HalfaSeatOn
Well-known member
May be on equity release it is when you take it out? The people we know have done it in their 70’s. It’s still appealing as tackles the asset rich, cash poor dilemma.
Reading here in envy as have 20 years before I hit sixty
Mortgage will be gone if not overpaid on my 60th, have around £9k per annum (index linked) previous final salary pension and putting away £12K a year into a new pension (current pot £40k) for me plus the wife’s c4k per annum.
No idea what the state pension will look like when our time comes
Might be the time now to ensure we are on the right track and seek the view of an IFA as have no intention what so ever of working beyond my state retirement age (67), ideally wrapped up before
Reading here in envy as have 20 years before I hit sixty
Mortgage will be gone if not overpaid on my 60th, have around £9k per annum (index linked) previous final salary pension and putting away £12K a year into a new pension (current pot £40k) for me plus the wife’s c4k per annum.
No idea what the state pension will look like when our time comes
Might be the time now to ensure we are on the right track and seek the view of an IFA as have no intention what so ever of working beyond my state retirement age (67), ideally wrapped up before
Hopefully………! I consider myself very lucky. I’m not well educated and sort of fell into a career that turned out ok and happened to pay reasonably well, plus we never got into the ‘keeping up with the Joneses’ stuff that is absolutely rife in banking, leading to ridiculous spending, huge mortgages (and often costly divorces). Also had kids relatively young so all the big commitments fell away which made stopping work viable.
Absolutely. I remember when I paid off my mortgage at 40ish one of my associates at a similar level at work was stunned. He still had a huge Mortgage and couldn't understand how his kids at Public school, Brand new very flash cars for him and his Mrs every two years and multiple Caribbean holidays at exclusive resorts and Skiing holidays in USA/Canada had effected his ability to do likewise
I think i really need to see a financial advisor as i have less then 2 years before i will be able to receive my state pension .
But after being lied to by my Lloyds bank manager when i applied for a loan in 2007 and he insisted i take out PPI which i am happy to say i got back, I have lost trust in the financial industry that they will only be looking after there own interests and not mine!
I’m a bit of a nerd with managing our household expenses and therefore was able to make estimates of the income we needed in retirement using a fair few years of financial records - it’s largely proved to be fairly accurate over the last four years. It’s a really important part of planning for stopping work. Our drawdown income is more than the £30k others have mentioned. I don’t believe we have a particularly extravagant lifestyle other than spending over £4k per annum on private healthcare which will eventually prove unsustainable but proves the point about knowing what your real expenses will be.
21 months to go. (Not that I’m counting down the days) Then I’ll probably get a PT job a couple of days a week, can’t wait.
I assume you're in the Arundel area going by your avatar? But, if you're in Brighton, or Hove actually, or somewhere nearby, PM me and I can get you involved in organised kick-abouts. I'm 66 and play proper football three times a week.
I also retired at 60 years old. Where the last six years have gone is a complete mystery. It's gone in a flash.
Initially, it was really strange, waking up when I woke up - no alarm clock any more, then wondering what to do. Once I sorted out a new routine, which took about three months, I've not looked back.
I look after a couple of friends' gardens, and generally just take my time doing all the things I used to have to cram in to a busy week. It's all about being content in your mind.
The best advice I was given is that you don't have to do anything. I used to think I had to be doing something, but you don't.
I've done a bit of volunteer work for Butterfly Conservation, including building huge bonfires and tree planting.
I just sloth around gently. It's great. I'm back on the French learning, I do a crossword every day and generally just enjoy doing not much. It is an art though, and I can understand people that might struggle having worked all their lives and then suddenly stop.
Hope you sort yourself out a new routine and enjoy yourself.
16K p.a. for the next 20 years is 320K. If that is being invested sensibly you should have around 400K to 500K in the pot in 20 years time. State pension will be around 1000 per month in today's money so around 1,300 to 1500, possibly.
I’m envious of you. You have more of the best asset of all. Time.
Are you both in good health and don’t really claim on the health insurance?
If so, self insuring by sticking the £4k in a separate savings account I think can be a good idea. It’ll soon mount up and might rarely be touched.
My 80+ year old Dad just had a full knee replacement with the physio sessions afterwards, £15k all in, including all the consultations. Just as an example of costs.
No need to worry about cancer treatment. Even during this pandemic, the NHS have provided very fast and effective care in prostate, skin and bowel issues in that area to close ones.
Good thread - I’ve been spending some time on this last few years despite being in 30s. Work pension is quite good in terms of contribution (9%+9%) Despite being PAYE, I’ve had additional tax due 3 out of last 4 years due to having a heavily commissioned job and generally being a higher rate tax payer and not paying enough attention to tax codings.
The last 3 years I’ve generally invested in a private pension to the amount to off-set my tax bill which has given me a healthy pot in a short space of time and now opened my eyes to what it could look like in 20 years with only moderate growth and further investment.
Did look at some IFAs but never felt confident with any recommended, or the one I did was retiring himself in 5 years and wasn’t taking new clients on except for one off advice.
Would definitely say to anyone in their 20s-30s as difficult as it is to consider something like this for any excess cash they have
I’m envious of you. You have more of the best asset of all. Time.
Why do you need an IFA? They are expensive, and offer no service you can't do yourself. I ditched them long ago.
A work pension is always constrained by the Trustees' desire to return their members' capital, so contributions are put into safe havens, where the risk is low, but so are the rewards. Being in your 30s, you've got the time to get hold of that pension pot yourself, transfer it into your own SIPP, and truly diversify your investments by sector, region, risk, industry, growth/income, active/passive, capitalisation etc, rather than be stuck in the funds your pension scheme trustees would prefer you to invest in.
I’m envious of you. You have more of the best asset of all. Time.
Unless you really are incredibly young looking for you age would I be right in assuming that is a fairly early retirement and from a final salary pension?