Your video could not be more prescient. I lost my Dad last month, he was the very personification of *_’Carpe Diem’_* and never squandered a day. Tomorrow is promised to no one.
I retired two years ago and, although stockmarket returns during those two years have been disappointing, I have no regrets. Why? Well, it's simple. If I think I'm going to run out of money I can probably earn some more but when I run out of time (and we all do) it won't matter how much money I have left. Even a billion pounds in the bank won't buy me one extra second of life.
I've already retired. For me it was never planned it was mainly due to a change in family circumstances, I first reduced my hours then left altogether. It ended up being the best thing to happen to me for a number of reasons and now my time is all my own. I no longer have to deal with bad behaviour in the workplace and I have no-one to answer to but myself. I set my goals and achieve them alot quicker than ever before.
When you either lose someone close, your health takes a knock or even lose your job you may not take time out to review what time you have left. I should have done it sooner.
I'm 50 and if I could retire right this very second I absolutely would. I'm so sick and tired of my job and I'm quite convinced that I picked the wrong path in life. It's too late for me to make a drastic change but there is one piece of advice I can give is to not waste so much of your life at a job or in a career that you hate. It is so not worth it.
My original retirement plan was to retire at 62, work part-time, and save money. However, high prices for everything have severely affected my plan. I'm concerned if people who went through the 2008 financial crisis had an easier time than I am having now. The stock market is worrying me as my income has decreased, and I fear I won't have enough savings for retirement since I can't contribute as much as before.
I’m 77 and still working full time. I do enjoy my work, it provides me with purpose and has secured my financial future. Most people are too eager to retire as early as possible. Even if you do retire early, best to get a part time job for the reasons cited above, as well as following many if not all of the suggestions in this video.
Accurate asset allocation is crucial. Some use hedging or defensive assets in their portfolio for market downturns. Seeking financial advice is vital. This approach has kept me financially secure for over five years, with a return on investment of nearly $1 million.
Finding financial advisors like Rebecca Nassar Dunne who can assist you shape your portfolio would be a very creative option. There will be difficult times ahead, and prudent personal money management will be essential to navigating them.
People who are able to retire early are lucky . I have 15 months till 65 and need to look at calling it quits, my only fear is running out of funds much later, thus keen on investing. What could be the safest possible ways to invest for cashflow, in order to afford lifestyle after retirement?
That's right. I am a wife, mother of four and new grandmother, 28 years in Corporate America, retired recently at 57 after discovering the freedom investing could provide, been contributing to my portfolio since the pandemic in early 2020, and have grown a $250,000 savings account to almost 1 million, credits to my investment advisor.
My CFA ’Izella Annette Anderson’ , a renowned figure in her line of work. I recommend researching her credentials further. She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market.
Thanks for sharing this, I googled the lady you mentioned and after going through her resume, I can tell she's a pro. I wrote her and I'm waiting on her reply
I’d be retiring or working less in 5 years, and curious to know how best people split their pay, how much of it goes into savings, spendings or investments, I earn around $250k per year but nothing to show for it yet.
money advice is subjective, what works for you may not work for me. I would suggest getting rid of any unnecessary purchases, especially things that cost you monthly, or better still consider financial advisory.
People often underestimate the importance of financial advisors until they feel the negative effects of emotional decision-making. I remember a few summers ago, after a tough divorce, when I needed a boost for my struggling business. I researched and found a licensed advisor who diligently helped grow my reserves despite inflation. Consequently, my reserves increased from $275k to over $750k.
This is definitely worth considering! Do you have any recommendations for professionals or advisors I could speak with? I really need help with proper portfolio allocation.
I've shuffled through investment coaches and yes, they can be positively impactful to an individual's portfolio, but do your due diligence to find a coach with grit, one that withstood the 08' crash. For me, “Teresa L. Athas” turned out to be better and smarter than all the advisors I ever worked with till date, I’ve never met anyone with as much conviction.
Thanks for sharing. i searched her full name and found her web instantly. After reviewing her credentials and conducting due diligence, i reached out to her.
Dude, you're much wiser than your age. Excellent video. I'm 68.5 years young. I retired at age 65. I love retirement. What I did prior to retirement is to pay off all my debts. No car payment, no mortgage, no credit card debt. Then, I sat down and figured out my monthly budget I would need each month to cover the type of retirement that I wanted. My minimum happened to be $4500 a month. Then, I started going to the gym, at least 3 days a week, and for 2.5 hours each one of those days. I'm healthy and I feel great. Life is good. Now, people, go out there and give yourself the retirement that you want. Only you can.
My dad passed away suddenly and unexpectedly in January 2021. He was 49. When my sister and I were handed the unfortunate task of sorting his affairs we saw that he had been paying into two private pension funds since 1998. It made us both realise that, whilst money IS important, you certainly can't take it with you. I'm sure if my dad was informed of his imminent death prior he would have enjoyed that money in every possible way. My message to everyone watching is - money isn't everything, don't get stressed about investing/saving every last bit while you're still young, because old age may never greet you.
Sorry for your loss. While I understand what you are saying but I disagree because I believe in generational wealth. I may not be able to enjoy but I will be happy that my kids will not have to worry to some extent!
Three of my siblings died at 59. I'm now 62 and worry about when my time might be. I'm doing all I can to stay healthy but on work days my blood pressure is very high. On days when I'm not working, I get really good BP readings. I think I've answered my own question before it was asked!
Recently diagnosed with stage four cancer so my timetable has been flipped. I appreciate your video because so few people think of how short time is. I was working 70 hours a week and missing tons of family things. I’ve cut down to 35 hours a week and probably will go for disability so what time is left can be spent with loved ones. Powerful advice thanks for the video
Don't believe everything your doctors tell you just because they say there's nothing else you can do it is absolute bullshit look up how many people have cured themselves from stage 4 cancer Keep Hope starting right now do not eat no more sugar or carbohydrates look up Dr Berg he has multiple people on their who explain how they have cured themselves of stage 4 cancer after the doctors have told them there is nothing left for them I believe wholeheartedly we are what we eat don't give up keep fighting and start fasting start small but move your way up to at least 5 days in a row of not eating when you fast it will not let the cancer grow at all and it will starve the cancer from with inside of you
@@mikeoglen6848 I was lucky I took a golden hand shake ,after 41 yrs at BA , I can tell you I was worried about the money to live on but friends said I was silly if I didn’t take it. I took the plunge and never looked back, mind you think it is a bit harder these days to make ends meet.
@@mikeoglen6848What works for him won't work for you. Look at your budget now and find ways to eliminate remaining ongoing debt within the next 2 years. No mortgage. No car payment. More money.
@@mikeoglen6848layout a blueprint ..??? Money can't buy time don't be foolish haven't u learned anything in life ?? People don't impress because we all have the same destiny can't u figured this out numbskill lol !!
I needed to hear this. I retired at 55 with a lifetime pension. Not a huge pension, but a comfortable one. I have had a hard time giving up that hustling lifestyle. Within 6 months of retiring, I began working another job, then became dissatisfied with that one, then got another, then another and another. Although I told myself I needed to work these jobs I ended up disliking all of them. It has finally dawned on me that I need to just chill out and relax, find a hobby, visit family or travel more. Working a job is almost a bad habit at this point. I am now recognizing this job-hopping pattern and intend to stop the madness for once and all. I need to enjoy the fruits of my labor from here on out.
That was me when I went back to work! I think when you work for so many years it becomes a habit. When I first retired I felt rudderless and didn't know what to do. My husband says I have to work at it and like you I think I just need to chill out and relax and not expect the hustle and bustle I was used to. Good luck to you in your retirement. I hope it is a long and healthy one.
Im retirement age, 66 and soon to be 67, i love my job as a joiner on building sites, i only do 4 days a week now and reducing to 3 come spring, my job now is like a hobby i get paid for, i don't need to do it and can leave anytime i want
👏🏻 to Alcaraz. What a match! I’ve been patiently waiting to put this video live until it finished. I don’t know about you, but I’m feeling knackered after watching that - time for thinking about retirement perhaps!
Retirement plan - win Wimbledon. Never played tennis in my life and 30 years old but seems like some minor logistical factors in my solid retirement plan.
You should have said 52 Wimbledon finals too. Everybody’s future and how long that will be is unknown to everyone, it seems to me that people are more concerned about money in the future completely forgetting that what’s far more important is their health. A lot of people will earn far more money than they actually spend before they die. A very informative video by the way.
Great real life advice. Too many people think they are living forever or think they’ll have plenty of time to spend with their parents, partner, children. My best mate died 4 weeks ago, he’d only retired in March this year. Life is short, make the most of the time you have left.
I'm 78 and my wife and I cycled the old cobbled road over the St Gotthard pass a couple of weeks ago so you may have more years of enjoyable cycling than you expect. We try to do it every year and hope to continue for a few more years. We have been retired going on twenty years and it has been fantastic.
I retired two years ago at 63 with very little saved I’m also single and live well within my means and so far it’s been a great decision I have a small school bus I converted and last year spent several months in Arizona NM California and Utah as I’m from Colorado I also travel to Sweden to see my son and his family, that’s where I’m at now My biggest advice is don’t get upset if you can’t do everything you hoped to do Live within your means and enjoy the things you can afford to do
And that my friend is called “gratitude”. Congrats on your retirement. Sometimes the best things in life cost very little when you’re looking in the right places.
I'm starting to realize that I may need to retire sooner than later and just live with a much smaller pool of money. My job right now is incredibly high stress with so when I leave it I would have to retire but I could always get another job if I so desire
Great video! I retired last November at 61 and my husband at 60. We moved from the US to Spain. Best decision we ever made! Our jobs were giving us so much stress that we couldn't deal with that lifestyle anymore and life is too precious to waste being a slave to your job. We moved to a country where we can afford to live comfortably.
@@amylee9 taxes are high. That's the only drawback. But there is a dual taxation treaty between Spain and the US so you don't have to pay taxes to both countries.
I've had that as a rule with work. Work in the larger metro areas, spend in the country. That part I did right...As for the rest....well...the jury is still out on that.@@hobo1704
Starting working part time from this year at 52. Working 15 hours a week. I have more time to spend with my family and friends. Enjoying new hobbies such as baking and gardening and still having active social life with my work mates and staying connected with society. Minimalist is a new norm for me. God is good!
I'm 57 and I have really had enough of working. I have made a plan to take the plunge to retire and I am doing it next year in July. But what gets annoying is when people say you should work to your 65. No thanks.
Retired at 51. Don't regret a moment of it. I'm starting to see friends go with illness etc and you do realise that your greatest commodity after 50 is time and health.
I went from working 65 hrs a week to working 3 days a week entirely from home. I am working less than half the time and taking off 8 weeks per year for vacation. My wife works part time as well. Being able to spend time at home with family is amazing. I am able to go to the gym, biking and golfing. We each have six figure incomes while still being able to spend time with our children. Once they are out of college we will consider retiring. So five more years to go and trying to make the most out of our time together.
@@davidconnall5820With enough savings you can retire anywhere at anytime. Official retirement age is just for the government payouts. Make sure your savings are not locked up in a pension fund where you cannot access it before very old age, however.
I thought I was the only person who thinks this way, but I’m glad to know I’m not. Yes, the limited opportunities could be viewed as depressing, but I’m excited about retiring in a few months and getting on with those precious experiences. The countdown app is engaged and I’m ready. I’m 63 and I’ve invested a lot of effort in my physical health, and now I’m ready to visit my daughters and grands, do all the hikes, do the backcountry camping trips, and ride the long distance motorcycle trips that I’ve been wanting to do.
I lost my husband when i was 42 and retired at 49.. No children and no specific hobbies, but a year on i know it was the best thing i ever did.. Most people use “I love my job, it gives me purpose” as an excuse…. I want to spend as much time with my friends as possible, whether it’s on the phone or in person, and working didn’t allow me the time to be there for people as much as a I wanted to be… I have a great aunt who is living by herself at the age of almost 106, so I could be around for a while, and i want to make sure that when my time is up, people remember the love i gave, not how much money is left over… Great video.. Thank you!!
Thank you for sharing Cathy. Interesting you say “I love my job” is an excuse, I would agree but I think it’s deeper then that, so much of our identity can be tied up in what we do that to deny it, to suggest that we’ve been wasting our time, can be very painful. But I agree. Many people say they love their job, some genuinely do, but most only say that because they haven’t discovered the alternative yet.
