- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Coaching Changes
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
50% of millennials think they need $300,000 or less to retire in comfort
Posted on 8/16/21 at 5:12 am
Posted on 8/16/21 at 5:12 am
Read Here
quote:
According to a new survey from the Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies, half of millennials (born 1981 to 1996) believe that they’ll need $300,000 or less in savings to retire comfortably — a fraction of what most estimates say they’ll need.
quote:
Gen X (born 1965 to 1980) and Gen Z (born 1997 to 2012) had slightly higher estimates for their retirement needs: The median guess for each group came in at $500,000. Boomers (born 1946 to 1964) had the highest median guess, at $750,000 — which makes sense, since many of them are near or at retirement, so they have a clearer picture of what their retirement needs will be. However, even that amount probably won’t be enough to retire on in comfort, experts say.
This post was edited on 8/16/21 at 5:44 am
Posted on 8/16/21 at 6:31 am to pioneerbasketball
No surprises here. Most people, regardless of generation, are financial idiots.
Posted on 8/16/21 at 6:44 am to pioneerbasketball
I’m surprised it’s not a higher percentage.
Posted on 8/16/21 at 6:51 am to pioneerbasketball
Based millenials don’t care about retirement like you cringe boomers do. You think we dream of becoming a boomer and retiring so we can go to Walmart and bitch at people for not wearing masks like y’all?
Besides, we millenials know that with the vaccine we won’t have to worry about getting old which is pretty cool
ETA: as a millenial myself, I’m not trying to buy my way out of Egypt til I get to 10 million but more than likely I’ll die on the job and become pyramid mortar
Besides, we millenials know that with the vaccine we won’t have to worry about getting old which is pretty cool
ETA: as a millenial myself, I’m not trying to buy my way out of Egypt til I get to 10 million but more than likely I’ll die on the job and become pyramid mortar
This post was edited on 8/16/21 at 6:55 am
Posted on 8/16/21 at 6:56 am to ATLsuTiger
quote:
Add a zero.
Depends on when you want to retire.
Posted on 8/16/21 at 7:27 am to pioneerbasketball
By the time Biden is done you’ll need about $25,000,000 to retire.
Posted on 8/16/21 at 8:05 am to pioneerbasketball
Makes sense. That is because they believe the rest of what they need the government will provide free of charge.
Posted on 8/16/21 at 8:18 am to pioneerbasketball
The only odd thing here is Gen Z is right up there with Gen X, otherwise the trend was pretty clearly the older the generation the more they think they need to retire. Which is honestly the opposite of what you would hope to see.
Majority of folks just dont get serious about retirement planning (if they ever do) until their 50s and 60s sadly enough, by then it's too late for a lot of people to fund the retirement they may want.
Was talking with some friends last weekend and the wife was mentioning her parents are living off $350k retirement investments with like just under $3k/mo of S.S. and the mother was still working part time (they are about 70). The good news is their house is paid off, but the bad news is the mom still is working a little so they can live the retirement lifestyle they want (some, but not much, travel). She talked about how they were never really savers much growing up, but at least did manage to pay off the house they lived in for over 30 years now.
Majority of folks just dont get serious about retirement planning (if they ever do) until their 50s and 60s sadly enough, by then it's too late for a lot of people to fund the retirement they may want.
Was talking with some friends last weekend and the wife was mentioning her parents are living off $350k retirement investments with like just under $3k/mo of S.S. and the mother was still working part time (they are about 70). The good news is their house is paid off, but the bad news is the mom still is working a little so they can live the retirement lifestyle they want (some, but not much, travel). She talked about how they were never really savers much growing up, but at least did manage to pay off the house they lived in for over 30 years now.
Posted on 8/16/21 at 8:24 am to pioneerbasketball
(no message)
This post was edited on 4/12/23 at 2:54 am
Posted on 8/16/21 at 8:32 am to msutiger
Even before the recent inflation concerns, $300k wasn't gonna be worth much when millennials hit retirement age.
Posted on 8/16/21 at 8:33 am to pioneerbasketball
2 bitcoins should suffice in 20 or so years
This post was edited on 8/16/21 at 8:35 am
Posted on 8/16/21 at 8:33 am to thunderbird1100
quote:for those with no pension this is probably better than average
talking with some friends last weekend and the wife was mentioning her parents are living off $350k retirement investments with like just under $3k/mo of S.S. and the mother was still working part time (they are about 70). The good news is their house is paid off, but the bad news is the mom still is working a little so they can live the retirement lifestyle they want (some, but not much, travel). She talked about how they were never really savers much growing up, but at least did manage to pay off the house they lived in for over 30 years now.
Posted on 8/16/21 at 8:36 am to thunderbird1100
quote:
f $350k retirement investments with like just under $3k/mo of S.S. and the mother was still working part time (they are about 70). The good news is their house is paid off,
when I read this board and retirement projections, I see people post stories like this as horror stories and it makes me wonder what these people are spending money on. $3k/mo with no house payment is solid, then add in investments (i'm hoping i read that right) and that's a really nice monthly income
Posted on 8/16/21 at 8:37 am to msutiger
quote:
The amount needed to retire is completely dependent on lifestyle and the decisions you make leading into retirement. I feel like that is rarely taken into consideration when throwing out “amount needed for retirement numbers”
thank you
assuming you don't have a house payment and that you're not putting money away in savings, how much money do you really need per month?
Posted on 8/16/21 at 8:40 am to SlowFlowPro
About 4k per month spend.
That's pretty comfortable in the vast majority of the country, especially with no mortgage.
That's pretty comfortable in the vast majority of the country, especially with no mortgage.
Posted on 8/16/21 at 8:57 am to pioneerbasketball
Well damn I'm doing good half way there 27 years to go
Posted on 8/16/21 at 9:13 am to LSU6262
Millennials rent so they will have a monthly housing note. They are fricked
Posted on 8/16/21 at 9:28 am to CP3LSU25
What is rent?
Who has even paid rent in the last 18 months?
Who has even paid rent in the last 18 months?
Posted on 8/16/21 at 9:29 am to CP3LSU25
I'm 38 and $300K would keep me up nights. I'm lucky enough to be one of the last people to get a good pension from the state (PA). I'll retire somewhere at 75-87.5% of highest salary which will cover a lot, but I still try to invest about 20% of my salary on top of that. Our pensions are not COLA so if inflation really blows up it will decimate my payout. My wife puts away a lot too. I don't know if we'll retire early, but we will be able to retire comfortably I do believe.
I had a colleague give me a good piece of advice once, if you plan on being retired for 25 years, you will need $30,000 to cover a $100 a month bill (like internet, cell phone, etc). Just blew my mind to think of it in thet way.
I had a colleague give me a good piece of advice once, if you plan on being retired for 25 years, you will need $30,000 to cover a $100 a month bill (like internet, cell phone, etc). Just blew my mind to think of it in thet way.
Popular
Back to top


25











