8 comments

  • ksherlock an hour ago

    Your savings rate is a lifestyle choice.

    eg, let's simplify and assume spherical cows, no inflation and no ROI. If you save 50% of your income, 1 year of work is 1 year of retirement. If you save 25% of your income, 3 years of work is 1 year of retirement.

    So you should probably read bogleheads, live below your means, and max out your 401k/403b/roth ira/etc with low-cost index funds. or just yolo it on stonks and hope for diamond hands.

  • jleyank an hour ago

    Two ways come to mind re: retirement. Luck/skill into a big payout via startups or tailor a series of jobs to get you a paid-off residence someplace you'd like to live. Carrying a mortgage into retirement is just too much of a financial restriction for most folks.

    You need retirement savings that will cover expenses over any government pension you might get. I assume you're in the US, so there's little chance of a company pension... Basically, save as much as you can while living a reasonable lifestyle. And the killer question is whether or not you have kids - which, usually, suggests a partner having similar decisions. DINKS have more financial flexibility but less populated lives.

    In a way, you should "burn the candle at both ends" while younger. Deferring everything until later puts you at risk to not having the physical or mental means to do what you'd like. Or, not having the people you'd like to do them with. I guess you could say "don't waste time". You only get so much and it grows valuable as you age.

    And store up memories when you're young. You'll spend them when you're old.

      anigbrowl an hour ago

      How are you going to store up memories if you're spending the whole time working to satisfy the demands of your financial overlords?

  • WheelsAtLarge an hour ago

    The best thing to do is to be prepare to switch your career at some point. The tech industry is notoriously ageist so don't expect to retire working in the same type of job you have now.

      raw_anon_1111 24 minutes ago

      I am 51. I got my first job in BigTech at 46. When I got Amazoned in 2023, within the first two weeks I had three offers.

      I was out looking again in 2024, I responded to a recruiter and had a job offer within two weeks.

      I am still an IC and half my job as a staff consultant is pushing out code onto AWS, the other half is leading projects, supporting sales, talking to customers.

  • toomuchtodo 2 hours ago

    How fast you fire is a function of your savings and burn rate. The more you save and the lower your burn rate, the faster you fire.

    https://www.mrmoneymustache.com/2012/01/13/the-shockingly-si...

  • kay_o an hour ago

    I do not plan on living until retirement given the current state of things and my age. Most of my age cohort seem to be similar -- we will never be able to afford a home, we will never have a pension.

    Only way out is jackpot -- lottery, startup sale, AI slop millionaire.