Bonasababy
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 16, 2024
- Messages
- 527
You will find many who said they wish they could have saved more! And it doesn't take much more to really add up over the course of 35 to 40 years!I have nothing of value to add to this thread. I appreciate everyone being open and honest about their situations to help get a grasp of where I'm at.
Wife and I both maxing out Roth IRA's, we'll both have a bit of VA money coming in, she'll have a pension as well which would take care of the healthcare aspect. Nowhere near where I want to be, but according to most of the calculators I've checked, we should be OK. She gets pretty mad at me for insisting on saving/investing as much as we do, I try to tell her that no one gets mad for having TOO much money at the end of it all.
Been drilling that into my kids and all the younger folks at work.
One strategy a coworker has is a good one IMO--each time he gets a raise he rolls most of that into more retirement.
Couple of other thoughts--Roth is great for what it is, but you balance will build a lot faster in pre-tax. No one has a crystal ball but I think having some in both likely works out best for many. How much in Roth is more of a question than how much in pre-tax IMO. At least now you can convert pretax to roth later closer to retirement--if that makes sense. And you will know a LOT more about your tax situation in retirement then than you do now...a key factor in deciding between Roth and pre-tax.
We are probably best lumped into the mid to upper middle class--and our taxes will be LESS in retirement than while working. A fair amount less it appears. We haven't stuck much into roth and what we have we are letting grow and not drawing from.