How to Get on Track for Retirement, Ep #149

Best In Wealth Podcast - Un pódcast de Scott Wellens

Are you on track for retirement? Do you have enough money saved at this point in your life to retire or reach financial freedom by 65? One of the biggest questions I hear is: How much money do I need to save for retirement? In this episode of Best in Wealth, I do my best to answer that question using the formula Charles Farrell outlines in his book, Your Money Ratios: 8 Simple Tools for Financial Security at Every Stage of Life. You need to take actionable steps now to be prepared for your future.Outline of This Episode[0:35] What do you dream about doing?[3:58] Are you on track for retirement?[11:15] Why you need 80% of your current income[13:51] How do you come up with the $60,000?[17:37] What’s your job now?Get retirement ready with Charles Farrell’s formulaYou need to create a detailed retirement plan to really zero in on your goals and get the right steps in place to prepare. In his book, Charles Farrell shares a simplified version of how much savings you’ll need. I’ll give you some simple guidelines from this book that demonstrate where you should be at each stage of life. The goal is to hit at least 12x your household income in order to retire, so you can live off of 80% of that of your household income in retirement.Charles developed the Capital to Income Ratio. You can use it to find out if you’re on track to get to 12x your income by the time you retire. If your household income is $100,000 annually, you need to save $1.2 million for retirement. So where do you need to be at each age?Here are the income ratios by age, with the approximate amount you should have saved if your household income is $100,000 annually: Age Income Ratio Savings Required 25 0.1 $10,000 30 0.6 $60,000 35 1.4 $140,000 40 2.4 $240,000 45 3.7 $370,000 50 5.2 $520,000 55 7.1 $710,000 60 9.4 $940,000 65 12 $1.2 million So are you on track for retirement?Based on the table above—are you on track for retirement? Here’s how to calculate it:Take your household income and multiply that by the income ratio that correlates with your age to see if you’re currently on track. It’s easy to calculate if you’re paid a salary. If you aren’t, count the average of your pay for the last 4 years as your income.By the way, by money saved, we’re talking about things such as your 401k, IRA, annuities, CDs, life insurance, checking and savings, real estate, etc. Please note that your home is NOT a capital investment.How do you live on 80% of your current income?How do you live on 80% of your current income in retirement if you need 100% of it now? Where did Charles come up with that number? If you’re going to get to 12x your income by retirement age, you have to be saving 12–15% of your $100,000 annual income to get there. If you’re saving 12% now, you really only need 88% of your income to live off of. In retirement, you won’t be saving for your retirement anymore.Plus, your mortgage should be paid off by the time you retire. If your mortgage accounts for 20% of what you pay and we take off another 12% for savings, 7.65% for social security taxes, that brings you down to $60,000. So you really only need $60,000 to live off what you’re making right now. Social security will play a role—it typically replaces 20% of your income. If you’re making around $100,000 a year, it will make up the other $20,000 to bring you to the projected $80,000 a year in retirement.You want that extra $20,000 cushion to account for things like yearly inflation, medical expenses, or perhaps even vacations. Keep listening to find out why I think the 5% rule can be dangerous—and what I think you should do...

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