I haven't had to tap my Roth, IRA, or 401k as of yet. But it took til age 68 to get there.

    • @arthurbishop3173
      @arthurbishop3173 Год назад

      Nice-that's what I'm working toward, but am 15-20 years from retirement age.

    • @howellwong11
      @howellwong11 Год назад

      Same here. I retired at 68 and my pension along with my SS is enough to cover my expenses. All my assets remained untouched and I have been retired for 23 years.

    • @tomj528
      @tomj528 Год назад +1

      I can't help but wonder about the tax consequences of holding those investments in your taxable accounts. For me, there are other goals such as slowly and under taxable limits converting out tax deferred accounts to our Roth IRAs. Outside of this if you keep yourself in the 12% tax bracket you're all set.

    • @parkerbohnn
      @parkerbohnn Год назад

      I don't have the guts to put one red cent in the biggest ponzi fraud stock market of all time maybe even all times including the future one million years. I figure at some point in time everyone except the bankers will lose everything. 95 percent is the standard definition of a ponzi collapse. The 5 percent are the bankers who run the entire ponzi.

  • @SKF358
    @SKF358 Год назад

    These videos NEVER state whether these figures are gross income or net income.

  • @WilliamMurphy-uv9pm
    @WilliamMurphy-uv9pm 7 месяцев назад

    A CPA should understand the differences between average and median and which better reflects the real situation he is trying to explain. He seemed to have picked average. Wrong choice; especially for a person who understands numbers and statistics.

  • @thomasvanetten1984
    @thomasvanetten1984 Год назад +6

    In my situation, I’m retired but my spouse is still working (they are four years younger) so the household income is more than twice my retirement income (and I have SS, pension and 401k money coming in). And I’m in the first age bracket.

  • @williamstohler9221
    @williamstohler9221 Год назад +8

    The other reason households have more than double the single person's income probably has to do with the savings rate. If you're married, dual incomes often are available to pay the bills, leaving more to save and invest for retirement.

  • @bahijarhafiri
    @bahijarhafiri Год назад

    I've come to realize that the key to amassing wealth lies in making sound investments. I purchased my first home at the age of 21 for $87,000 and sold it for $197,000. My second home, acquired for $170,000, was later sold for $320,000, and my third property, purchased at $300,000, fetched $589,000, with buyers covering all closing costs and expenses. Not reaching a million before retirement feels like an unfulfilled goal.||

    • @bahijarhafiri
      @bahijarhafiri Год назад

      I initially started my investment journey with the guidance of a financial advisor named *Jenny Pamogas Canaya.* Her transparent approach granted me full control of my investments, and her fees are reasonable, considering my return on investment. Nonetheless, it's crucial to conduct thorough research before engaging with any financial advisor.

  • @youtubesurfer478
    @youtubesurfer478 Год назад +1

    Thank you for this helpful information. At first, my projection as a not-yet-retired individual, I felt way off, on the low end. Then I realized that your numbers are in terms of Gross Income, right? I express my income projections in terms of Net Income accounting for estimated future tax rates, reductions in Social Security funding, and market down turns. Gross Income is somewhat helpful, median more so than mean. However, Net income is more important to me as a soon-to- be-retiree, about 3 to 5 years away.

  • @kennethvaughn5967
    @kennethvaughn5967 Год назад

    People with part time jobs don’t consider themselves retired. Retired and being 65 or drawing social security are not the same thing. This bs is making assumptions that are not pointed out to begin with. Like I said, “retired” people are not working “part time”. If someone is still working, even part time we either call it working part time or possibly semi-retired. But, semiretired implies someone is working.

    • @glendacastillo6504
      @glendacastillo6504 Год назад

      Legally im retired after 20 years of service from military. I worked 4-5 hours twice a week to get my 20% discount from clothing stores.

  • @joer1678
    @joer1678 9 месяцев назад

    Should always go by median, not average…

  • @angieharris8015
    @angieharris8015 Год назад +2

    A lot of us do collect bullion/coins and other precious metals (both numismatic and non-numismatic). It's not as rare as you think :)

    • @chrislindsay3104
      @chrislindsay3104 Год назад +4

      I got one gold eagle and one silver coin. They are both worth less than I paid for them.😢

    • @davidpowell3347
      @davidpowell3347 Год назад

      Most people who do this probably do not get any significant income from it.