'I love my job' is just an alternative to 'my job sucks but I don't dare admit it because it suggests I'm some kind of failure'. It's just a little bit of BS.
I also retired at 49 and now living at a minimum wage level from my pension. I drive a 25 year old van with low mileage and keep it in good shape . After 31 years I keep busy and fit , eat good food and buy used items .(no tax) . We do not need costly outside recreation , so many things to do are free. Time for my oatmeal, honey and banana.
I don’t know why I feel insecure about my future with $5 million net worth at 47 years old. I’ve got four children. Everybody’s happy. But I have this mindset that if I retire now it may not last. I want to be to help people I love until I die
I was lucky enough to retire a couple of years ago, aged 52. I'm enjoying my new life greatly :) I'm spending loads of time learning about DIY and gardening, getting fit again, delving into the world of academic finance, and generally noodling around and doing whatever I like. And that's from someone who uses to love going into the office and climbing the corporate ladder. I sometimes miss the social aspects of the office, but the benefits outweigh the things I've lost by a huge margin. The strange thing is that I seem to have even less spare time than I use to; I have no idea how I used to cram in 50+ hours in the office. Wish I'd pushed the button years earlier, to be honest !
My father died at 73 and enjoyed about 5 years of retirement, then 2 years of illness and treatment (cancer). Life passes by quick. I retired at 52, or perhaps I transitioned to being in a position where I will only spend time how I want to from now on (which may include work!). It has been wonderful so far - and with some planning and management, even through a down term market it was fine
I retired at 55 with 400k, but only did 2 years of retirement, I just hated the boredom of winter, I also missed investing strangely enough. So I trained to be a tree surgeon, I now work 2 days a week through Autumn and winter and have Spring and Summer touring Great Britain. The 400K was touching 440 after 2 years, even after taking 2 years living expenses, so money wasn't a problem. I think you have to find the correct balance to enjoy retirement.
I've always wanted to be a tree surgeon when I retire from the office job... how did you find it? Isn't it quite physically demanding? And how do you find work?
@@chris420uk I really enjoy, the physical side of the job, I'm now 60 and I haven't had a day yet when I've thought I don't need this anymore. I started out by getting a couple of jobs from another local arborist who was up to his neck in work, I've never had to advertise, I don't want to, I wouldn't want to turn people down, do a great job and word of mouth will get you enough work. I hope you can follow your dream retirement I just stumbled across this, from the sheer boredom of winter and just couldn't face another winter twiddling my thumbs so go for it Chris.
Thank you so much James fir the best video on this subject. I am 55 in June and have been putting off retirement for all those reasons. Time and health are so limited. I am resigning this week. Thanks again!
I made the decision to work part-time as soon as I could afford it so i could have more time for personal interests. Have been working 4 days for a few years and plan to move to 3 days soon as I can. It's been life changing and one of the best decisions I've made. So I consider myself "semi-retired" and have been enjoying some of the benefits instead of waiting until i reach retirement age. Have taken two sabbaticals too which i consider "mini retirements".
My dad worked as a laywer for 25 years. The job was stressful and he decided to retire early (about 5 years earlier than he was planning on retiring). I've never seen him happier. Work was literally killing him.
I'm sure his job was stressing him out. The thing about prolonged stress is it robs people of joy and happiness. Especially when they have to deal with other people's problems for a living.
I stopped working four months ago, I'm 57y my Mum is 79y, fit and healthy and now lives around the corner, my sister is close by too. I worked for 37y, I was happy to adjust my outgoings to spend time; I see my sons whenever I can, travel on my own and with my group of friends. Give up work as soon as you can!
Great video and I agree with this. My father passed away at 58 years old with an unexpected heart attack late last month. He worked throughout all those years and endured a war in the 90s in the balkans. All he did was work for a better life for his family, but also for retirement. He paid off the home we live in, my mother has his and her retirement, i have saved a good 6 figure amount, I have nothing that needs to be paid off (education, etc), and I am just 30 years old. I feel like I want to enjoy life now knowing there isnt much to worry about and I can use my years left to enjoy the things I grew up with, be with friends and family, and just enjoy life. I am grateful for everything my father has done for my family, friends, and myself. I just wish he took some break time because we really miss him so much and he worked his life solely for this retirement goal that in the end he did not get to see. If he had known, I am sure he would change things. I am healthy for now, and feel like an early retirement and living in what my father built might need to be the choice. Again, amazing video and thanks for nailing this on the head.
This week I start my final week of full time work, after 37 years of working. I realised I had enough money to live out the rest of my life comfortably. So at 57 I will be going part time, as time is now more important. Another great video James. Thank you
Yes, we need to remain mentally and socially active. If one fully retires there are ways to meet those needs, it might just take a bit of time and effort to work out what the new way of living looks like. All the best.
Thank you. You are the only Financial Planner that hasnt made me feel insecure about the fact that i havent enough to retire on. I retired in my mid 50s due to healrh reasons. My health is monitored and my quality of life is pretty good. The theory that when you earn more you spend more rings true. My income has now reduced but my lifestyle has improved. Everyone is different but my focus now is living a simple, quality and fulfilled life. Stuff is just stuff but people,places and experiences are paramount.
Hi James everything you say is true, people spend far too much time worrying about money, health comes first, I am retired and have been so for 3 years now, don't miss work at all, no more travelling to work, worrying if your late etc
Such great advice. We had a similar pensions talk at work and it made me adjust my savings strategy. Time is so precious I certainly don't want to work until I drop.
We targeted 55 for retirement, arbitrary target initially. I went on for another year to complete something and had a serious heart attack just before the pandemic. As James said, you have no idea what is around the corner. We live on the basis of how little we need rather than how much we need.
Another great video. My wife and I are both 56 and wondering whether we should retire next year with 34 years of full employment behind us both. I think you just made up our minds.
I did 37 years, so I can’t add any more to the UK state pension. Bare-in-mind the state pension age is likely to rise in the next few years. I have another couple of years added (67) thanks to HM Government !. If you have no debt and enough to pay your living expenses inc. inflation + 30% without running out of cash, you can retire. If you need a new car every 3 years + expensive holidays, you will need more than I’ve quoted. Good luck !.
It also depends what you want in retirement if you want a simple but nice life that's ok, If you want expensive cars on the drive and jetting off every other month then you need to save a lot lot more and is it really worth it?
I am 52yrs old and I have started preparing for retirement but with the ongoing effects of high inflation, lower market returns and stagnant wages, achieving a secure early retirement could is more challenging than ever before. I'll appreciate a means of making short term profit from stocks and others.
If you need advise on a short term profitable investment. It may be a good idea to speak with a financial advisor who can help you build strategies based on your individual goals.
@DiegoPersie I'm actually interested in this idea of investing through an analyst. Sounds like the most sensible thing to do in the market right now. Could you give me a pointer to who you work with, please?
@DiegoPersie I checked Kaitlin up out of curiosity, found her webpage and i must say i am impressed by her Credentials. i emailed her already, waiting on her response.
Buy silver and gold. We are financing this corrupt system through fiat currency. Every time we accept a paper bill or digital based on fiat currency, we reassure its value. And the guy with the printing machine, prints more and pay thugs to mug us and our family. Stop valuing what has no value. Let it break. Get out of the system. Trade. Barter. Use precious metals. Get away from these paper bills with no real value, but the power to oppress us in daily basis. Oh dear... do not count on state for your retirement... not even funds... you are on your own, unless you submit to their rules and get a lot of exper|ments and whatever they think you should have in your body to get that allowance... pretty much it will reduce your life spam, dear use|ess e/\ter... (not my words, but theirs!).
I went part-time at 50 and then retired at 56. Many colleagues were shocked and asked why a part-time A380 captain would retire… the answer was that I should because I could. 7 years on I am certain it was the best decision I could have made.
You are on point my friend. Money isn't everything. If you have enough to retire, DO IT. You will run out of time to spend that time with your friends and loved ones. Even if you don't have enough to retire, just get a little part time job to make ends meet and stop doing crazy hours. It's too late by then. Some things are priceless, like spending time time with the ones you love, specially having time for yourself. Thanks for the advice.
I retired a year ago at 58. It was financially ‘early’ in some respects, one pension now to keep me going, the other two next year, then state pension as a top up. It wasn’t so easy to get to the decision, but the job I had been in for the best part of 34 years I’d had enough. I was bypassed for better wages even though I was still saving the day. The work became boring and hijacked by woke. I knew I could support myself without working, albeit less luxuries. I haven’t been bored, plenty to do on an old house and I don’t have to rush around trying complete it because back to work Monday. It’s all good. If you can give up work, even for a simpler life, then do it. I left my job after 34 years and literally walked out the door having given in my kit and security pass. Not even a thanks from the management team. It really was the right thing to do.
@@gjmjajajGreat question you’ve asked: What’s woke? In the context of the OP, my bet is: “Woke” is a word avatar (symbol) that Florida~man governor guy is using to demonize, dehumanize, and persecute fellow American citizens who disagree with, or stand in the way of his attempts to radically change our civilized society, and social order by re-institutionalizing sexism, and racism through retro ideological religious thinking, and legislative malfeasance. I also would like to understand the OP’s feelings and intention in using that word. So I hope they also respond to your question.
@@TheSunnyDay2013 different periods of employment and two defined benefit pensions being closed. (Deferred). Final pension defined contributions (money purchase).
Aviva did a pension webinar at my work years ago and what stuck with me was when they told us to calculate how many paydays we had left before were aiming to retire. This was to highlight that waiting one more payday to start your pension or increase contributions is actually more of an impact than you think. I'm 30 and aiming to retire at 60 so I've only got 360 paydays left - messing about for 3 paydays is 1% of my paydays left!
Interesting. Michael Lewis says something like: As a rule of thumb, to work out what % of your salary you should be contributing to your pension to retire comfortably at 65, you should divide the age at which you start contributing to your pension by 2. So if you start at 20, you need to put 10% in. But if you start at 30 you need to put 15% in. Its obviously a very rough estimate, and won’t be appropriate for everyone, but it helps highlight how much is required and how starting late can really set you back.
@JamesShack yes they actually used the same calculation as a broad brush as well to explain compounding. They started with the how many paydays left then explained compounding and how putting it off can make it incredibly difficult to catch up. I know my pension isn't where it should be at 30 but every time I'm almost about to buy a house, something happens to the housing market and I'm put back a step again 🤦♂️
@@JamesShackI don't understand how you can just use a percentage with no reference to the actual numbers? Someone on a low salary might put in the "correct" percentage but how does that mean they'll have enough? Their pot will be a lot lower than someone on a higher salary putting in exactly the same percentage.
@@palmtree-e2l think you'll find that it works because most people will live to their means, so then, in retirement, they continue living at the same level (cost) and only need part of their previous income to live on, so the "invest a proportion of income" policy would work for the majority of people. But, everyone has individual needs and expectations, so the rule of thumb should be flexible and adjusted to personal circumstances. For example, someone renting their home needs more income in retirement than someone that has previously invested in buying their home and is no longer paying a mortgage following retirement.
I retired at 56 and the first 6 months was the hardest all i thought was have i done the right thing ,3 years later now i have 2 allotments go regularly fishing and a couple of afternoon drinking sessions, the odd game of golf and a bit of northern soul on Saturday nights, Personally i am going to squeeze every day i live now doing the same thing ,i absolutely love my life ,
@@MissAndDav Yes I'm going to a all nighter 7pm to 6am next week at Rugeley it's being run by pep a old wigan casino dj , I'm really looking forward to this one , I forgot my wife love the northern soul aswell
Very apt timing. Decided 2 months ago to wind down work next year. I’m early 40s but work has overshadowed my life the last 15 years. I’ve never truly enjoyed breaks because worried about work and so forth. I’m still fit and enjoy many sports. I’m lucky in that my mortgage is mostly paid off and have a bit in investments that if I actively manage should do well until I fully retire. Life is too short, I want to hang out and be present for my kids whilst they’re still young, I want to wake up and not feel a slave to my desk. I want to smell the air and sun in my face without worrying about timelines. I’m happy to take a hit in lifestyle but can you out a value on time - nope!
