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How to Retire One Day

disclaimer: This is written by a USA. The direct, specific advice is directed at my fellow yanks. Those are the numbers and nuances I know. There will be something here for other folks, mostly in the sections that cover mindset. I'm going to talk about things as they are, not as they should be. I am not an expert. I have read a few books, followed discussion forums on the topic for a few years, listened to podcasts, etc. I'm a layman, I know enough to provide a good introduction.

0. How do you live? 1. Financial Health 2. The Dark Forest 3. F.I.R.E. 4. The Well Trodden Path 5. The Paths to Gold 6. The Paths to Time 7. On Work 8. On Financing, Loans, and Homeownership 9. On Death 10. In Conclusion

0. How do you live?

MUSIC: Low Key Gliding - Hal Walker

Who are you? What do you value? How much risk can you tolerate? What is you capacity to tolerate catastrophy? Getting finances in order is about making conscious decisions when you were not doing so before. One who trods down this path–treating it with the gravity it deserves–will rebuild their finical world in the image of what they value in life. Finances should be a mirror of what you want your life to be in all stages; in youth, in middle age, in the elder years, and in death. It's a tool that enables you to live the life you desire, filters out foolhardy thoughts, and acts as a scale to give decisions their proper weight. Retirement planning and having a solid understanding of personal finance is one of the best tools to decide what kind of live you want. It will give you the tools to plan it, exit ramps if things are going poorly, and tell you how to derive maximum benefit from a windfall. Have a think. How do you live?

1. Financial Health, and Foundational Information

aka. what they should teach you in high school about being an adult human in the modern world

MUSIC: Drive45 - Everything I own

1a. Budgeting 1b. Getting Healthy 1c. Interest, ← the most important thing tbh 1d. How do taxes work? 1e. Investing 1g. Insurance 1h. Windfalls

Saving for retirement is important. Ensuring your finances are in good shape is more important. First part of saving for retirement is ensuring you have an okay understanding of personal finance, you're financially healthy, and you understand where money is going. We'll start with checking your financial health.

Someone who has good financial health is someone who understands where their money is coming from, where it's going, has an emergency fund that will cover a few months expenses, has no high interest rate debt, doesn't spend an outsized amount of income on a single expense, and is capable of saving at least 20% of their income.

1a. Budgeting

First step of retirement planning is figuring out your budget. This is the foundation of all further planning. Grab a spreadsheet or find an app to help your plan. Note down your monthly income. If your income or expense are variable assume the worst. If you have a yearly/quarterly expense divide by 12/3 and include it. You want an accurate picture of what's coming in and going out, and to categorize what's going out into need/want/debt/save. Use your debit/credit card or checking account statements to ensure things are accurate. Mentally run down everywhere you regularly spend money and if you're confident make estimations on how much you've spent. If you're not confident in your estimations get a budgeting app and start noting down every time you spend money for a month.

Note down mandatory expenses:

  • Housing, including insurance
  • Groceries
  • Transportation, including repairs, insurance
  • Utilities
  • Healthcare

Note down Optional Spending:

  • Movies, steaming services, theater
  • Restaurants/dining out (if you're paying someone to cook for you it's optional)
  • Vices, e.g. alcohol, tobacco, gambling, pornography
  • Hobbies, gym memberships
  • Shopping, luxuries

Debt payments, savings, and investments

  • Retirement investments
  • Saving for major expenses (down payment, new bike, etc)
  • Creating/refilling an Emergency Fund
  • Debt repayments

Red Flags

At minimum shoot for meeting the 50/30/20 rule. Up to 50% of your after-tax income on needs, 30% on wants, and 20% into debt repayment and savings. If you have to spend more on needs, or debt, or your want spending is out of control you should adjust. T

No more than 30% of your wage should be going to your mortgage or rent. If it is get a roommate or a cheaper place.

Your transportation costs should not exceed 15% of your income. It is very affordable to drive a $3,000 dollar car with liability insurance, even if it needs repairs more often.

Groceries should not be more than $300 per person per month, even in high cost of living cities. This is applicable to USA as of 2024

1b. Getting Healthy

Once you have a budget figured out, you can start setting goals for yourself to improve your finances, and you'll know where to make cuts (or work more) to start working to those goals. The first three things you should do now that you have a good picture is:

  1. Pay off high interest debt
  2. Build an emergency fund
  3. Start taking the employer match for retirement funds

Debt

If you have any high interest debt you should immediately pay it off. If it's a very high interest rate sacrifice as much as you can manage until it is gone. High interest debt is debt that has a higher interest rate than what the returns would be on low risk investments. For most yankees that'd be around 6%. A very high rate would be anything over 10% interest, like credit card debt, payday loans, and predatory vehicle loans.

