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Retire Early
Lifestyle
Retirement; like your parents, but way cooler

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In 1991 Billy and Akaisha Kaderli retired at the age
of 38. Now, into their 4th decade of this
financially independent lifestyle, they invite you
to take advantage of their wisdom and experience. |
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Unlocking
Financial Freedom:
A Guide to Calculating Your
Retirement Needs
Billy and Akaisha Kaderli
Billy and Akaisha Kaderli,
early retirement advocates, simplify the process of estimating your retirement
savings needs.

Akaisha and Billy at the Tour Eiffel,
Paris
Are you preparing to retire?
It’s going to happen someday, no matter if you want to retire early or later
these questions below need to be answered.
How much do I need to retire?
Without going into complicated spreadsheets and analysis, a simple way to
determine your “number” is to multiply your current annual spending by 25.
First you need to figure out what you are spending per year. Do you know? Most
people have no idea where their hard-earned dollars go.
We offer an easy-to-use spreadsheet in our book
The Adventurer’s
Guide to Early Retirement, or you can make one yourself. The
important thing is that you know how much you are spending annually.
For illustrative purposes let’s use this data.
The 2022 Consumer Expenditure Survey by the Bureau of Labor Statistics reveals
that the average American household's monthly expenses total approximately
$6,081, equating to $72,967 annually. We will round this to $73,000.
Are you above or below this average? Remember, this is not your take home pay,
but how much you are actually spending on rent/house payment, car, insurance,
gas, clothing, and everything else that you spend money on.
Using the 73K figure multiply this by 25 = $1,825,000 Dollars is how much you
need to have invested in liquid assets. Most studies use 60% stocks, 40% bond
portfolio. In my opinion that’s a bit conservative but it all depends on your
personal risk tolerance. In our case
Social Security and cash are our bond
equivalent thus we have a higher stock allocation.
Regarding Social Security, do you know what your estimated annual payments will
be? Simply go to SocialSecurity.gov and create an account. All of your
contributions and work history will be there as well as the number of quarters
you have accumulated. You need a minimum of 40 quarters of work history to
qualify for your payments.
Don’t get discouraged by the $1,825,000 figure, but how are you going to get
there?
Based on December 2023 data from the Social Security Administration the average
monthly check is $1,767.03 or $21,204.36. Multiply this figure times 2 in your
household equals $42,408.72.
$73,000 expenses minus $42,409 in Social Security payments leaves a $30,591 income
deficit that you need to create from your investments to cover your expenses.
Looking better?
Now let’s multiply $30,591 times 25 and your new “number” is $764,775 that
you need to have invested in a stock/bond/cash portfolio.
If you are
retiring early like we did before your retirement age, you will need
to have enough invested to cover your living expenses before receiving your
Social Security. Maybe that is 20 years or more so you need to plan accordingly.
How to get to your number.
Hopefully you’ve already
started
investing and have a growth portfolio that is
matching
market returns or close to it using the ETF, VTI, Vanguard Total Market. Now
you know how much you have to contribute through the years to arrive at your
target, assuming that you will continue spending $73,000 per year.
In our experience after retirement, our spending decreased, mostly as a result of Geo-Arbitrage
and going car free. As a result, we have mentioned numerous times, now at age 71
we are
increasing our spending purposefully.
From
NerdWallet, this chart shows the household net worth by age.
|
Age of head of family |
Median net worth |
Average net worth |
|
Less than 35 |
$39,000 |
$183,500 |
|
35-44 |
$135,600 |
$549,600 |
|
45-54 |
$247,200 |
$975,800 |
|
55-64 |
$364,500 |
$1,566,900 |
|
65-74 |
$409,900 |
$1,794,600 |
|
75+ |
$335,600 |
$1,624,100 |
You can see that a household in the 45-54 years age already has the $764,775
needed in the above example. This is assuming that they
sell the house, which is
where most people's net worth is and invest the proceeds. Again, this is what we
did as our retirement dream was and still is to travel the globe and accumulate
experiences rather than things.
Everybody’s idea of retirement is different and there is no one size fits all.
What’s important is that you create the retirement lifestyle that works for you,
and not to be afraid to
make adjustments along the way.
Retirement life is as fluid as your life is today. Once you become Financially
Independent opportunities like repositioning cruises, weekday skiing and cheap
airfares will become normal and you can choose how to proceed.



Retire
Early Lifestyle appeals to a different
kind of person – the person who prizes their
independence, values their time, and who doesn’t
want to mindlessly follow the crowd.
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