  • @billkramer2994
    @billkramer2994 Год назад

    Get rid of "guber" smile in title pg.

  • @headlibrarian1996
    @headlibrarian1996 Год назад +8

    Couples have more than double the income because they have more than triple the assets. Marrieds get better tax treatment (there’s a reason being taxed like a single is derisively called a “torpedo”) and it’s much less than twice as expensive to support two people in one household. Both are extremely helpful during the accumulation phase.

    • @noreenn6976
      @noreenn6976 Год назад +7

      The struggle is real for singles

    • @tomj528
      @tomj528 Год назад +1

      Actually there's a married couple tax penalty for higher earners. The "tax torpedo" is when you're bumped into a higher tax bracket thanks to Required Minimum Distributions from your tax deferred retirement accounts, especially when coupled with pension payments and of course your social security and taxable investment dividends, interest and capital gains. Then there's the "Widow's Tax Trap" when the surviving spouse has most of the same income but their tax brackets and credits are halved. Of course it's easier to both build wealth and manage taxes as a married couple but those are all choices we all make and let's not pretend that marriage over staying single doesn't come with significant compromises and sacrifices. Either way, retirement is far too late to complain about the life choices you made all along the way.

  • @susanmarie2231
    @susanmarie2231 Год назад +2

    I am 68. My Soc Sec will double if my ex predeceases me.

    • @DrSchor
      @DrSchor Год назад +2

      he won't notice a little arsenic if you put it on grapefruit

    • @susanmarie2231
      @susanmarie2231 Год назад +1

      @@DrSchor Ha! I haven’t seen him in 35 years. I don’t wish him ill because it’s bad karma.

  • @cricket6410
    @cricket6410 Год назад +4

    Where are all these single retirees living on approx 35k/ year???? I assume that is pre tax income. So, they are living on even less. It would seriously be helpful to know. Of course some are living w family and friends. But, certainly not the majority. Would really appreciate a video on how and where single 65 yo retirees are living on approximately 35k/yr. Pre tax income. I hope you consider this request.

    • @cricket6410
      @cricket6410 Год назад +3

      I overstated the median single 65 yo income. Approx 30k. Not 35k. Pre tax. I am unable to believe that many/most single retirees are living with others. Dumbfounded as to how and where these people are living. Please expand on this topic with another video. Some of us need info on less expensive alternatives to current living expenses.

    • @mom2bbjandag
      @mom2bbjandag Год назад +10

      If your home is paid for at retirement, living on $30k is not extremely difficult in rural areas of the southeast. Retire to the country.

    • @edennis8578
      @edennis8578 Год назад +6

      My husband and I live on $30k/year in Iowa. That's what we spend, not our income.

    • @edennis8578
      @edennis8578 Год назад +2

      Just to add, our expenses would be $24k/year, but I'm still paying $500/month on my student loans.

    • @michaelcavalier8750
      @michaelcavalier8750 Год назад +8

      It helps if your home is paid off and you have low property taxes.

  • @David-TX59
    @David-TX59 Год назад

    I have rare coins, but I don't count them as investments.

    • @DrSchor
      @DrSchor Год назад

      dont be silly; they are part of your net worth, and are investments

  • @JKJ2800
    @JKJ2800 9 месяцев назад

    Absolutely no stats on retirees of 62 yo.

  • @BrianW211
    @BrianW211 Год назад +1

    Any chance at getting this data for early retirees? E.g., people that are retired but in the age ranges of 45-49, 50-54, 55-59, and 60-64.

  • @AbigailOliviaq4l
    @AbigailOliviaq4l 3 месяца назад +243

    I think investors should always put their cash to work, especially In 2024, we'll start to see more market diversification. I'm hoping to invest about $350k of my savings in stocks against next year. Hope to make millions in 2024

    • @LincolnFelix-s4z
      @LincolnFelix-s4z 3 месяца назад

      Since risk is at an all-time high right now, perhaps you should be a little more patient and return when it has decreased. Alternatively, you can consult a trained financial expert for strategy.

