Brendan Burgess
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You simply don't know at age 40 whether you will be able to retire in your mid 50s.
Nor do you know whether you will even want to retire in your mid 50s.
So, it's an academic argument.
What you need to do now is to get the balance right between preserving and maximising your wealth so that you will have the flexibility to do as you please.
So don't make any high risk gambles such as borrowing to invest in a buy to let. Sure, it might work out. But it might also greatly reduce your wealth and delay your retirement.
Absolutely do not ring-fence any money for education. You should have one pot which you can use to feed your pension, educate your children or finance your life in retirement.
You will reach your mid 50s with a good income and no mortgage. You will be able to finance education costs from your incomes.
Do not borrow to invest. So while you have a mortgage on your home, you should not invest in shares or property or anything else.
Max your pension contributions as you are doing.
Keep the cash you need to buy your new car or do up your house, but after that, the right overall strategy is to clear your mortgage. There might be a tactical reason to keep a mortgage if you have a low fixed rate while deposit rates after tax are higher, and that is fine. But if your mortgage rate exceeds your deposit rate, then clear the mortgage.
After you have cleared the mortgage and maximised your pension, build up your savings in a diversified portfolio of shares. They are liquid which means that if you need money at short notice you can get it by selling part of your portfolio. If you have €300k tied up in an investment property, and you need €60k, you can't sell 20% of your investment property.
If your kids go to college away from home, then it might make sense to buy a property for them while they are in college. Again, if you own an investment property in the wrong place, then you won't be able to do that. Well you will, but the cost and hassle of selling the property might make it difficult.
Being mortgage-free, with a well funded pension, and a diverse portfolio of shares, gives you the flexibility to deal with the uncertainties any family of 6 faces over the next 20 years.
Brendan
Nor do you know whether you will even want to retire in your mid 50s.
So, it's an academic argument.
What you need to do now is to get the balance right between preserving and maximising your wealth so that you will have the flexibility to do as you please.
So don't make any high risk gambles such as borrowing to invest in a buy to let. Sure, it might work out. But it might also greatly reduce your wealth and delay your retirement.
We dont currentky have specific ring fenced fund for this. Should we? I always thought best to treat income as 1 pot and then spend, save, invest holistically from that.
Absolutely do not ring-fence any money for education. You should have one pot which you can use to feed your pension, educate your children or finance your life in retirement.
You will reach your mid 50s with a good income and no mortgage. You will be able to finance education costs from your incomes.
Do not borrow to invest. So while you have a mortgage on your home, you should not invest in shares or property or anything else.
Max your pension contributions as you are doing.
Keep the cash you need to buy your new car or do up your house, but after that, the right overall strategy is to clear your mortgage. There might be a tactical reason to keep a mortgage if you have a low fixed rate while deposit rates after tax are higher, and that is fine. But if your mortgage rate exceeds your deposit rate, then clear the mortgage.
After you have cleared the mortgage and maximised your pension, build up your savings in a diversified portfolio of shares. They are liquid which means that if you need money at short notice you can get it by selling part of your portfolio. If you have €300k tied up in an investment property, and you need €60k, you can't sell 20% of your investment property.
If your kids go to college away from home, then it might make sense to buy a property for them while they are in college. Again, if you own an investment property in the wrong place, then you won't be able to do that. Well you will, but the cost and hassle of selling the property might make it difficult.
Being mortgage-free, with a well funded pension, and a diverse portfolio of shares, gives you the flexibility to deal with the uncertainties any family of 6 faces over the next 20 years.
Brendan
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