I've been self-employed working from home for 18 years. What happens during retirement or similar is you then have too much time. Time is precious when working, but when you're retired or self-employed time is in abundance, to the point where you can get bored. I can tell from your comment you're naive and think your life will be incredible once you retire. WRONG, you'll worry about income, and eating into savings, etc. You will worry about social activities and your health. You'll just worry about different things than deadlines, etc. It's human nature.
@@blackporscheroadster-yw8hb what a weird take especially as I even mentioned how active I was. well you’ve assumed wrong. I tell the FIRE community this all the time - start hobbies and interests NOW. Also did you miss the point where I said I’ll go part-time - Im a self-employed consultant, even working 10 hours weekly. all bills are paid - did you also miss the point where I mentioned my mortgage is almost paid off? The option is always there to work more. I have a solid reputation in my industry - I can pick and choose. My investments I’ll manage actively for when I draw down in 15 years. I mean you could have approached this comment completely differently without calling someone naive- it only shows how your judgement is lacking. Maybe get some hobbies too, it’ll make you more interesting and more patient with others - but here’s another observation I’ve made - people who tie their time and identity to their work lack passion for life. Let that sink in.
@@blackporscheroadster-yw8hbIt's not human nature, it's the nature of *some* humans. None of us are in a position to assume how others think or operate. We are all different and I hope you find/have found what makes you truly happy.
I am in the same position, feeling work overshadows most of my life. 48 now and kids are grown but if I could do it again I would have taken a few years away to be more present during those precious years. Hope you can make it happen, good luck!
I retired 28th April 2023, so as I type this, 2.5 months ago. Up to the point of retirement my focus was solely on money, will I have enough? Now my focus is on health and time. I cannot begin to describe the weight that was lifted from my shoulders once retired. I am sleeping better, eating better and am now actually enjoying exercise! My thoughts are simple, if there is anyway to afford retiring now, instead of waiting "one more year", just do it.
The size of my pot is irrelevant, since our situation and expenses will be different. In terms of age, let's put it this way, it will be another few year before I can draw the state pension...
I have similar thoughts re finances, I could be so much better off if I work another couple of years but I have decided to stop 'chasing the money' and enjoy the time instead.
I’m closing in on retirement, and I'd love to move from Minnesota to a warmer climate, but home prices are ridiculous now.. do I look at other assets and wait for housing crash, or go ahead with house purchase anyways?
I absolutely love this video. I am 53 looking to retire at 57. I rather give up some material things to buy time. I am teaching my kids to judge each purchase as time not money. You’re trading your time to buy that item, is it worth it? When you put purchases into time it sometimes gives a different view, especially as we get older.Time and health are the most important assets in life. Our society sometimes is too centred on money. Thank you for reminding people.
Another great video James. I’m in my late 30’s and think I spend too much time trying to come up with an arbitrary number for what I might need for retirement (whenever that may be)! And the bit about parents really hit home…time is precious, use it wisely!
Thank you for this video mate. Sometimes we are so busy down in the weeds chasing money, that we forget what is really important. This video has changed my perspective on a few things. Seriously, thank you.
I retired as early as I could manage at 57. I just turned 70 so I have had 13 years without having to go to work. I paid off mortgage money once a year to get to the point of owning my home. I also helped my kids financially when needed. My main advice is to plan your pension and retirement and reach retirement when you can. You need to sort out your health. This means weight control, exercise and managing alcohol. Two can live almost as cheaply as one. Regarding health if you are doing anything that will damage your body then you should reduce that too. Loud music = ear damage. Lots of physical stuff can wear out joints. Anyway, time to retire as soon as you can. Make sure you have hobbies. Keep your brain sharp.
I was happy in my corporate job until about 55 when I began to find things beginning to irk. Continuous reorganisations, improvement projects, more and more processes, same problems to solve time after time, etc etc. So I decided to retire at 62 spending the intervening 7 years maxing out my pension savings to take advantage of the 40% tax break. In the end I retired at 63 because of the Covid lockdown and I was working from home anyway. I also spent those years developing my social network and developing interests outside my career- mostly golf I’m afraid- so I would have a structure to life in retirement which had previously been provided by work. I’ve now been retired for 2 years and am really enjoying it. It turns out that there is more to me than the career I chose (and did reasonably well in). It’s true that the winters can drag a little, but then I can take full advantage of every single one of the lovely spring, summer and autumn days we have in our beautiful island. I’m lucky, I have good health, a loving family (although I was divorced about 15 years ago- so it’s not all been plain sailing), I’ve developed a great network of friends and I’ve (probably) saved enough money to do most things we want. If you really love your job, then by all means stay in it, but you might find that there is more to life than the 9 to 5. It’s a brave new world to discover.
Nice one !. Sounds like the path I took as well (without a divorce though). I retired at 58, early I know, but the Corporate grind and daily woke saw me run for the hills. Three older colleagues, a bit older than me, did the same, all within six months. Bliss.
Oh dear - I’m starting to feel that way about work and I’m only 40!!! 😂 Best of luck in retirement - lots of inspiration here to work hard and plan, to allow you to prioritise and enjoy life 😊
I was made redundant at 59 and now work 3 days a week for a friend. The money's not great, but there's no stress like my previous job. I also get free gym membership, which l use, l cycle, walk a lot, and next year at 66 get my state pension when l will go down to 2 days a week. I believe working when retired gives you extra money, routine, social interaction, and a purpose if that's what you need. I've seen so many people retire and go downhill. Health and fitness is the biggest goal, and have a bucket list, projects to do.
Great video! The way you put time into perspective with your charts is eye opening. I retired 2 years ago at age 62 and I am loving second of it. No regrets, except that I should have done it sooner.
This is an amazing video. Thank you for putting time into real perspective!! I'm 60 yrs old. With 6 figures invested. I was going to volunteer to do more hours in work. But I'll think I'll stay as I am . And look to do less!!
Good video James, I have just had my 60th birthday and am deciding whether to fully retire. A couple of thoughts on being 60... you are right it is just an arbitrary number and in many ways I have the same questions and doubts as I did at 50. Secondly, cycling... I spent my 60th riding in the French alps and then enjoying a beer with a lifelong friend, you will be suprised how you can maintain your fitness as long as you keep going. We plan on doing the same on my 70th! 🤞
Brilliant vid James, retired nearly 4 years ago at age 61 and haven’t regretted it for a second. My tip would be to work out what your basic spending needs are and make sure you have enough money to buy an annuity that meets these needs. With the rest of your funds you can either keep investing, keep saving (great interest rates currently) or use to supplement income either via annuity or income drawdown, depending on your appetite for risk. FWIW I’ve found my risk appetite has reduced as I’ve gotten older and as I’ve tried (and largely succeeded) to reduce life’s stresses (remember it is stress that will kill you in the end). Good luck everyone
Really appreciate the insights, and also the fact that the video edits don't come in between your talking with too many audio effects. Makes it way more watchable :)
So true. I said I would never work past 60, now 63 and still working, although I am retiring in a couple of months, just got to the point of stop worrying about the money and the future and just take it as it comes, as I always have. We'll just have to cut back a bit and think about what we purchase and purchase things we need rather than want. Still pretty scary though having worked since I was 14 if you include Saturday jobs.
I retired aged 52, 6 years ago. I started planning this aged 45 and built a model to grasp expenditure and pension income (that I continue to maintain). My expenditure in retirement is far lower than when working and yet I have maintained my standard of living. Without doubt, this has been the best decision I’ve ever made and has enabled me to give much more time to family, friends and myself. Don’t delay - plan and retire!
Best Video I have seen in my LIFE!!!...I am 54 and going to retire in 58...I will only have 20 years in my pension will is equal to like 30%, but to get my max 80% I would have to work till I am 72..SCREW THAT!!!...I will not chase the carrot. just get rid of stuff I do not need like a Car, etc!!! My daughter already said she will give me rides when I need,...Less $$$ but more Time is worth it!!
Great video James and certainly food for thought. I’m 54 and have 300k invested. No mortgage on my own home and I also own a Buy to let outright worth around 200k. So around 500k. I also have a holiday home abroad I share with my brother. Thing is I feel now I’m working for my two kids and leaving them as much as possible. If I work another 10 years. With my contributions I’ve estimated close to 1 million. I certainly don’t need this amount but want to pass as much as possible to my kids who I don’t think will have the fortunate position to buy property like I was. Anyone else thinking for others and not themselves?
I find this really interesting as someone early 50's and thinking about retiring next two or three years. It seems to be the done thing these days as more and more parents are working longer to make their children more comfortable. I'm guessing yours must be 20s or 30s so at what point does that support end? It used to be a case of support your children til they leave home and they get the rest when you're dead. One of my wife's colleagues was due to retire but her youngest son finished Uni and wanted to do a gap year and asked his mum not to retire for another year so he could. Amazingly she did! I'm not sure what financial lesson this has taught him but I don't think its a positive one. When I wanted something 'expensive' I used to have to save for it and those lessons have put me in a position where I can retire years before my friends, most of whom have higher paid jobs than me. Regarding the property maybe you could do a 'we'll match what you save' or 'we'll double what you save' model.
Very similar situation. 55 now - I’ve used the excellent online modelling tool and believe I have enough to stop now - really just accumulating to support grown-up children. I’m going to retire within 12 months, probably at the end of this year. A very thought provoking video - time marches on….we can’t get it back. Thank you
@@dns383 yes it's really hard. On one hand they should be living their own lives and saving their own retirement. My son 28 works hard he can't afford to buy so is renting a flat with his girlfriend, he has a low paying job so knows life is hard. He still never complains. Daughter 21 still at home. Moaning at me like a second wife :) I think it's just knowing they will hopefully be ok with a few bob financially when i'm gone. They're Good kids and have never asked for anything from me. I'm in a decent job earning good money. So I am working for their future as much as mine.
I made it clear to my son that once he finished Uni the major support would end. Yes I'd like to support and leave him something but work is stressful and I've been working for 32 years and will retire in 5 years at 55. You need to be a bit selfish as we only have one life. Think about your own health both physically and mentally.
Fairplay James I have been following you for a while because I'm in the situation of just turning 56yrs and looking to retire. In the next couple of months I should be made redundant as I hoped with a good package I hope. 35 yrs with Tata Steel and paying 25% into my pension for the last couple of years. James out of all of your videos this was has impressed me most, not for your usual financial expertise but for your honesty on why we should retire when possible in the best health. Many thanks James.
Overall, 60% of traders think this year would favor stocks, mutual funds, and other equity-based investments, despite Treasury yields and other safer cash-like investments paying big. I’m looking for opportunities in the market that could fetch me $1m ahead of retirement by 2025.
Investing without proper guidance can lead to mistakes and losses. I've learned this from my own experience. If you're new to investing or don't have much time, it's best to get advice from an expert.
@@BoianOlenberg Inflation is gradually going to become part of us and due to that fact, any money you keep in cash or a low-interest account declines in value each year. Investing is the only way to make your money grow. Unless you have an exceptionally high income, investing is the only way most people will have enough money to retire.
@@JeffreysSuttons How can one find a verifiable financial planner? I would not mind looking up the professional who helped you. I will be retiring in two years and I might need some management on my much larger portfolio. Don't want to take any chances.
@@WaldronsSousas The beauty of MARGARET MOLLI ALVEY approach is her dual focus: while aggressively pursuing profit opportunities, she's equally tenacious about shielding investors from potential pitfalls. It's a balance few can achieve.
Thank-you, looks like an excellent series of videos that I will be watching with great interest. I'm 60, working nightshifts in a supermarket, my wife is 59, and a self employed professional artist. Our mortgage ends in about 4 years which is when I'm intending to retire. It feels like someone hit the "pause" button on my life about 28 years ago when my kids were born. My wife wouldn't see it that way. But now they've left home and got they're own lives, it's time to hit "play" and start living again. Time and money, the "big trip" to either Australia or America probably in reality us never going to happen. Retirement is a trip into realising your on the "exit" escalator. Shame my finances don't look anything like the graph at the start of the video. Everything's dwindling at the same rate.
Brilliant illustration. Having lost my parents long before their retirement I retired with modest sums at 56 and 8 month's. Lovely not to have the stress of a full time COJ. I now work 3 days but only because i enjoy it. And that's only while i still enjoy it.
Depends on what you mean by 'modest sums' and whether you've paid off your mortgage, and of course how much your partner has. I'm 56 but won't pay my mortgage off for another 5 years.