    • @LoganGabriel6m
      @LoganGabriel6m 3 месяца назад

      Yes true, I have been in touch with a brokerage Advisor. With an initial starting reserve of $80k, my advisor chooses the entry and exit commands for my portfolio, which has grown to approximately $550k.

    • @LoganGabriel6m
      @LoganGabriel6m 3 месяца назад

      NICOLE ANASTASIA PLUMLEE' is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.

  • @pagosabob10
    @pagosabob10 8 месяцев назад +2

    I don't care how I compare. I'm not in competition with anyone. Enough already!!!

  • @reebeeable
    @reebeeable Год назад +2

    Interesting. I’m surprised that the median income is so low for singles and can’t imagine getting by on that even if the home is paid off.

    • @commonsense6967
      @commonsense6967 Год назад

      It would be difficult, these days.

    • @kathyann9643
      @kathyann9643 Год назад +3

      Half of the retirees do it on much less than that. Depends where you live. $51,000 would be a windfall for me.

  • @kevinfestner6126
    @kevinfestner6126 Год назад

    Age how do I compare? Yup I'm older 😂. I'm astonished how low even the mean single income.

  • @paulsaragosa371
    @paulsaragosa371 Месяц назад

    Hey let's go play records for a song lyrics

  • @grcigar9911
    @grcigar9911 Год назад +1

    I believe all baby boomers will be 65 by 2030. For the sake of discussion based on close approximations of today’s numbers, boomers hold $75T in net worth yet the median net worth sits at about $300K for those at 50th percentile over 65. Regardless of the fuzzy math, the gap between the haves and the have nots is no joke. I see this gap only growing for subsequent generations who will also bear the additional burden of closing Medicare and SS shortfalls created by the ones that came before.

  • @24hourgmtchannel64
    @24hourgmtchannel64 Год назад

    I early retired at 53 in 2019 from my IT job with no pension and set my taxable amounts up to generate about 30k in income which I live off of and do not tap the principal. I generate another 17k per in my IRA'S in dividend and yeild income but have not touched it since I am 57. My wife is 52 and works and makes 60k. Of course her providing health insurance through her employer for us is significant. My total savings is up since I retired in 2019 from 1.25m to 1.4m not including my home, collector car and watch collection. My wife has 400k saved and set a goal of 500k to pull the plug. As you can see my current 30k is paltry but I do not struggle one bit. SS for me shows around $2400 per month at 67 which sight unforseen would mean I'd need significantly less from my investments. The irony is if we sold our home our net worth would be about 2.2m which years ago I thought was more money than we'd ever need but now with runaway inflation, it's a different story.

  • @SSS-wo2hn
    @SSS-wo2hn Год назад +10

    In NO country should the top 1% own 2/3 of the wealth.

    • @jamesgreen1857
      @jamesgreen1857 Год назад +1

      They can own whatever they can , it really has nothing to do with what the rest of us do or don't do.

    • @goththicus
      @goththicus Год назад +2

      You should stop buying their products. 😂
      P.S. There’s always going somebodies on the top.

    • @TT-fq7pl
      @TT-fq7pl Год назад +7

      @@jamesgreen1857 Of course it does. The wealthiest can afford to find ways to avoid paying taxes, which costs everyone in society. And much of their wealth is built on the backs of exploited labour and supports all sorts of unethical practises that make it more difficult for the rest of us. I should think that's obvious. You might think that kind of wealth concentration is a good thing (rah rah free market capitalism and all that), but don't pretend it doesn't have severe consequences.

    • @jamesgreen1857
      @jamesgreen1857 Год назад +1

      @TT-fq7pl Nope , its irrelevant what someone else makes, I focus on me and planning my future. 23 yrs factory worker and now I work for myself. I probably make less than the guys I worked with at the factory but that ok, it's my choice. Just like it's your choice to work wherever or not or start your own thing.
      This is still the best country on earth. Immigrants come here everyday with nothing and sacrifice have their own businesses within 5 or 10 yrs and are successful.
      Envying what someone else has is not a good life strategy,

    • @chessdad182
      @chessdad182 Год назад

      That is because they own 99 percent of the politicians! LOL.

