TimberHole
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Jul 17, 2017
- Messages
- 524
- Location
- Missouri
- Tractor
- JD9504WD w/ 75 Loader, JD345, Bobcat S150
The way to calculate this is to work backward. There are endless calculators on the internet to help you with this or you can write a simple spreadsheet to calculate it yourself. Basically, you need to have 25 times as much saved as you plan to spend in a year in retirement. Figure out what you need to live on including health insurance and taxes, subtract out Social Security and pensions, adjust for average inflation and you have your spending and your required nest egg. Now use an on line calculator to see how much you need to invest yearly based on historical returns on your investments. I was 100% stock until I retired, but a more caution approach might be 80% stocks / 20% bonds.
The 25X figure is informative because it makes you realize that if you can cut spending in retirement by $1000 yearly, you need $25,000 less in savings. Similarly if you are paying an advisor 1% and you can only withdraw 4%, the advisor is taking a quarter of your spending money every year.
If it looks like you will come up short, you may need to up your income through better skills / education, a second job or more contribution from the spouse.
This sounds like the same logic I kept running across. At 25 times annual retirement income a 4% return will provide the income without depleting the principal. Why can’t the average joe plan on using the principal in his retirement account? I don’t get it.