Emergency Funds

While paying off high interest debt you should start building an emergency fund. The only time you shouldn't be building an emergency fund is if you have very high interest loans you are repaying. Having money set aside is one of the biggest returns on investment in both terms of money and peace of mind. If your fridge breaks, your car breaks, you are hurt and can't work, your home burns, you are covered. You won't have to go into (likely high interest) debt to dig yourself out. This can literally save you from becoming homeless.

Your emergency fund should be somewhere between 3 times and 6 times your monthly expenses. If your income is volatile (freelancers, self employed) you should shoot for more.

You should keep your emergency fund somewhere you can access it quickly. For most folks this will be a savings account. Preferably one with higher interest. Other options would include bonds and CD accounts. You can sell these for their entire value whenever, you'll only loose out on interest gains. A CD account at a bank, and you put money in and you're not allowed to touch it for some amount of time. If you don't touch it you get paid a higher interest rate than a normal savings account. If you do touch it you only loose out on the interest rate. Regardless of where you put your emergency fund you should make sure you can access almost all of it within a day or two.

Employer Matched Retirement Accounts

You should always contribute as much as needed to get the full employer match. It is free money. A bonus wage they pay you for saving. If your employer offers multiple types of account see below and decide what works best for you. For most folks (read: yanks) this will be a 401(k). Taking the employer match to retirement is literally the highest return safest investment you can make in your life.

In Conclusion

Do some mix of the above three until you have payed off all your high interest debt, built an emergency fund, and are able to take the full employer match to retirement accounts. Prioritize ultra high interest debt first, followed by making progress towards the emergency fund, followed by taking that employer match. If doing the above three is impossible you need to either live a less lavish lifestyle, or pursue education to make more money.

1c Interest

Understanding interest, and the difference between interest (sometimes called simple interest) and compound interest, is important foundational knowledge. If someone lends you money, they're going to want to get paid for that service. The longer and more money you borrow, the more the lender wants to get paid. Interest refers to the amount you pay to the lender for money they borrowed you. It is often charged on a yearly basis at a specific rate. This yearly rate is call an APR, or annual percentage rate. Simple interest is calculated by multiplying how much money you borrow, by the term of the loan, by the APR.

Example, if you borrow $10,000 dollars for 10 years at an annual rate of 10%. You'd end up paying the lender $1,585.81 per year for 10 years. Or $15,858.09 over the life of the loan. This is simple interest at work.

Compound interest is when you earn interest both on the initial amount loaned, and on the interest on top of that. This is how savings accounts and investments work. Compound interest is super intuitive. It is also one of the most powerful tools you can use save month and grow wealth.

How much money will $10,000 be after accruing 10% compounding interest over 10 years? 11% is the average yearly return of the stock market over the last 50 years, everything rounded to keep the math simple. Pick a number in your head, seriously. That $10,000 dollars will grow to $27,182.82, a return of $17,182.82. What happens if let that $10,000 dollars grow for 30 years? I'd like you to guess in your head again. The investment would have grown to $200,772.91. If this was simple interest and it didn't compound the value would only be $31,592.58

This is the power of compounding interest. This is how you retire. You put away money into investment accounts. You let that money accrue compound interest (or in the case of investment and we're being pendants, compounding returns) for as long as possible. Once there's enough money in the account to cover every dollar you'll spend for the rest of your life you retire. Simple as.

1c Taxes

Taxes are fairly complex and nuanced. I'll primarily be talking about income and capital gains taxes, as these are the two most relevant. I won't be talking about deductions or credits all that much in this section. In other sections (such as buying real estate) I'll touch on tax advantages.

Income taxes

For every dollar you're payed, your government is going to take some percentage of it. The more you make, the more they take. Money withdrawn from retirement accounts is usually considered income, as is money payed by disability benefits, pensions, social security (for the yanks), gifts, proceeds from selling drugs, winning the lottery, etc. As you make more money your tax rate goes up. There will never be a situation where earning more money will cause you to have less after-tax income due to taxation; taxes work in a bracketing system.

For example, lets say Ollie made $50,000 in 2023. Here's the relevant bits of the federal income tax brackets:

tax rate income range
10% $0-$11,000
12% $11,001-$44,725
22% $44,726-$95,375

The first $11,000 they make will be taxed at 10%, the first $11,001 to $40,725 is taxed as 12%, and so on. This give Ollie an effective income tax rate of 12.82%. Total income tax burden would be $6,413.