  • @drumsnbass
    @drumsnbass Год назад +2

    I’m 63 now, and SS would be $2300 it I took it, $2450 at 64, $2660 at 65, $2860 at 66 which is where I think I’ll take it.
    My roughly $1.1MM (not all I have) is throwing off ~10% in divvies (though some MLP stocks will be taxed). I give up “gains” for income. I’m also in a private partnership that throws off ~ $12k/yr
    So at 66 I’ll be getting ~$33k from SS. That will take me to ~$150k/yr. House is paid off.
    And I still have a very large reserve just in case.
    If the idiots in DC don’t get us all nuked, I’ll probably make it to my mid-80’s where if my health is not so good I’ll just check myself out of the game.

  • @kellymcmurry6886
    @kellymcmurry6886 Год назад

    Please do a segment on 1099 contractors. I and my wife have our own LLC and spin off 2 1099 each year. We are boht 65 years old and plan on working until age 70. We have low 6 firgure assets and earn about $100k each per year.

  • @TonyHoover
    @TonyHoover Год назад +1

    RUclips creator "Sarasota Tim" says everyone should take their social security at age 62 because they don't know how long they will live and just do a side hustle to make up the pay your not getting. What do you thonk of that strategy Mr Schmidt?

    • @HolySchmidt
      @HolySchmidt  Год назад +3

      Like anything, it depends. Some people are worried about running out of money later in life, others “want what’s theirs” and still others saved very well. I have videos on this which outline some of the decision points

    • @JBoy340a
      @JBoy340a Год назад +2

      I think his advice is questionable for anyone that plans on working prior to Full Retirement Age (FRA) which is 66-67 for most new retirees. If you make more than 19K or so from that "side hustle" they start reducing your SS check $1 for every $2 over or $1 for every $3 over in final year. So, if you earn much you can dig yourself a hole.

  • @josephkelleher8820
    @josephkelleher8820 Год назад

    It doesn't matter what your income is. What matters is your net worth.

  • @brent1041
    @brent1041 Год назад

    Really wish you would do more videos for people that want to retire early. I’m 34 and would like to retire around age 45-50. To work towards that lofty goal both me and my spouse are maxing out our 401K and being responsible with other spending

    • @glendacastillo6504
      @glendacastillo6504 Год назад +4

      No one is stopping you from retiring early. The question is, are you financially set for life. Do you have a steady monthly retirement?

    • @newafricanforum
      @newafricanforum Год назад +1

      Why do you need a video to retire?

  • @LogoTimeClark
    @LogoTimeClark Год назад

    Thanks for the income information. As couple our gross income is close to the mean, but much higher than the median. What is most concerning for us is inflation. Asset values have been hit hard since 2020. We've been buying TIPS and short term treasuries to take advantage of higher interest rates.

  • @bernie9728
    @bernie9728 Год назад

    Why would anyone care about how they "compare" to others? Unless you are the poorest person on the planet, or the richest person on the planet, there will be people who are poorer, or richer than you. Get over it.

  • @stevenbrady440
    @stevenbrady440 Год назад +2

    I think you're fabulous. But I'm almost certain your statement that one percent of the population owns 2/3 of the wealth in this country is off by a significant margin.
    Although it is significant, I don't think it's anywhere near that amount. By orders of magnitude.

    • @14sasst
      @14sasst Год назад +12

      He is right. Do some research. The one-percent holds tremendous wealth.

  • @oaxaca1948
    @oaxaca1948 Год назад

    the poor made minimum wage and couldn't save. and now have to live of SS

  • @bman6502
    @bman6502 Год назад

    I’m 62 with $20m saved up.. I’d like to retire now but not sure I have enough saved????

  • @randy74989
    @randy74989 Год назад +1

    You should have 15 to 20 times your last year's annual salary (excluding social security) saved in a tax-deferred account and/or Roth account or both.

    • @kevinh5349
      @kevinh5349 Год назад +3

      Uh-huh. Talk about the 1%.