Agree, agree, agree! Time is the commodity that people squander. I was presented a window, sacrificed for 18 years and retired at 50. I’d offer this though, if you retire early and your friends don’t, you won’t actually see them more. My experience is that you’ll see them less. They’re still working and their off time is still scarce. In my experience, who I thought were close friends faded very quickly due to envy. They don’t want to be around a guy who owns all his time when they’re still miserably trapped in the grind. The flip side is you’re gonna want to be around people who are also retired and have the ability to do as they please like you do. Can’t agree more about physical fitness. Free time does not mean more time. You must take care of yourself. Cheers 🕺
Add another 10-20 years to the biking. I was cycling in Italy this spring with people who were 70. One of them could beat me up the hills and on the flats. I’m 62. I’m not retired but I do work contracts. This means I work when I want and don’t work when I don’t want. I work for multiple companies (private, government, non-profits) so it’s something different all the time. Aside from the field work, I can do the work when I want, as long as it gets done by the deadline. This degree of freedom means I’ve been acting semi-retired for about 15 years now. I’ve moved by mom in with me so I see her every day. I spend months out west visiting my sister and her kids (can work anywhere I have my laptop, including by the ocean), so have lots of days with her. I make it work because I live simply. I don’t need a lot. Not everyone can do it if they have a family but for my circumstances it’s worked out really well, and it happened almost by accident (tried to get fulltime work but eventually realized I was doing fine on contracts and I liked the free time, so I quit worrying about fulltime and embraced the benefits).
People who are able to retire early are lucky . I have 15 months till 65 and need to look at calling it quits, my only fear is running out of funds much later, thus keen on investing. What could be the safest possible ways to invest for cashflow, in order to afford lifestyle after retirement?
That's right. I am a wife, mother of four and new grandmother, 28 years in Corporate America, retired recently at 57 after discovering the freedom investing could provide, been contributing to my portfolio since the pandemic in early 2020, and have grown a $250,000 savings account to almost 1 million, credits to my investment advisor.
My CFA ’Annette Marie Holt’ , a renowned figure in her line of work. I recommend researching her credentials further. She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market.
Thanks for sharing this, I googled the lady you mentioned and after going through her resume, I can tell she's a pro. I wrote her and I'm waiting on her reply
I like the way you explained the 3 resources in life at the beginning. I retired early at 56, valuing my time and health over money. Many people put all the emphasis on the money. It is not 'how much' but 'is it enough' a wisdom I've always remembered.
A hundred percent agree. Being 56 with mounting health issues, I'm determined to semi retire this year. Not an easy decision to make though with our complicated finances, and addiction to very high health care professional income. I've plans for big outdoor adventures though, so better get on with it
Thank you for this. Messages we all need to hear - especially for those of us who think in terms of major sports events. Greatly appreciated. Have now subscribed.
Excellent- but sobering- video. Have been considering retiring early next year, but was worrying about all the issues you raise. This has put all my doubts into perspective and I will definitely be going. Thank you!
Dear James, thank you for the great video! I am now 64 and have an incredibly nice job. I enjoy that every day, both from work and from colleagues. But I also make sure that my work is so much fun. I'm the one who has to hang up the streamers every day at my job. It's not easy but it really is possible. That makes my work a party. I have been working for more than 40 years, but I know that my last working years are the best. In a few years I will retire with a party.
I retired aged 42 and that was thirty years ago. Never looked back.... I wasn't rich, but I'd accumulated enough wealth to turn my back on the Matrix! Today I have zero money. Well I've almost got $1000 in the bank and next Tuesday another $800 will come as my pension. My wife also gets that much. And we live like kings. Out of debt on a small farm that allows us to pretty much live as self sufficiently as we are prepared to work for. But I've never felt richer.
very helpful. I'm 57 and was made redundant a few months ago. I am going to make a real career change to something less pressured and lower paid but with more free time for arts and crafts
James not denying your wisdom but some people love work and the love the journey not the end goal. My personal goal is cutting down never stopping and I love my job.
I'm nearly 40 and spent majority of my 20s and early 30s travelling and living it up. I should have been more disciplined with my spending and should have invested more and contributed more into workplace pension. Luckily I didn't get into debt during that phase. Spending what i was earning Last 5 years I've been laser focused, putting away as much as i can in my workplace pension, bonus sacrifices, investing aggressively in my stocks and shares ISA. Still making up for lost ground.
Ask anyone in their 50s and 60s who are travelling the world on the money they saved when not travelling in their 20s and 30s and they’ll tell you they would have rather done it when they were young
@@RobertGillontheinterweb BS. Most people in their 20s and 30s don't have much money anyway, so they slum it backpacking instead of staying in luxury hotels. The silver foxes you see in the 4-5 star hotels made their money in their 40s and 50s.
Powerful content, could feel thr emotion when you were talking about your parents.....I too think about that, how much time will I spend with them.....feels like you spend 90% of your time with your parents in the first 10% of your life, when you probably don't appreciate them in the way you do later in life, and only have 10% of that time with them.
I fell into retirement at 58 when my position as in house IT support person was outsourced. I had a look at my situation and thought (fuckit) I have enough money and I’m still healthy that’s enough work for me. I’m 61 now and every day is Saturday! Luck played a part in my outcome, however my advice is invest in property in a city where there is high demand and limited supply. It can be the house you live in. I later moved to the country and rented the city house out. Recently I got sick of dealing with tenants so I sold the property. Invest while you are young. I owned my first property at 26 but you have to stick your neck out. From then on the only trick is spend less than you earn and money will pile up. The only interest you pay should be on your mortgage. I haven’t made a car payment in 35 years. I pay no bank fees at all. Find a good tax accountant to help you make good decisions. Get rich quick schemes don’t exist and usually make someone else rich.
Over the last 10 years in my job I have seen probably 5 guys die just before retirement or a year or two into it. Made me realise to do everything possible to retire early. To work your whole life looking forward to retiring but never actually get there is the saddest thing possible..
I’d add friends & family to your 3 resources list. Early retirement allowed me to focus on personal relationships rather than corporate which I have found is more important than money.
Excellent video. Interestingly I’m 55 and have just retired having worked as a financial adviser for the last 30 years. Your video perfectly resonated with my own thought processes. Great job and good luck with your channel 👍
that is the definition of wishful thinking. you believe only what you wish to be true. clearly, you can't think objectively and must be failing as a financial advisor.
Great advice and certainly why I’m planning to retire at 57 with a modest income supplemented by some part time work. The way I see it, I hopefully have another couple of decades of beating my mates up the Col du Galibier too!
With markets tumbling, inflation soaring, the Fed imposing large interest-rate hike, while treasury yields are rising rapidly-which means more red ink for portfolios this quarter. How can I profit from the current volatile market, I'm still at a crossroads deciding if to liquidate my $125k bond/stocck portfolio.
The market is volatile at this time, hence i will suggest you get yourself a financial-advisor that can provide you with entry and exit points on the shares/ETF you focus on.
very true, I started investing before the pandemic and that same year I pulled a profit of about $600k with no prior investing experience, basically all I was doing was seeking guidance to make a from a financial-advisorr, you can be passively involved with the aid of a professional.
Thanks, I merely looked her up on Google and was highly impressed by her credentials; I got in touch with her because I need all the help I can get. I just set up a phone call.
Love your comments regarding #6. People these days, especially with TH-cam retirement videos assume way too much when it comes to how much people need in retirement. They mostly base their assumptions on people having mortgages, car payments and other expenses that a lot people simply don't have when they retire. They also like to set aside these ridiculous amounts for recreational spending as if everyone is going to be globetrotting throughout retirement. This is simply not the case for most people. I saw one estimate assuming that based on the individuals current salary, they would need $120k (USD) per year to live on.
Great video - I’m 40 so a way off!! But starting to think about it with my wife - you’ve convinced me to pull retirement forward! Also, I will just say, your comment on parents really got to me… mine are in declining health and at the current way I’m going, I don’t have many days left with them… Time to make a change - you’re so right, you get caught up in short term goals and lose sight of the big picture. 😊
I know this is such a huge decision for everyone getting closer to retirement. I turned 62 at the end of 2023; i went ahead and completed and approved for early retirement. My first check is in February 2024. I work part time at the Transportation department at out local school to supplement my income and I can still make an additional $1100 a month thru my photography business. I decided to retire now instead of 67 because it’s good for me. We don’t have a house or auto payment but if we do we will work with it. I track all of my expenses to make sure I am not wasting money. If you can do it. Adjust your lifestyle a little and enjoy those senior years and try to not overthink it
If you truly hate your job sure. Part of enjoying life is the contrast between the things you have to do and the things you like to do. A lot of people retire and wither away, become very inactive
If you’re already retired, do you have any words of encouragement for people who are thinking about taking the plunge?
Your video could not be more prescient. I lost my Dad last month, he was the very personification of *_’Carpe Diem’_* and never squandered a day. Tomorrow is promised to no one.
If it doesn’t work out when you retire, you can always go back to work. Doesn’t have to be a one way street.
I retired two years ago and, although stockmarket returns during those two years have been disappointing, I have no regrets. Why? Well, it's simple. If I think I'm going to run out of money I can probably earn some more but when I run out of time (and we all do) it won't matter how much money I have left. Even a billion pounds in the bank won't buy me one extra second of life.
I've already retired. For me it was never planned it was mainly due to a change in family circumstances, I first reduced my hours then left altogether. It ended up being the best thing to happen to me for a number of reasons and now my time is all my own. I no longer have to deal with bad behaviour in the workplace and I have no-one to answer to but myself. I set my goals and achieve them alot quicker than ever before.
When you either lose someone close, your health takes a knock or even lose your job you may not take time out to review what time you have left. I should have done it sooner.
I'm 50 and if I could retire right this very second I absolutely would. I'm so sick and tired of my job and I'm quite convinced that I picked the wrong path in life. It's too late for me to make a drastic change but there is one piece of advice I can give is to not waste so much of your life at a job or in a career that you hate. It is so not worth it.
Similar age and same story. I sometimes feel like my whole life story is 'picking the wrong path' 😬
You are not alone. I'm in the same boat.
I'm younger, and already had my guts full of s*h*i*t
I'm so bored at work now - 62 here
Your earliest retirement age should be based on your ability to financially afford the lifestyle you want to live without working.
My original retirement plan was to retire at 62, work part-time, and save money. However, high prices for everything have severely affected my plan. I'm concerned if people who went through the 2008 financial crisis had an easier time than I am having now. The stock market is worrying me as my income has decreased, and I fear I won't have enough savings for retirement since I can't contribute as much as before.
I’m 77 and still working full time. I do enjoy my work, it provides me with purpose and has secured my financial future. Most people are too eager to retire as early as possible. Even if you do retire early, best to get a part time job for the reasons cited above, as well as following many if not all of the suggestions in this video.
Accurate asset allocation is crucial. Some use hedging or defensive assets in their portfolio for market downturns. Seeking financial advice is vital. This approach has kept me financially secure for over five years, with a return on investment of nearly $1 million.
Mind if I ask you to recommend this particular coach you using their service?
Finding financial advisors like Rebecca Nassar Dunne who can assist you shape your portfolio would be a very creative option. There will be difficult times ahead, and prudent personal money management will be essential to navigating them.
I just Googled her name and her website came up right away. It looks interesting so far. I sent her an email and i hope she responds soon. Thanks
People who are able to retire early are lucky . I have 15 months till 65 and need to look at calling it quits, my only fear is running out of funds much later, thus keen on investing. What could be the safest possible ways to invest for cashflow, in order to afford lifestyle after retirement?
consider investment planning, learning from a well experienced advisor is invaluable
That's right. I am a wife, mother of four and new grandmother, 28 years in Corporate America, retired recently at 57 after discovering the freedom investing could provide, been contributing to my portfolio since the pandemic in early 2020, and have grown a $250,000 savings account to almost 1 million, credits to my investment advisor.
@@mariaguerrero08Could you possibly recommend a CFA you've consulted with?
My CFA ’Izella Annette Anderson’ , a renowned figure in her line of work. I recommend researching her credentials further. She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market.
