Plot twist on this thread... Yea, I'm in the same boat... plenty of money and nothing I *need* to spend money on. I'm cheap and still look at what's for free on Craig's list... You never know when a bargain will pop up. I could buy new but it's the hunt, I'm here for...
I have no children but have a wife that will out live me for sure (at least that's the plan). Her family all lived very long lives... my pension will support her for her life time.
When to jump? When it cost you... A dear friend was worried about this, I was first inline to take his job but he never thought he would have enough money to retire. Long story short, he worked 40 years and retired at 125% of his salary.
This means a couple of things, 1) His take home pay after he retired was $900 MORE per month. But that also meant that last year he worked, he paid the State $900/month just for the joy to come to work.
He lost money by working (unless he lives a long life to recover the costs) - Look at what you get in retirement vs. what your net take home pay is.
For me, getting about $3/hour was not worth it... Once Social Security kicks in (6 months) I'ii be getting way more money than I was working... yes, I'm taking it at 62... not sure how long I will have to be able to get my money back.
That's for another thread... or is it?
Life is short, eat desert first. Sort of…once you’ve got enough laid away to take care of the future.
I was working for 33 cents on the dollar. I could say home and do nothing and get 2/3 of my base pay OR work 100% of the available work hours in a month and get the remaining 1/3 of my salary. I might be slow and cheap, but not that cheap. So I got a gig working part time at a much greater hourly rate, have twice as many days off and gross significantly more. I was fortunate to have/pursue a “niche” career path that very few make to three or four decades of experience in, but all of the niche firms want the well experienced folks and are willing to pay accordingly. That supply and demand thing I suppose.
As to training myself to spend, well my wife’s got that covered pretty well. But I really have no intention of touching my (our) private retirement funds for at least 5 years. I know it will be pretty hard for me once I start actually pays the bills out of those savings. Like you said, on paper it all looks quite reasonable, but I’ll probably never be 100% comfortable spending saved money.
As to SS, drawing at 62 seems reasonable if one doesn’t think they will make it to their 80s (or whatever the cross over age is).
Based on the image below and age 67 being 100% benefit, presuming one can accurately guess their terminal age, I did some math:
1) about age 82.5 if you draw at 70
2) about age 80 if you draw at 65
3) about age 78 if you draw at 62.
It’s not that big of a window, less than 5 years. Kind of an extreme case, but if one starting drawing at 62 thinking they’d make it to 75, but actually made it to 90, they would have collected about 79% of what they would have if they waited to draw at 70 and made it to 90.
I have some friends about a decade and an half ahead of me and they are talking about deferring taking it until the latest age possible (70, I believe). But they do have a pretty decent family trust (my impression) in addition to a lifetime of making good financial decisions.
Here’s a nice little SS bulletin I found that demonstrates the effect of drawing early (62), on time (67), or late (70).
SS Bulletin- Impact of drawing early or late
Here’s the graph that is the meat and potatoes of the situation. Looks to be a simple mathematical problem to assume various terminal ages, and making a decision from there. Obviously there probably complexities, such as working and drawing at the same time in the early end of the equation.