    • @randy74989
      @randy74989 Год назад

      @@kevinh5349 Easy to do, just match your company's % match in your 401k and add 1% every time you get a raise. PS - I'm not in the 1%.

    • @chriskasprzyk6235
      @chriskasprzyk6235 Год назад +3

      Why? There is no realistic mathematical basis for this unless you are retiring at age 30 and need to sustain income for a long time and will receive basically 0 for social security.

    • @craftsmanctfl3493
      @craftsmanctfl3493 Год назад

      This figure of 15-20 times your last salary has been shown to be way off. It all depends on your particular expenses in retirement.

    • @daveh6402
      @daveh6402 Год назад

      That figure is extremely high unless you are going to put your entire nest egg under your mattress in cash. No future growth.

  • @Donkeyearsa
    @Donkeyearsa Год назад

    You left out income from taxable investment accounts. Not everyone can invest a great amount into retirment accounts. Then there are people that can invest in a traditional 401k but dont want to as its not tax effective for them.

  • @sharonlugone5955
    @sharonlugone5955 Год назад

    Interesting that you say that people who worked hard have a good retirement income. I think you need to realize that that's true for men but not necessarily for women. More retired women live in poverty than men, and it's not because they didn't work hard. There are two reasons. The first is that there continues to be a pay gap between men and women. The second is that women are forced to take time off during their earning years to take care of family members, beginning with their children and possibly ending with their aging parents. Men are much less likely to do this. This care work is certainly hard work for which women receive no compensation. Next time you're going to offer advice that only applies to men, please post a warning label at the beginning of the video.

  • @richdouglas2311
    @richdouglas2311 Год назад +1

    I'm 64. I'm not retired. (I run my own practice.) But I have two pensions: military and federal. I receive them now (and have for a long time), even though I'm hardly "retired."

    • @stevennevins6643
      @stevennevins6643 Год назад

      Your situation is similar to mine, except I retired at 66 about 5 years ago: 34 year Col.’s pension, then 10 years working for the VA, plus a VA disability pension. Add my social security, and my wife’s pension and social security and we gross about $19,500 monthly, and that’s after our Part B premiums have been deducted and before adding investment income.

    • @richdouglas2311
      @richdouglas2311 Год назад

      @@stevennevins6643 We won't do that well, but we're just below that. I have both TRICARE and Federal BC/BS. Not sure how they interact with Medicare, but I'll have to figure it out in the next 6 months or so. I retired as a captain (prior enlisted), but I retired at 36, so I've been collecting for 27 years. The GS-15 retirement isn't too impressive (13 years), but having the Fed insurance is!

    • @stevennevins6643
      @stevennevins6643 Год назад

      @@richdouglas2311 When you turn 65, Medicare becomes your primary, and TRICARE For Life your secondary. You’ll have to pay Part B premiums, but that’s it. My wife and I have had ZERO out of pocket medical expenses since turning 65, except very small medication co-pays for her. I don’t see the need for any other medical insurance. (Although I used VA for hearing aids and for my medications). I did keep the GS dental insurance. It’s much better than TRICARE dental for retirees. What branch were you?

  • @cassandragarcia3363
    @cassandragarcia3363 Год назад

    We sold our house in FL and moved to Merida, Yucatán. Mexico to retire. No regrets

    • @DrSchor
      @DrSchor Год назад

      you left out the "yet"

  • @user-cj7dv2kc6d
    @user-cj7dv2kc6d Год назад

    Or for some others, you pass on before you can even enjoy any retirement.

  • @Qrail
    @Qrail Год назад

    Thanks for the information. I’m about average in the group, so I appreciate your efforts on this video, Geoff.
    One thing I never hear about in retirement videos is death. How do you reconcile that into your plans?

    • @nixworld767
      @nixworld767 Год назад +1

      I'd plan on that happening.

    • @Qrail
      @Qrail Год назад

      @@nixworld767 …and taxes!

    • @priola7587
      @priola7587 Год назад

      @@nixworld767😂

  • @mattp4079
    @mattp4079 Год назад

    The comments here are usually insightful, but man the A.I. spambots are overloading it.😞