Thanks for sharing this, I googled the lady you mentioned and after going through her resume, I can tell she's a pro. I wrote her and I'm waiting on her reply
I’d be retiring or working less in 5 years, and curious to know how best people split their pay, how much of it goes into savings, spendings or investments, I earn around $250k per year but nothing to show for it yet.
money advice is subjective, what works for you may not work for me. I would suggest getting rid of any unnecessary purchases, especially things that cost you monthly, or better still consider financial advisory.
People often underestimate the importance of financial advisors until they feel the negative effects of emotional decision-making. I remember a few summers ago, after a tough divorce, when I needed a boost for my struggling business. I researched and found a licensed advisor who diligently helped grow my reserves despite inflation. Consequently, my reserves increased from $275k to over $750k.
This is definitely worth considering! Do you have any recommendations for professionals or advisors I could speak with? I really need help with proper portfolio allocation.
I've shuffled through investment coaches and yes, they can be positively impactful to an individual's portfolio, but do your due diligence to find a coach with grit, one that withstood the 08' crash. For me, “Teresa L. Athas” turned out to be better and smarter than all the advisors I ever worked with till date, I’ve never met anyone with as much conviction.
Thanks for sharing. i searched her full name and found her web instantly. After reviewing her credentials and conducting due diligence, i reached out to her.
Dude, you're much wiser than your age. Excellent video.
I'm 68.5 years young. I retired at age 65. I love retirement. What I did prior to retirement is to pay off all my debts. No car payment, no mortgage, no credit card debt. Then, I sat down and figured out my monthly budget I would need each month to cover the type of retirement that I wanted. My minimum happened to be $4500 a month. Then, I started going to the gym, at least 3 days a week, and for 2.5 hours each one of those days. I'm healthy and I feel great. Life is good. Now, people, go out there and give yourself the retirement that you want. Only you can.
My dad passed away suddenly and unexpectedly in January 2021. He was 49. When my sister and I were handed the unfortunate task of sorting his affairs we saw that he had been paying into two private pension funds since 1998. It made us both realise that, whilst money IS important, you certainly can't take it with you. I'm sure if my dad was informed of his imminent death prior he would have enjoyed that money in every possible way. My message to everyone watching is - money isn't everything, don't get stressed about investing/saving every last bit while you're still young, because old age may never greet you.
That's true brother. Sorry to hear about your dad, life is very cruel and unfair sometimes.
Wise words and something often missing from these videos. Sorry for your loss...
Sorry for your loss. While I understand what you are saying but I disagree because I believe in generational wealth. I may not be able to enjoy but I will be happy that my kids will not have to worry to some extent!
Sorry for your loss. Thank you this reminder. ❤
So true😢
Three of my siblings died at 59. I'm now 62 and worry about when my time might be. I'm doing all I can to stay healthy but on work days my blood pressure is very high. On days when I'm not working, I get really good BP readings. I think I've answered my own question before it was asked!
Recently diagnosed with stage four cancer so my timetable has been flipped. I appreciate your video because so few people think of how short time is. I was working 70 hours a week and missing tons of family things. I’ve cut down to 35 hours a week and probably will go for disability so what time is left can be spent with loved ones. Powerful advice thanks for the video
Best wishes to you 🙏
Please look up RSO oil
Sending my very best wishes ❤
Great decision, enjoy your time with family, best wishes
Don't believe everything your doctors tell you just because they say there's nothing else you can do it is absolute bullshit look up how many people have cured themselves from stage 4 cancer Keep Hope starting right now do not eat no more sugar or carbohydrates look up Dr Berg he has multiple people on their who explain how they have cured themselves of stage 4 cancer after the doctors have told them there is nothing left for them I believe wholeheartedly we are what we eat don't give up keep fighting and start fasting start small but move your way up to at least 5 days in a row of not eating when you fast it will not let the cancer grow at all and it will starve the cancer from with inside of you
I retired T 56 now 86 and still enjoying life I was worried about the money , but you adapt and still live a good life.
Can you lay out a Blue-Print to show us how it is done?
@@mikeoglen6848 I was lucky I took a golden hand shake ,after 41 yrs at BA , I can tell you I was worried about the money to live on but friends said I was silly if I didn’t take it. I took the plunge and never looked back, mind you think it is a bit harder these days to make ends meet.
@@mikeoglen6848What works for him won't work for you. Look at your budget now and find ways to eliminate remaining ongoing debt within the next 2 years. No mortgage. No car payment. More money.
@@mikeoglen6848layout a blueprint ..??? Money can't buy time don't be foolish haven't u learned anything in life ?? People don't impress because we all have the same destiny can't u figured this out numbskill lol !!
Top man 👍🏻
I needed to hear this. I retired at 55 with a lifetime pension. Not a huge pension, but a comfortable one. I have had a hard time giving up that hustling lifestyle. Within 6 months of retiring, I began working another job, then became dissatisfied with that one, then got another, then another and another. Although I told myself I needed to work these jobs I ended up disliking all of them. It has finally dawned on me that I need to just chill out and relax, find a hobby, visit family or travel more. Working a job is almost a bad habit at this point. I am now recognizing this job-hopping pattern and intend to stop the madness for once and all. I need to enjoy the fruits of my labor from here on out.
That was me when I went back to work! I think when you work for so many years it becomes a habit. When I first retired I felt rudderless and didn't know what to do. My husband says I have to work at it and like you I think I just need to chill out and relax and not expect the hustle and bustle I was used to. Good luck to you in your retirement. I hope it is a long and healthy one.
How are you going to travel with insufficient funds?
Im the same age as you, Im looking to go selfemployed with a small pension ill be fine doing something I love.
Im retirement age, 66 and soon to be 67, i love my job as a joiner on building sites, i only do 4 days a week now and reducing to 3 come spring, my job now is like a hobby i get paid for, i don't need to do it and can leave anytime i want
👏🏻 to Alcaraz. What a match! I’ve been patiently waiting to put this video live until it finished.
I don’t know about you, but I’m feeling knackered after watching that - time for thinking about retirement perhaps!
Retirement plan - win Wimbledon. Never played tennis in my life and 30 years old but seems like some minor logistical factors in my solid retirement plan.
@@hannahb6471 haha - he just won a cool £2,350,000 … maybe he needs some financial advice. Anyone know his agent?!
@@JamesShack imagine that compounding from age 20!
You should have said 52 Wimbledon finals too. Everybody’s future and how long that will be is unknown to everyone, it seems to me that people are more concerned about money in the future completely forgetting that what’s far more important is their health. A lot of people will earn far more money than they actually spend before they die. A very informative video by the way.
Great real life advice. Too many people think they are living forever or think they’ll have plenty of time to spend with their parents, partner, children. My best mate died 4 weeks ago, he’d only retired in March this year. Life is short, make the most of the time you have left.
@Help_Iinegod damn man bots pathetic
I'm 78 and my wife and I cycled the old cobbled road over the St Gotthard pass a couple of weeks ago so you may have more years of enjoyable cycling than you expect. We try to do it every year and hope to continue for a few more years.
We have been retired going on twenty years and it has been fantastic.
Where is St Gothard's Pass?
@@mikeoglen6848 Easiest is to google it, but it is double 't', Gotthard.
I retired two years ago at 63 with very little saved I’m also single and live well within my means and so far it’s been a great decision I have a small school bus I converted and last year spent several months in Arizona NM California and Utah as I’m from Colorado I also travel to Sweden to see my son and his family, that’s where I’m at now My biggest advice is don’t get upset if you can’t do everything you hoped to do Live within your means and enjoy the things you can afford to do
And that my friend is called “gratitude”. Congrats on your retirement. Sometimes the best things in life cost very little when you’re looking in the right places.
I'm starting to realize that I may need to retire sooner than later and just live with a much smaller pool of money. My job right now is incredibly high stress with so when I leave it I would have to retire but I could always get another job if I so desire
Like what you say.
Retired at 65, 1and a half years early.living the same way, minus Switzerland. Happy so far!
I totally agree
Great video! I retired last November at 61 and my husband at 60. We moved from the US to Spain. Best decision we ever made! Our jobs were giving us so much stress that we couldn't deal with that lifestyle anymore and life is too precious to waste being a slave to your job. We moved to a country where we can afford to live comfortably.
That sounds very nice. I spend much too much time working......due to lack of planning. Oh well.
How are the taxes for Americans living in Spain?
@@amylee9 taxes are high. That's the only drawback. But there is a dual taxation treaty between Spain and the US so you don't have to pay taxes to both countries.
That's the secret, move somewhere that is cheaper
I've had that as a rule with work. Work in the larger metro areas, spend in the country. That part I did right...As for the rest....well...the jury is still out on that.@@hobo1704
Starting working part time from this year at 52. Working 15 hours a week. I have more time to spend with my family and friends. Enjoying new hobbies such as baking and gardening and still having active social life with my work mates and staying connected with society. Minimalist is a new norm for me. God is good!
This is the video that changed my life. I saw it in September 2023. I retired on 17 November. Thank you James.
Congratulations, and all the best with it!
I'm 57 and I have really had enough of working. I have made a plan to take the plunge to retire and I am doing it next year in July. But what gets annoying is when people say you should work to your 65. No thanks.
Retired at 51. Don't regret a moment of it. I'm starting to see friends go with illness etc and you do realise that your greatest commodity after 50 is time and health.
what about health insurance?
I went from working 65 hrs a week to working 3 days a week entirely from home. I am working less than half the time and taking off 8 weeks per year for vacation. My wife works part time as well. Being able to spend time at home with family is amazing. I am able to go to the gym, biking and golfing. We each have six figure incomes while still being able to spend time with our children. Once they are out of college we will consider retiring. So five more years to go and trying to make the most out of our time together.
where you can retire at 51 ? , in Spain retirement age is 65 years old
@@davidconnall5820With enough savings you can retire anywhere at anytime. Official retirement age is just for the government payouts. Make sure your savings are not locked up in a pension fund where you cannot access it before very old age, however.
@@davidconnall5820 You can retire whenever you want if you can afford to.
I thought I was the only person who thinks this way, but I’m glad to know I’m not. Yes, the limited opportunities could be viewed as depressing, but I’m excited about retiring in a few months and getting on with those precious experiences. The countdown app is engaged and I’m ready. I’m 63 and I’ve invested a lot of effort in my physical health, and now I’m ready to visit my daughters and grands, do all the hikes, do the backcountry camping trips, and ride the long distance motorcycle trips that I’ve been wanting to do.
I lost my husband when i was 42 and retired at 49.. No children and no specific hobbies, but a year on i know it was the best thing i ever did.. Most people use “I love my job, it gives me purpose” as an excuse…. I want to spend as much time with my friends as possible, whether it’s on the phone or in person, and working didn’t allow me the time to be there for people as much as a I wanted to be… I have a great aunt who is living by herself at the age of almost 106, so I could be around for a while, and i want to make sure that when my time is up, people remember the love i gave, not how much money is left over… Great video.. Thank you!!
Thank you for sharing Cathy. Interesting you say “I love my job” is an excuse, I would agree but I think it’s deeper then that, so much of our identity can be tied up in what we do that to deny it, to suggest that we’ve been wasting our time, can be very painful.
But I agree. Many people say they love their job, some genuinely do, but most only say that because they haven’t discovered the alternative yet.
Best comment best wishes for the future dont take care go for it whatever.
'I love my job' is just an alternative to 'my job sucks but I don't dare admit it because it suggests I'm some kind of failure'. It's just a little bit of BS.
I also retired at 49 and now living at a minimum wage level from my pension. I drive a 25 year old van with low mileage and keep it in good shape . After 31 years I keep busy and fit , eat good food and buy used items .(no tax) . We do not need costly outside recreation , so many things to do are free. Time for my oatmeal, honey and banana.
59 days until retirement for me. House and cars paid for. 2K/month Pension, 3.5K/month SS and 700K in 401K. I think we are ready. Thank God!
I don’t know why I feel insecure about my future with $5 million net worth at 47 years old. I’ve got four children. Everybody’s happy. But I have this mindset that if I retire now it may not last. I want to be to help people I love until I die
@@BKNb77 just because you 'retire' doesn't mean you can never make money again...get outta there.
