DaveH
Striker
But the other side of that is that if you say get £5k less per year, you get £5k less per year. Would you want to sit at home worrying about the heating bill and wishing you could go away for a cheap holiday, knowing you will have got more out of the scheme by the time you are 88 by going early?When you retire early, many look at the headline figures & are put off by how much less you get each year. The reality is that all youre doing is spreading the pot (i know there isnt an actual pot for DB) over a longer period so you get less annually, but same over expected average lifetime
Then because pension (and state pension) is taxable, if you wait until state pension age, youll pay more tax on your works pension as you wont have had the years were youre only earning your works pension
The approach I'm taking is deciding on how much I need to live on and that is an eye opener in itself. Going from my salary to my pension income is a large downward jump and sounds a bit frightening. But when I look at my take home pay after tax and pension, I lose quite a bit there. Then with mortgage overpayments, that is another chunk gone. If I take off what I put into savings each month and what I spend on travel to work, I'm starting to get into the realms of what my pension predictions are. I'll need something to top that up going early, but hopefully only have a couple of years of mortgage left which gives free money to save. And that is only filling the gap between early retirement and state pension.
And when I'm a pensioner, I shouldn't have two teenagers at home, one of which is at the stage where we can't fill him with food or stop him growing out of all his clothes every 6 months.
It is an exercise I'd recommend anyone doing. Basically take your take home pay and subtract all the stuff you will not be paying out for, saving or investing. For me that is coming out just over a third of my salary figure.