Superbadross
Midfield
Everyone’s circumstances are completely different.
Depends on where you live also
Depends on where you live also
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I'd have thought most kids would be up to you saying ,right, I'm running on a budget til I go and the house etc will be left .Circumstances vary. I’d like to be able to drop the kids / grandkids a few quid on birthdays / Christmas, pay for family meals etc. some money put away for family emergencies.
Things like hosting the family at Christmas cost £100’s. You’re hands never out of your pocket with a family and don’t really want a line in the sand moment where it all stops suddenly.
At least 60% of final salary / income or you will feel the squeeze. At least if you are more of a spender than a saver.
Net or gross? Given that you immediately save around 20% from no longer paying NI or pension contributions. Add in no mortgage, savings in commuting to work, kids leaving home. You could maintain a similar lifestyle on a lot less. But obviously you'd have more time to fill & want more holidays which cost more etc etc
Just for you or as part of a couple? £40k in today’s money in 10 years time you’re going to need a helluva pension pot to achieve that.Planning on 40-50 large per year, or whatever that equates to at that time, at 60 years old (10 years' time).
No doubt but if possible I’d rather not have to go down that road.I'd have thought most kids would be up to you saying ,right, I'm running on a budget til I go and the house etc will be left .
Just me. My other half has a separate pension. I've been paying as much as I can directly from my small company into a SIPP for the last 10 years and hopefully can continue to do so for the next 10 years. I've taken minimal income from the company with a view to enjoying my planned retirement in Northumberland or (if things go majorly tits-up before then) it goes directly to my two kids.Just for you or as part of a couple? £40k in today’s money in 10 years time you’re going to need a helluva pension pot to achieve that.
As per post 50....nice big tax bill..Just for you or as part of a couple? £40k in today’s money in 10 years time you’re going to need a helluva pension pot to achieve that.
I'm only 50, but I see myself following the same philosophy from 55, just winding back the hours/days to earn some beer tokens and keep active. I've been on some big multi-million/billion dollar jobs at management level (Take no prisonersThinking more in terms of gradually winding down rather than working my guts out so when I retire I'm sitting on money I'm too frigged to spend. Seen it happen to others.
I'd work into my 70s provided 55 onwards it was 25hrs a week tops and minimal physical exertion. Enough to keep the body and mind going.
Work down the gears rather than do 80mph and the engine's fucked at the destination. If you're fantasising about doing nothing, you're doing the wrong thing and probably too much of it as well.
I know it doesn't answer the OP's question but it's on the same topic.
£12,800 for a single person sounds about right to me. I did my sums a year ago and found I needed £14,000 to survive on, anything above that like holidays, motorbikes, drugs and prostitutes would add to my living expenses obviously.Researchers at Loughborough’sYou must be logged on to see external linkshave created a set of “You must be logged on to see external links” that have swiftly become the industry benchmark for what pensioners really need in retirement.
Its researchers say that the minimum standard of income you currently need as a single person is £12,800, or £19,900 for a couple, according to the 2022 figures published at the start of this year.
This figure is the same as the Joseph Rowntree Foundation’s minimum income standard and reflects what the public thinks is required to cover a retiree’s needs, not only to survive but to live with dignity, including social and cultural participation.
However, this is a minimum, and it is far from generous. It leaves a pensioner only £54 a week for food, no car, enough money for a short break in the UK every year and £580 a year for clothing and footwear. This assumes the person works until 67 and has a full national insurance record. Crucially, these figures assume you have paid off your mortgage. If not, your costs in retirement could be substantially higher
Got less than 2 years before I get my final salary pension, it’ll be around 24k a year (should have been nearer 30k if I wasn’t robbed) I’ll only be 53 so will most likely work till I’m 60 and build up a nice savings pot so I can enjoy the years before I’m either deed or stuck in a chair, stinking of stale shite/piss while a nurse spoon feeds me gruel and wipes dribble off my wrinkly wobbling lips.Our group are counting down the days to retirement, some nearer than others.
Had a discussion in the pub last night about how much you need to live a ‘very comfortable’ lifestyle when retired. Nice international holiday, couple of smaller jollies, restaurant once a week etc, no mortgage to pay, kids self-sufficient.
Figures ranged from £20k-£30k or £45k+ if in a couple.
What do you reckon and any lads/lasses out there living the dream already who are in the know?
Thought youse won the pension case mate ?Got less than 2 years before I get my final salary pension, it’ll be around 24k a year (should have been nearer 30k if I wasn’t robbed) I’ll only be 53 so will most likely work till I’m 60 and build up a nice savings pot so I can enjoy the years before I’m either deed or stuck in a chair, stinking of stale shite/piss while a nurse spoon feeds me gruel and wipes dribble off my wrinkly wobbling lips.
My ex-boss retired on 30th June last year, at 64, after hanging on for a t least three years to 'get as much out of the b@stards as I can'.Exactly, the longer you leave it, the closer you are to death, and increases the likelihood of not having a retirement.
Get out of the rat race at the earliest opportunity is my thoughts.
Exactly, the longer you leave it, the closer you are to death, and increases the likelihood of not having a retirement.
Get out of the rat race at the earliest opportunity is my thoughts.
Then you will get to 55 and be praying for your redundancy (I am at 54, hoping for payoffs next April, none are planned yet, but fingers crossed)I'm 50 now so my current plan is to keep my head down at work to avoid any redundancies (job hunting in your 50s is a lot harder) and promotions (don't need any more hassle) then see where I am in 5-6 years time by when the mortgage should be paid off
I wouldn't want to totally retire but finding a stress free part-time job would be nice while I start to draw down my private pension.
I'm 50 now so my current plan is to keep my head down at work to avoid any redundancies (job hunting in your 50s is a lot harder) and promotions (don't need any more hassle) then see where I am in 5-6 years time by when the mortgage should be paid off
I wouldn't want to totally retire but finding a stress free part-time job would be nice while I start to draw down my private pension.