presidenttttt
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Typical Property Tax is c€700. I hope your are spending more than that on food in a yearShortly I will be spending the same amount on my Property Tax as I will spend on all my food for two of us for a year.
or
My Property Tax spend will equate to my Health Insurance for two people for a year.
This is a large bill that I had not anticipated when I retired a few years back and was probably not built in to any retirement pots years ago.
Of course a mortgage free couple could live on a grand a week. You could live like a king on that. Surely the majority will neither have nor need that.Personally, I think that most couples could live quite comfortably on an annual (net) income of around €50k.
So, a combined pension pot of around €1m, plus two full State (Contributory) pensions, should be sufficient for most folks, assuming they own a mortgage-free home.
Here's a more academic UK study that I posted a few years ago that basically concludes that a retirement income of around €50k should be comfortable for most couples -Any more studies like the Which article would be interesting to read.
I don't necessarily disagree.Of course a mortgage free couple could live on a grand a week. You could live like a king on that. Surely the majority will neither have nor need that.
This recent UK survey on what constitutes a comfortable level of spending in retirement might be of some help.
Personally, I think that most couples could live quite comfortably on an annual (net) income of around €50k.The secret to a happy retirement? £26,000 per year, Which? research reveals - Which? News
We help you to identify your retirement income targetswww.which.co.uk
So, a combined pension pot of around €1m, plus two full State (Contributory) pensions, should be sufficient for most folks, assuming they own a mortgage-free home.
Thanks - I hadn't come across that report before.I came across this report a couple of years back
Hi all,
There are numerous calculators for savings and pension pot size, but is there something to forecast retirement spend?
One of the first articles at the top of a google search is a Motley Fool one suggest 80% of pre-retirement income. That seems very excessive for anyone who is fortunate not to be living month to month. With mortgages paid off costs should plummet, and if Covid lockdown savings have proven anything it has proven people pay a huge "tax" with going to work in an office (travel and sustenance). The % of pre-retirement income will vary broadly depending on how close that income is to the average or standard cost of living?
Doing the actual maths is important to us as early retirement or early partial retirement is an objective.
The 4% rule is often banded around, and it seems reasonable, but i need to establish what 4% is.
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