@@BKNb77 wait till u have 10 m
I was lucky enough to retire a couple of years ago, aged 52. I'm enjoying my new life greatly :) I'm spending loads of time learning about DIY and gardening, getting fit again, delving into the world of academic finance, and generally noodling around and doing whatever I like. And that's from someone who uses to love going into the office and climbing the corporate ladder. I sometimes miss the social aspects of the office, but the benefits outweigh the things I've lost by a huge margin. The strange thing is that I seem to have even less spare time than I use to; I have no idea how I used to cram in 50+ hours in the office. Wish I'd pushed the button years earlier, to be honest !
My Dad retired at 60 and spent the next 30 years volunteering. He always says I don't know how I ever found time to go to work.
Good for you 😊
My father died at 73 and enjoyed about 5 years of retirement, then 2 years of illness and treatment (cancer). Life passes by quick. I retired at 52, or perhaps I transitioned to being in a position where I will only spend time how I want to from now on (which may include work!). It has been wonderful so far - and with some planning and management, even through a down term market it was fine
Life is short.
My lifestyle and outlook mirror yours
I am retired at 43 - life is so amazing
@@WISERandHAPPIER what do you do about health insurance?
@@imnitguy Safetywing
I retired at 55 with 400k, but only did 2 years of retirement, I just hated the boredom of winter, I also missed investing strangely enough. So I trained to be a tree surgeon, I now work 2 days a week through Autumn and winter and have Spring and Summer touring Great Britain. The 400K was touching 440 after 2 years, even after taking 2 years living expenses, so money wasn't a problem. I think you have to find the correct balance to enjoy retirement.
I've always wanted to be a tree surgeon when I retire from the office job... how did you find it? Isn't it quite physically demanding? And how do you find work?
@@chris420uk I really enjoy, the physical side of the job, I'm now 60 and I haven't had a day yet when I've thought I don't need this anymore. I started out by getting a couple of jobs from another local arborist who was up to his neck in work, I've never had to advertise, I don't want to, I wouldn't want to turn people down, do a great job and word of mouth will get you enough work. I hope you can follow your dream retirement I just stumbled across this, from the sheer boredom of winter and just couldn't face another winter twiddling my thumbs so go for it Chris.
I think you went out on a limb! : )
@@barnstar2077 Ba Da, Bum! Tip your waiters folks, BarnStar is here all week!
Working outdoors in the British winter sounds dire! Could you not work the summer 2 days a week and then go abroad for the winter? 😅😂
Thank you so much James fir the best video on this subject. I am 55 in June and have been putting off retirement for all those reasons. Time and health are so limited. I am resigning this week. Thanks again!
I made the decision to work part-time as soon as I could afford it so i could have more time for personal interests. Have been working 4 days for a few years and plan to move to 3 days soon as I can. It's been life changing and one of the best decisions I've made. So I consider myself "semi-retired" and have been enjoying some of the benefits instead of waiting until i reach retirement age. Have taken two sabbaticals too which i consider "mini retirements".
My dad worked as a laywer for 25 years. The job was stressful and he decided to retire early (about 5 years earlier than he was planning on retiring). I've never seen him happier. Work was literally killing him.
I'm sure his job was stressing him out. The thing about prolonged stress is it robs people of joy and happiness. Especially when they have to deal with other people's problems for a living.
I stopped working four months ago, I'm 57y my Mum is 79y, fit and healthy and now lives around the corner, my sister is close by too. I worked for 37y, I was happy to adjust my outgoings to spend time; I see my sons whenever I can, travel on my own and with my group of friends. Give up work as soon as you can!
Great video and I agree with this.
My father passed away at 58 years old with an unexpected heart attack late last month. He worked throughout all those years and endured a war in the 90s in the balkans.
All he did was work for a better life for his family, but also for retirement. He paid off the home we live in, my mother has his and her retirement, i have saved a good 6 figure amount, I have nothing that needs to be paid off (education, etc), and I am just 30 years old. I feel like I want to enjoy life now knowing there isnt much to worry about and I can use my years left to enjoy the things I grew up with, be with friends and family, and just enjoy life.
I am grateful for everything my father has done for my family, friends, and myself. I just wish he took some break time because we really miss him so much and he worked his life solely for this retirement goal that in the end he did not get to see.
If he had known, I am sure he would change things.
I am healthy for now, and feel like an early retirement and living in what my father built might need to be the choice.
Again, amazing video and thanks for nailing this on the head.
Sorry for your sad loss , but thank you for helping me with a life choice . Your father sounded like a great man ☘️❤️🩹
This week I start my final week of full time work, after 37 years of working. I realised I had enough money to live out the rest of my life comfortably. So at 57 I will be going part time, as time is now more important. Another great video James. Thank you
Best way semi retired, keeps the cogs turning and the social integration we'd miss if we straight out retired.
Yes, we need to remain mentally and socially active. If one fully retires there are ways to meet those needs, it might just take a bit of time and effort to work out what the new way of living looks like. All the best.
This goes against what the vid suggests.
If you have enough money to live comfortably then why work, even part-time?
So how is it going three weeks in?
Best of luck 😊
Thank you. You are the only Financial Planner that hasnt made me feel insecure about the fact that i havent enough to retire on. I retired in my mid 50s due to healrh reasons.
My health is monitored and my quality of life is pretty good. The theory that when you earn more you spend more rings true. My income has now reduced but my lifestyle has improved. Everyone is different but my focus now is living a simple, quality and fulfilled life. Stuff is just stuff but people,places and experiences are paramount.
Hi James everything you say is true, people spend far too much time worrying about money, health comes first, I am retired and have been so for 3 years now, don't miss work at all, no more travelling to work, worrying if your late etc
Such great advice. We had a similar pensions talk at work and it made me adjust my savings strategy. Time is so precious I certainly don't want to work until I drop.
We targeted 55 for retirement, arbitrary target initially. I went on for another year to complete something and had a serious heart attack just before the pandemic. As James said, you have no idea what is around the corner. We live on the basis of how little we need rather than how much we need.
Another great video. My wife and I are both 56 and wondering whether we should retire next year with 34 years of full employment behind us both. I think you just made up our minds.
Make sure you pay 35 years into NI savings so you get the full pension amount
@coastalcottagewales8688 Yes. I'll make it to 35 years next April..
Go for it I did best thing ever, Get up when we want, Go out when we want, Go on hols when we want the list is endless goodluck.
I did 37 years, so I can’t add any more to the UK state pension. Bare-in-mind the state pension age is likely to rise in the next few years. I have another couple of years added (67) thanks to HM Government !. If you have no debt and enough to pay your living expenses inc. inflation + 30% without running out of cash, you can retire. If you need a new car every 3 years + expensive holidays, you will need more than I’ve quoted. Good luck !.
It also depends what you want in retirement if you want a simple but nice life that's ok, If you want expensive cars on the drive and jetting off every other month then you need to save a lot lot more and is it really worth it?
I’m retired at 50. Love every minute of determining what to do with each day though I do live on a fairly tight budget. Still 💯 worth it
I am 52yrs old and I have started preparing for retirement but with the ongoing effects of high inflation, lower market returns and stagnant wages, achieving a secure early retirement could is more challenging than ever before. I'll appreciate a means of making short term profit from stocks and others.
If you need advise on a short term profitable investment. It may be a good idea to speak with a financial advisor who can help you build strategies based on your individual goals.
@DiegoPersie I'm actually interested in this idea of investing through an analyst. Sounds like the most sensible thing to do in the market right now. Could you give me a pointer to who you work with, please?
@DiegoPersie I checked Kaitlin up out of curiosity, found her webpage and i must say i am impressed by her Credentials. i emailed her already, waiting on her response.
Buy silver and gold. We are financing this corrupt system through fiat currency. Every time we accept a paper bill or digital based on fiat currency, we reassure its value. And the guy with the printing machine, prints more and pay thugs to mug us and our family. Stop valuing what has no value. Let it break. Get out of the system. Trade. Barter. Use precious metals. Get away from these paper bills with no real value, but the power to oppress us in daily basis. Oh dear... do not count on state for your retirement... not even funds... you are on your own, unless you submit to their rules and get a lot of exper|ments and whatever they think you should have in your body to get that allowance... pretty much it will reduce your life spam, dear use|ess e/\ter... (not my words, but theirs!).
scammmm
I went part-time at 50 and then retired at 56. Many colleagues were shocked and asked why a part-time A380 captain would retire… the answer was that I should because I could. 7 years on I am certain it was the best decision I could have made.
You are on point my friend. Money isn't everything. If you have enough to retire, DO IT. You will run out of time to spend that time with your friends and loved ones. Even if you don't have enough to retire, just get a little part time job to make ends meet and stop doing crazy hours. It's too late by then. Some things are priceless, like spending time time with the ones you love, specially having time for yourself. Thanks for the advice.
I retired a year ago at 58. It was financially ‘early’ in some respects, one pension now to keep me going, the other two next year, then state pension as a top up. It wasn’t so easy to get to the decision, but the job I had been in for the best part of 34 years I’d had enough. I was bypassed for better wages even though I was still saving the day. The work became boring and hijacked by woke. I knew I could support myself without working, albeit less luxuries. I haven’t been bored, plenty to do on an old house and I don’t have to rush around trying complete it because back to work Monday. It’s all good. If you can give up work, even for a simpler life, then do it. I left my job after 34 years and literally walked out the door having given in my kit and security pass. Not even a thanks from the management team. It really was the right thing to do.
what's woke?? inclusions??
@@gjmjajajGreat question you’ve asked: What’s woke?
In the context of the OP, my bet is:
“Woke” is a word avatar (symbol) that Florida~man governor guy is using to demonize, dehumanize, and persecute fellow American citizens who disagree with, or stand in the way of his attempts to radically change our civilized society, and social order by re-institutionalizing sexism, and racism through retro ideological religious thinking, and legislative malfeasance.
I also would like to understand the OP’s feelings and intention in using that word. So I hope they also respond to your question.
@@TheSunnyDay2013 different periods of employment and two defined benefit pensions being closed. (Deferred). Final pension defined contributions (money purchase).
@@TheSunnyDay2013Easy I've got 5 pensions through various jobs including state pension.Retired this year at 55👍
Great work!! I'm similar. 5 pensions overall. Decided I'd had enough for various reasons. Worked for nearly 40 years. I'm 55.
Aviva did a pension webinar at my work years ago and what stuck with me was when they told us to calculate how many paydays we had left before were aiming to retire. This was to highlight that waiting one more payday to start your pension or increase contributions is actually more of an impact than you think.
I'm 30 and aiming to retire at 60 so I've only got 360 paydays left - messing about for 3 paydays is 1% of my paydays left!
Interesting. Michael Lewis says something like:
As a rule of thumb, to work out what % of your salary you should be contributing to your pension to retire comfortably at 65, you should divide the age at which you start contributing to your pension by 2.
So if you start at 20, you need to put 10% in. But if you start at 30 you need to put 15% in.
Its obviously a very rough estimate, and won’t be appropriate for everyone, but it helps highlight how much is required and how starting late can really set you back.
@JamesShack yes they actually used the same calculation as a broad brush as well to explain compounding. They started with the how many paydays left then explained compounding and how putting it off can make it incredibly difficult to catch up.
I know my pension isn't where it should be at 30 but every time I'm almost about to buy a house, something happens to the housing market and I'm put back a step again 🤦♂️
@@JamesShackI don't understand how you can just use a percentage with no reference to the actual numbers? Someone on a low salary might put in the "correct" percentage but how does that mean they'll have enough? Their pot will be a lot lower than someone on a higher salary putting in exactly the same percentage.
@@palmtree-e2l think you'll find that it works because most people will live to their means, so then, in retirement, they continue living at the same level (cost) and only need part of their previous income to live on, so the "invest a proportion of income" policy would work for the majority of people. But, everyone has individual needs and expectations, so the rule of thumb should be flexible and adjusted to personal circumstances. For example, someone renting their home needs more income in retirement than someone that has previously invested in buying their home and is no longer paying a mortgage following retirement.
I retired at 56 and the first 6 months was the hardest all i thought was have i done the right thing ,3 years later now i have 2 allotments go regularly fishing and a couple of afternoon drinking sessions, the odd game of golf and a bit of northern soul on Saturday nights, Personally i am going to squeeze every day i live now doing the same thing ,i absolutely love my life ,
Hi from the UK 🇬🇧
My brother is 60 and lives in Sweden. He loves Northern Soul!