Capital Gains

Capital gains tax is a tax on the profits made from investments, including investments into real estate and stocks. Retirement accounts are exempt from capital gains. This will be covered in detail later. Capital gains is split into two categories, long term capital gains and short term capital gains. Long term cap gains is on profits gained on assets held for more than a year, and short term cap gains is on profits from assets held for less than a year.

You are not charged capital gains if you simply by and hold an asset. You are only charged capital gains on the total profits you've made by selling held assets that year. If you sell assets and you loose money, that the loss from that sale reduces the tax burden on your profits.

You probably shouldn't raw dawg by and sell stocks outside of retirement accounts. You should buy mutual funds (discussed later) if you want exposure to the stock market, and you shouldn't think about touching any of those stocks/funds/instruments for many many many years. As a result, cap gains is not relevant to saving for retirement assuming you're using retirement accounts.

1e. Investing

2. The Dark Forest

じぶんがいない - salyu × salyu

2a. Tax Advantaged Investments 2b. Pensions and Social Security 2c. Real Property 2d. Children and Community MUSIC They Caught us Doin' it - The Vaudevillian

There are three dials to adjust to get close to retirement, saving

2a. Tax Advantaged Investments

The main way most folks save for retirement is tax advantaged investments. These are in two broad categories, Tax Differed and Tax Exempt. Both reduce the amount of taxes you pay on income, just at different points in your life. Withdraws from tax advantaged are penalized if done before retirement, with some exceptions and nuances. Broadly speaking they protect your money as well; they can't be seized if you go bankrupt, are generally shielded if you get sued, and are hard for creditors to access.

Tax Differed

Tax Differed accounts reduce your immediate tax burden. The most common types are; 401(k), offered by private employers; 403(b), offered by nonprofits; TSPs, for government workers; and Traditional IRAs, available to everyone. These work mostly the same, but there are nuances. You should read about the details of these accounts when they're offered to you. If you don't have access to these (e.g. you are self employed) you should read about and invest into a Traditional IRA.

Example: If Oliver made $50,000 and invests $3,000 into a tax differed account they'd only be taxed on $47,000 of their income. When Oliver retires they to withdraw $40,000 to cover their living expenses. The $40,000 withdrawn is treated as income, and will be taxed as such.

Tax Exempt

Tax exempt accounts are accounts that reduce your tax burden in retirement. You still pay income tax on tax exempt accounts, but you will not need to pay it in income taxed when you withdraw from your retirement accounts. These are best if you suspect you're making less now than when you will in retirement. For most of your life this won't be the case. Very early in your career, if you're taking a sabbatical, you win or inherit a lot of money, etc. are when you'd want to put more month into a tax exempt account over a Tax Differed. Examples of tax exempt accounts include a Roth 401(k), and a Roth IRA

Example: If Oliver made $50,000 this year and put $5,000 into a Tax Exempt account, they'd still be taxed on the full 50,000. Oliver is now old, and has reached retirement age. The $5,000 investment grew at 6% per year over 20 years and is now worth $16,036. Oliver can now withdraw the money and it wouldn't increase his income for that year.

The Rule of Thumb

You should put more of your retirement savings into a tax differed account if you expect your income to be lower in retirement than what your current income. Most folks will make less in retirement than they make for most of their career. This isn't true for everyone. If you're early in your career and are not making much money, but expect that to change, or are switching careers, or are taking a sabbatical, or otherwise are not making much money that year (and thus will have a low income tax burden for the year) you ought to save using a ROTH. If you're not sure whether you'll make more or less you can always invest in both types of accounts and use vibes and napkin math to help decide how much will go to each.

3. F.I.R.E.

MUSIC: Fire Sale - Church & AP Remix

4. The Well Trodden Path

5. The Paths to Gold

SWEAT - MUSIC: Nice Things - Tank and Bangas

6. The Paths to Time

MUSIC: Drugs - The Philharmonik

7. On Work

8. On Financing, Loans, and Homeownership

MUSIC: An Elusive Nightmare - Rockos

9. On Death

MUSIC - Waiting for Death - CandleKid

10. In Conclusion

MUSIC: Back when I was 4 - Jeffery Lewis

Do not worry about being optimal. Folks can obsess over this stuff. All of this is is a tool enable you to live the life you want, it shouldn't be a major stressor. Once you've sat down and made the decisions you can forget about the details. The details only need to be considered when you're making massive life changes, e.g. a career change, a house purchase, finding/loosing a life partner, etc. That initial hump of planning and getting finances in order takes a while. After that maybe an hour a month, 20 minutes a week. Most of this stuff is automatic. You make a decision when you're young, execute as your age, and change course when your life plans change.

Good Music listened to while writing this:

Brain breakers:

Tsu No Guemi - Rory in early 20s. lolil0 0pz - Goreshit HD.189733.B- c678924