@@MissAndDav
Yes I'm going to a all nighter 7pm to 6am next week at Rugeley it's being run by pep a old wigan casino dj , I'm really looking forward to this one ,
I forgot my wife love the northern soul aswell
Very apt timing. Decided 2 months ago to wind down work next year. I’m early 40s but work has overshadowed my life the last 15 years. I’ve never truly enjoyed breaks because worried about work and so forth. I’m still fit and enjoy many sports. I’m lucky in that my mortgage is mostly paid off and have a bit in investments that if I actively manage should do well until I fully retire. Life is too short, I want to hang out and be present for my kids whilst they’re still young, I want to wake up and not feel a slave to my desk. I want to smell the air and sun in my face without worrying about timelines. I’m happy to take a hit in lifestyle but can you out a value on time - nope!
I've been self-employed working from home for 18 years. What happens during retirement or similar is you then have too much time. Time is precious when working, but when you're retired or self-employed time is in abundance, to the point where you can get bored. I can tell from your comment you're naive and think your life will be incredible once you retire. WRONG, you'll worry about income, and eating into savings, etc. You will worry about social activities and your health. You'll just worry about different things than deadlines, etc. It's human nature.
@@blackporscheroadster-yw8hb what a weird take especially as I even mentioned how active I was. well you’ve assumed wrong. I tell the FIRE community this all the time - start hobbies and interests NOW. Also did you miss the point where I said I’ll go part-time - Im a self-employed consultant, even working 10 hours weekly. all bills are paid - did you also miss the point where I mentioned my mortgage is almost paid off? The option is always there to work more. I have a solid reputation in my industry - I can pick and choose. My investments I’ll manage actively for when I draw down in 15 years. I mean you could have approached this comment completely differently without calling someone naive- it only shows how your judgement is lacking. Maybe get some hobbies too, it’ll make you more interesting and more patient with others - but here’s another observation I’ve made - people who tie their time and identity to their work lack passion for life. Let that sink in.
@@blackporscheroadster-yw8hbIt's not human nature, it's the nature of *some* humans. None of us are in a position to assume how others think or operate. We are all different and I hope you find/have found what makes you truly happy.
I am in the same position, feeling work overshadows most of my life. 48 now and kids are grown but if I could do it again I would have taken a few years away to be more present during those precious years. Hope you can make it happen, good luck!
@@joe.esposito thanks buddy.
An amazing video. I retired at 60 on a state pension, became frugal and never regretted it for one moment.
isn't that quite late?
I retired 28th April 2023, so as I type this, 2.5 months ago. Up to the point of retirement my focus was solely on money, will I have enough? Now my focus is on health and time.
I cannot begin to describe the weight that was lifted from my shoulders once retired. I am sleeping better, eating better and am now actually enjoying exercise!
My thoughts are simple, if there is anyway to afford retiring now, instead of waiting "one more year", just do it.
Hi, sounds good. How old and what is in your pot?
The size of my pot is irrelevant, since our situation and expenses will be different. In terms of age, let's put it this way, it will be another few year before I can draw the state pension...
I have similar thoughts re finances, I could be so much better off if I work another couple of years but I have decided to stop 'chasing the money' and enjoy the time instead.
I’m closing in on retirement, and I'd love to move from Minnesota to a warmer climate, but home prices are ridiculous now.. do I look at other assets and wait for housing crash, or go ahead with house purchase anyways?
diversification is key to good investment strategy, consider talking to an advisor about which market sectors to focus your portfolio on
nice! once you hit a big milestone, the next comes easier, who is your advisor pleas, if you dont mind me asking?
Watch out for scammers!!
Leave America. The rest of the world, especially SE Asia, has much to offer and costs much less.
I absolutely love this video. I am 53 looking to retire at 57. I rather give up some material things to buy time. I am teaching my kids to judge each purchase as time not money. You’re trading your time to buy that item, is it worth it? When you put purchases into time it sometimes gives a different view, especially as we get older.Time and health are the most important assets in life. Our society sometimes is too centred on money. Thank you for reminding people.
Another great video James. I’m in my late 30’s and think I spend too much time trying to come up with an arbitrary number for what I might need for retirement (whenever that may be)! And the bit about parents really hit home…time is precious, use it wisely!
I’m very much in the same boat. Good luck to you🙏
Thank you for this video mate. Sometimes we are so busy down in the weeds chasing money, that we forget what is really important. This video has changed my perspective on a few things. Seriously, thank you.
I retired as early as I could manage at 57. I just turned 70 so I have had 13 years without having to go to work. I paid off mortgage money once a year to get to the point of owning my home. I also helped my kids financially when needed. My main advice is to plan your pension and retirement and reach retirement when you can. You need to sort out your health. This means weight control, exercise and managing alcohol. Two can live almost as cheaply as one. Regarding health if you are doing anything that will damage your body then you should reduce that too. Loud music = ear damage. Lots of physical stuff can wear out joints. Anyway, time to retire as soon as you can. Make sure you have hobbies. Keep your brain sharp.
I was happy in my corporate job until about 55 when I began to find things beginning to irk. Continuous reorganisations, improvement projects, more and more processes, same problems to solve time after time, etc etc. So I decided to retire at 62 spending the intervening 7 years maxing out my pension savings to take advantage of the 40% tax break. In the end I retired at 63 because of the Covid lockdown and I was working from home anyway. I also spent those years developing my social network and developing interests outside my career- mostly golf I’m afraid- so I would have a structure to life in retirement which had previously been provided by work. I’ve now been retired for 2 years and am really enjoying it. It turns out that there is more to me than the career I chose (and did reasonably well in). It’s true that the winters can drag a little, but then I can take full advantage of every single one of the lovely spring, summer and autumn days we have in our beautiful island. I’m lucky, I have good health, a loving family (although I was divorced about 15 years ago- so it’s not all been plain sailing), I’ve developed a great network of friends and I’ve (probably) saved enough money to do most things we want. If you really love your job, then by all means stay in it, but you might find that there is more to life than the 9 to 5. It’s a brave new world to discover.
Nice one !. Sounds like the path I took as well (without a divorce though). I retired at 58, early I know, but the Corporate grind and daily woke saw me run for the hills. Three older colleagues, a bit older than me, did the same, all within six months. Bliss.
Nicely put David, I can relate (except for the golf... but each to their own 😂). All the best.
Same
Oh dear - I’m starting to feel that way about work and I’m only 40!!! 😂
Best of luck in retirement - lots of inspiration here to work hard and plan, to allow you to prioritise and enjoy life 😊
I was made redundant at 59 and now work 3 days a week for a friend. The money's not great, but there's no stress like my previous job. I also get free gym membership, which l use, l cycle, walk a lot, and next year at 66 get my state pension when l will go down to 2 days a week. I believe working when retired gives you extra money, routine, social interaction, and a purpose if that's what you need. I've seen so many people retire and go downhill. Health and fitness is the biggest goal, and have a bucket list, projects to do.
Great video! The way you put time into perspective with your charts is eye opening. I retired 2 years ago at age 62 and I am loving second of it. No regrets, except that I should have done it sooner.
Totally agree with your comment about putting time into perspective. Quite shocking when you see and hear it spelled out in black and white.
This is an amazing video. Thank you for putting time into real perspective!! I'm 60 yrs old. With 6 figures invested. I was going to volunteer to do more hours in work. But I'll think I'll stay as I am . And look to do less!!
Great stuff!
57 and 1.5 years retired from a very stressful executive position. Never knew I could be this happy.
Congratulations
Good video James, I have just had my 60th birthday and am deciding whether to fully retire. A couple of thoughts on being 60... you are right it is just an arbitrary number and in many ways I have the same questions and doubts as I did at 50. Secondly, cycling... I spent my 60th riding in the French alps and then enjoying a beer with a lifelong friend, you will be suprised how you can maintain your fitness as long as you keep going. We plan on doing the same on my 70th! 🤞
Brilliant vid James, retired nearly 4 years ago at age 61 and haven’t regretted it for a second. My tip would be to work out what your basic spending needs are and make sure you have enough money to buy an annuity that meets these needs. With the rest of your funds you can either keep investing, keep saving (great interest rates currently) or use to supplement income either via annuity or income drawdown, depending on your appetite for risk. FWIW I’ve found my risk appetite has reduced as I’ve gotten older and as I’ve tried (and largely succeeded) to reduce life’s stresses (remember it is stress that will kill you in the end). Good luck everyone
Hello,
What type of annuity would provide you income in retirement? Thanks
Really appreciate the insights, and also the fact that the video edits don't come in between your talking with too many audio effects. Makes it way more watchable :)
So true. I said I would never work past 60, now 63 and still working, although I am retiring in a couple of months, just got to the point of stop worrying about the money and the future and just take it as it comes, as I always have. We'll just have to cut back a bit and think about what we purchase and purchase things we need rather than want. Still pretty scary though having worked since I was 14 if you include Saturday jobs.
I am glad I found your channel. You put things into another perspective I never thought of.
I retired aged 52, 6 years ago. I started planning this aged 45 and built a model to grasp expenditure and pension income (that I continue to maintain). My expenditure in retirement is far lower than when working and yet I have maintained my standard of living. Without doubt, this has been the best decision I’ve ever made and has enabled me to give much more time to family, friends and myself. Don’t delay - plan and retire!
Doesn't it get boring?
Best Video I have seen in my LIFE!!!...I am 54 and going to retire in 58...I will only have 20 years in my pension will is equal to like 30%, but to get my max 80% I would have to work till I am 72..SCREW THAT!!!...I will not chase the carrot. just get rid of stuff I do not need like a Car, etc!!! My daughter already said she will give me rides when I need,...Less $$$ but more Time is worth it!!
Great video James and certainly food for thought. I’m 54 and have 300k invested. No mortgage on my own home and I also own a Buy to let outright worth around 200k. So around 500k. I also have a holiday home abroad I share with my brother.
Thing is I feel now I’m working for my two kids and leaving them as much as possible. If I work another 10 years. With my contributions I’ve estimated close to 1 million. I certainly don’t need this amount but want to pass as much as possible to my kids who I don’t think will have the fortunate position to buy property like I was.
Anyone else thinking for others and not themselves?
It seems our lives are mirrored, very similar scenario.
I find this really interesting as someone early 50's and thinking about retiring next two or three years. It seems to be the done thing these days as more and more parents are working longer to make their children more comfortable. I'm guessing yours must be 20s or 30s so at what point does that support end? It used to be a case of support your children til they leave home and they get the rest when you're dead. One of my wife's colleagues was due to retire but her youngest son finished Uni and wanted to do a gap year and asked his mum not to retire for another year so he could. Amazingly she did! I'm not sure what financial lesson this has taught him but I don't think its a positive one. When I wanted something 'expensive' I used to have to save for it and those lessons have put me in a position where I can retire years before my friends, most of whom have higher paid jobs than me. Regarding the property maybe you could do a 'we'll match what you save' or 'we'll double what you save' model.
Very similar situation. 55 now - I’ve used the excellent online modelling tool and believe I have enough to stop now - really just accumulating to support grown-up children. I’m going to retire within 12 months, probably at the end of this year. A very thought provoking video - time marches on….we can’t get it back. Thank you
@@dns383 yes it's really hard. On one hand they should be living their own lives and saving their own retirement. My son 28 works hard he can't afford to buy so is renting a flat with his girlfriend, he has a low paying job so knows life is hard. He still never complains. Daughter 21 still at home. Moaning at me like a second wife :)
I think it's just knowing they will hopefully be ok with a few bob financially when i'm gone. They're Good kids and have never asked for anything from me. I'm in a decent job earning good money.
So I am working for their future as much as mine.
I made it clear to my son that once he finished Uni the major support would end. Yes I'd like to support and leave him something but work is stressful and I've been working for 32 years and will retire in 5 years at 55. You need to be a bit selfish as we only have one life. Think about your own health both physically and mentally.
Fairplay James I have been following you for a while because I'm in the situation of just turning 56yrs and looking to retire. In the next couple of months I should be made redundant as I hoped with a good package I hope. 35 yrs with Tata Steel and paying 25% into my pension for the last couple of years. James out of all of your videos this was has impressed me most, not for your usual financial expertise but for your honesty on why we should retire when possible in the best health. Many thanks James.
Thanks, Mark. I'm glad you liked it, and good luck with the redundancy!
Overall, 60% of traders think this year would favor stocks, mutual funds, and other equity-based investments, despite Treasury yields and other safer cash-like investments paying big. I’m looking for opportunities in the market that could fetch me $1m ahead of retirement by 2025.
Investing without proper guidance can lead to mistakes and losses. I've learned this from my own experience. If you're new to investing or don't have much time, it's best to get advice from an expert.
@@BoianOlenberg Inflation is gradually going to become part of us and due to that fact, any money you keep in cash or a low-interest account declines in value each year. Investing is the only way to make your money grow. Unless you have an exceptionally high income, investing is the only way most people will have enough money to retire.
@@JeffreysSuttons How can one find a verifiable financial planner? I would not mind looking up the professional who helped you. I will be retiring in two years and I might need some management on my much larger portfolio. Don't want to take any chances.
@@WaldronsSousas The beauty of MARGARET MOLLI ALVEY approach is her dual focus: while aggressively pursuing profit opportunities, she's equally tenacious about shielding investors from potential pitfalls. It's a balance few can achieve.
@@JeffreysSuttons Thank you for this tip. it was easy to find your coach. She seems proficient considering her résumé.
Thank-you, looks like an excellent series of videos that I will be watching with great interest. I'm 60, working nightshifts in a supermarket, my wife is 59, and a self employed professional artist. Our mortgage ends in about 4 years which is when I'm intending to retire. It feels like someone hit the "pause" button on my life about 28 years ago when my kids were born. My wife wouldn't see it that way. But now they've left home and got they're own lives, it's time to hit "play" and start living again. Time and money, the "big trip" to either Australia or America probably in reality us never going to happen. Retirement is a trip into realising your on the "exit" escalator. Shame my finances don't look anything like the graph at the start of the video. Everything's dwindling at the same rate.
Brilliant illustration. Having lost my parents long before their retirement I retired with modest sums at 56 and 8 month's. Lovely not to have the stress of a full time COJ. I now work 3 days but only because i enjoy it. And that's only while i still enjoy it.
That's great to hear Richard, I'm glad retirement has worked out for you!
Depends on what you mean by 'modest sums' and whether you've paid off your mortgage, and of course how much your partner has. I'm 56 but won't pay my mortgage off for another 5 years.
I’ve shared this video with several friends. Excellent visual representations of the concepts….really hits home. Keep producing great content.
Agree, agree, agree! Time is the commodity that people squander. I was presented a window, sacrificed for 18 years and retired at 50. I’d offer this though, if you retire early and your friends don’t, you won’t actually see them more. My experience is that you’ll see them less. They’re still working and their off time is still scarce. In my experience, who I thought were close friends faded very quickly due to envy. They don’t want to be around a guy who owns all his time when they’re still miserably trapped in the grind. The flip side is you’re gonna want to be around people who are also retired and have the ability to do as they please like you do.
Can’t agree more about physical fitness. Free time does not mean more time. You must take care of yourself. Cheers 🕺
Thanks for the video. I wish my mom would retire. She checks all of these boxes but still keeps going!
Very thought provoking and sobering too, thank you
Hopefully motivating too!
@@JamesShack definitely
Add another 10-20 years to the biking. I was cycling in Italy this spring with people who were 70. One of them could beat me up the hills and on the flats.
I’m 62. I’m not retired but I do work contracts. This means I work when I want and don’t work when I don’t want. I work for multiple companies (private, government, non-profits) so it’s something different all the time. Aside from the field work, I can do the work when I want, as long as it gets done by the deadline.
This degree of freedom means I’ve been acting semi-retired for about 15 years now. I’ve moved by mom in with me so I see her every day. I spend months out west visiting my sister and her kids (can work anywhere I have my laptop, including by the ocean), so have lots of days with her.
I make it work because I live simply. I don’t need a lot. Not everyone can do it if they have a family but for my circumstances it’s worked out really well, and it happened almost by accident (tried to get fulltime work but eventually realized I was doing fine on contracts and I liked the free time, so I quit worrying about fulltime and embraced the benefits).
People who are able to retire early are lucky . I have 15 months till 65 and need to look at calling it quits, my only fear is running out of funds much later, thus keen on investing. What could be the safest possible ways to invest for cashflow, in order to afford lifestyle after retirement?
consider investment planning, learning from a well experienced advisor is invaluable
That's right. I am a wife, mother of four and new grandmother, 28 years in Corporate America, retired recently at 57 after discovering the freedom investing could provide, been contributing to my portfolio since the pandemic in early 2020, and have grown a $250,000 savings account to almost 1 million, credits to my investment advisor.
Could you possibly recommend a CFA you've consulted with?
My CFA ’Annette Marie Holt’ , a renowned figure in her line of work. I recommend researching her credentials further. She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market.
Thanks for sharing this, I googled the lady you mentioned and after going through her resume, I can tell she's a pro. I wrote her and I'm waiting on her reply
You are now my favourite you tuber! How did the algorithm not put you in front of me before? That AI wants an upgrade.
I like the way you explained the 3 resources in life at the beginning. I retired early at 56, valuing my time and health over money. Many people put all the emphasis on the money. It is not 'how much' but 'is it enough' a wisdom I've always remembered.
A hundred percent agree. Being 56 with mounting health issues, I'm determined to semi retire this year. Not an easy decision to make though with our complicated finances, and addiction to very high health care professional income. I've plans for big outdoor adventures though, so better get on with it
Health is by far the most under appreciated resource.
Indeed many do not even regard health as a ®️esource.
Thank you for this. Messages we all need to hear - especially for those of us who think in terms of major sports events. Greatly appreciated. Have now subscribed.
Excellent- but sobering- video. Have been considering retiring early next year, but was worrying about all the issues you raise. This has put all my doubts into perspective and I will definitely be going. Thank you!
Dear James, thank you for the great video!
I am now 64 and have an incredibly nice job. I enjoy that every day, both from work and from colleagues.
But I also make sure that my work is so much fun. I'm the one who has to hang up the streamers every day at my job. It's not easy but it really is possible. That makes my work a party.
I have been working for more than 40 years, but I know that my last working years are the best. In a few years I will retire with a party.
I retired aged 42 and that was thirty years ago. Never looked back.... I wasn't rich, but I'd accumulated enough wealth to turn my back on the Matrix!
Today I have zero money. Well I've almost got $1000 in the bank and next Tuesday another $800 will come as my pension. My wife also gets that much. And we live like kings. Out of debt on a small farm that allows us to pretty much live as self sufficiently as we are prepared to work for.
But I've never felt richer.
very helpful. I'm 57 and was made redundant a few months ago. I am going to make a real career change to something less pressured and lower paid but with more free time for arts and crafts
Cant wait to retire. My health and fitness is absolute peak work hard at staying in top condition so when i do retire i can enjoy it to the maximum
James not denying your wisdom but some people love work and the love the journey not the end goal. My personal goal is cutting down never stopping and I love my job.
I'm nearly 40 and spent majority of my 20s and early 30s travelling and living it up. I should have been more disciplined with my spending and should have invested more and contributed more into workplace pension. Luckily I didn't get into debt during that phase. Spending what i was earning
Last 5 years I've been laser focused, putting away as much as i can in my workplace pension, bonus sacrifices, investing aggressively in my stocks and shares ISA. Still making up for lost ground.
Nothing wrong with enjoying your youth!
Ask anyone in their 50s and 60s who are travelling the world on the money they saved when not travelling in their 20s and 30s and they’ll tell you they would have rather done it when they were young
@@RobertGillontheinterweb BS. Most people in their 20s and 30s don't have much money anyway, so they slum it backpacking instead of staying in luxury hotels. The silver foxes you see in the 4-5 star hotels made their money in their 40s and 50s.
@@tancreddehauteville764 so you judge the quality of your life experience by the quality of hotel you’re staying in. 😞
@@RobertGillontheinterwebyep, another one that has a lot to learn..
Powerful content, could feel thr emotion when you were talking about your parents.....I too think about that, how much time will I spend with them.....feels like you spend 90% of your time with your parents in the first 10% of your life, when you probably don't appreciate them in the way you do later in life, and only have 10% of that time with them.
It's not always about earning loads of money, it's about 'how to be financially free without compromising precious times and personal priorities'
I fell into retirement at 58 when my position as in house IT support person was outsourced. I had a look at my situation and thought (fuckit) I have enough money and I’m still healthy that’s enough work for me. I’m 61 now and every day is Saturday!
Luck played a part in my outcome, however my advice is invest in property in a city where there is high demand and limited supply. It can be the house you live in. I later moved to the country and rented the city house out. Recently I got sick of dealing with tenants so I sold the property.
Invest while you are young. I owned my first property at 26 but you have to stick your neck out.
From then on the only trick is spend less than you earn and money will pile up. The only interest you pay should be on your mortgage. I haven’t made a car payment in 35 years. I pay no bank fees at all. Find a good tax accountant to help you make good decisions. Get rich quick schemes don’t exist and usually make someone else rich.
Over the last 10 years in my job I have seen probably 5 guys die just before retirement or a year or two into it. Made me realise to do everything possible to retire early. To work your whole life looking forward to retiring but never actually get there is the saddest thing possible..
think about this: you are not them. what if you need the money to avoid being a pauper when elderly?
@@DrSchor make good decisions so you don't have to. That's my point
I’d add friends & family to your 3 resources list. Early retirement allowed me to focus on personal relationships rather than corporate which I have found is more important than money.
Excellent video. Interestingly I’m 55 and have just retired having worked as a financial adviser for the last 30 years. Your video perfectly resonated with my own thought processes. Great job and good luck with your channel 👍
that is the definition of wishful thinking. you believe only what you wish to be true. clearly, you can't think objectively and must be failing as a financial advisor.
@@DrSchorexplain why it is wishful thinking?
Great advice and certainly why I’m planning to retire at 57 with a modest income supplemented by some part time work. The way I see it, I hopefully have another couple of decades of beating my mates up the Col du Galibier too!
With markets tumbling, inflation soaring, the Fed imposing large interest-rate hike, while treasury yields are rising rapidly-which means more red ink for portfolios this quarter. How can I profit from the current volatile market, I'm still at a crossroads deciding if to liquidate my $125k bond/stocck portfolio.
The market is volatile at this time, hence i will suggest you get yourself a financial-advisor that can provide you with entry and exit points on the shares/ETF you focus on.
very true, I started investing before the pandemic and that same year I pulled a profit of about $600k with no prior investing experience, basically all I was doing was seeking guidance to make a from a financial-advisorr, you can be passively involved with the aid of a professional.
wow ,that’s stirring! Do you mind connecting me to your advisor please. I desperately need one to diversified my portfolio.
LINDA PEREZ LEWIS
That’s my licesed Financial advisor you can easily look her up, Thank me later!
Thanks, I merely looked her up on Google and was highly impressed by her credentials; I got in touch with her because I need all the help I can get. I just set up a phone call.
Love your comments regarding #6. People these days, especially with TH-cam retirement videos assume way too much when it comes to how much people need in retirement. They mostly base their assumptions on people having mortgages, car payments and other expenses that a lot people simply don't have when they retire. They also like to set aside these ridiculous amounts for recreational spending as if everyone is going to be globetrotting throughout retirement. This is simply not the case for most people. I saw one estimate assuming that based on the individuals current salary, they would need $120k (USD) per year to live on.
Great video - I’m 40 so a way off!! But starting to think about it with my wife - you’ve convinced me to pull retirement forward!
Also, I will just say, your comment on parents really got to me… mine are in declining health and at the current way I’m going, I don’t have many days left with them…
Time to make a change - you’re so right, you get caught up in short term goals and lose sight of the big picture. 😊
I'm sorry to hear that, but I'm sure you're make the most of that remaining time. All the best, James
I know this is such a huge decision for everyone getting closer to retirement. I turned 62 at the end of 2023; i went ahead and completed and approved for early retirement. My first check is in February 2024. I work part time at the Transportation department at out local school to supplement my income and I can still make an additional $1100 a month thru my photography business. I decided to retire now instead of 67 because it’s good for me. We don’t have a house or auto payment but if we do we will work with it. I track all of my expenses to make sure I am not wasting money. If you can do it. Adjust your lifestyle a little and enjoy those senior years and try to not overthink it
If you truly hate your job sure. Part of enjoying life is the contrast between the things you have to do and the things you like to do. A lot of people retire and wither away, become very inactive