HACKER Q&A
📣 WORMS_EAT_WORMS

How old are you and how much do you have saved for retirement?


How old are you and how much do you have saved for retirement?


  👤 xpWr7r1ZeX Accepted Answer ✓
Early 40s - dual income household with 2 kids - $3.5M-$4M USD living in an urban suburb. includes investments, house (paid off) and retirement - Started as a software engineer and slowly moved up seniority - no crazy high salaries, no Faang, no startup equity, cash outs or anything like that. Significant Other does not work in tech and has slowly moved up the ladder job wise as well.

In our 30's we made sure to live a comfortable lifestyle and not work like crazy. In general, we have always spent less that others who make the same, and save / invest pragmatically IMO.

Presently, while we do have periods of hard work, we believe in enjoying life as you go vs. waiting to retire - we take time off often and make sure we spend quality time together and with family / siblings / parents.

Who knows how long we'll be around and who knows how long kids, siblings and parents will be around - and from experience and observation, you never know when personal tragedy may strike.


👤 pelagicAustral
I'm like 34 and I think I'm worth like £12k. No kids, no waifu, no gf.

I started really late in life but I hope to build a house next year, already got the land and I think its going to be brilliant, after that I'll just continue to work, pay my mortgage, have a nice holiday every few years, drink a few beers and then expect to die alone, just like everyone else, since the beginning of time.

I do care to have that cushion-fund to allow me to get over hard times, other than that I think having death insurance is wise so you can pay for your own gravestone and maybe have an Elvis impersonator sing Amazing Grace. Which is kind of like an odd idea since I tell people they're 'not invited to my funeral' as much as I can.

In the end, it doesn't matter... as long as you've got enough for the odd BBQ with friends, the staycation, the nice steak dinner, laughs and help a friend or family here and there... Enjoy life folks, remember, you can end up in a grave with a million bucks in your bank account any single day of the lord...


👤 VirusNewbie
I'm 39, and have about ~700k in equity on my primary residence (conservative estimate), and my wife and I have about 700k in various investments/savings accounts, split evenly between retirement accounts and non retirement accounts.

Most of my money came from saving. Never worked for a FAANG or had startup equity hit, but I was doing software professionally at 17 and have saved a chunk almost every year since then.

While I could have afforded an apartment in my early/mid twenties, I ended up living with roommates and saving, then later buying a condo in early 2009.

Then I rented a room out. Always bought used furniture, found deals on cars (I did drive entry level luxury cars), was very careful about splurging on technology or entertainment. I did probably spend too much at bars and whatnot though.

So some of my net worth is due to good timing in RE, but a lot was due to working hard (enough) in my early-mid twenties that I was able to get a decent war chest and then invest it.


👤 retirement32
Age:32

Networth: $3.5m USD

——

Most of my networth came from investing inheritance and gifts from family. I didn’t separate their contributions from my person ones unfortunately, but I suspect on my own, I’d be at around $800k NW. I have received about $1M in gifts/inheritance that has appreciated.

I also add about $100k/yr to my savings from my employment.

This situation has made me pro-“Tax the rich”.


👤 dyingkneepad
34. My net worth is negative. I don't even know in which country I'll be retiring. Moving from a "currency challenged" country to the US in my 30s meant all the money I saved during all my life became pretty much worthless, I could use to all to buy maybe a car in the US. I don't know how much coming back to it will be a possibility due to my kids starting to develop roots here. They may not want to go back once I'm in retirement age, and I probably won't want to stay away from them and grandkids.

👤 culopatin
Wow everyone that’s posted has some very unique situation going on. Only a few are the normal grind.

Late 20s, about 90k NW. 7 years ago I had about $70 of my own. About 50k of that is my 401k. 5 figure salary in IT but great benefits +pension. However I think I’d kill myself staying here so I might not get to enjoy that.

I plan to retire in South America or Eastern Europe since their food and culture match what I like the most. The US is definitely not the place to retire for me.

I rent, I have a dog, a girlfriend in grad school and I race cars. I build everything myself so the most I’ve spent in one shot is 2K in a turbo and 600 on a welder. Overall I’d say I spent 10k on the car, so not bad (trying to justify myself lol).

I think I’m pretty frugal but I end up spending money on a lot of little things for racing and such. But I don’t have an 80in tv or the latest MacBook. I run Mac on a $300 Thinkpad X1. We cook every night and we buy at Costco or Aldi. We lowered our beef consumption and we drink Kirkland Malbec for $7 (but to me it’s on par with a $20 wine).

Anyway, that’s how I’ve been doing it, low risk, low return, no gifts, no inheritance, no company stock.


👤 giantg2
If you feel like your behind when looking at these other comments (like I did), this tells you the (woefully low) averages as well as how much you should have saved at each age.

https://www.sofi.com/learn/content/average-retirement-saving...


👤 deanmoriarty
35. $3.5M liquid and $4M illiquid pre IPO stock from a previous employer. Started from $0 and got it by working in tech/finance as a software engineer and investing in VTSAX.

👤 admissionsguy
Early 30s, nothing at all and I plan to live the next 4 years off basic student assistance.

The whole notion of retirement has never made sense to me. I remember when I was 15-ish people said I would understand once I grew up, but nope, it still doesn’t make any sense.

I have spent maybe 48 months working so far. I can bill about 20k a month when I do work. But it’s such a waste of lifetime to do it, I never work more than absolutely necessary.


👤 ixacto
220k in Roth, early 30s. Should be about 5-15MM USD in the late 2050s with an inflation adjusted rate of return of ~8% and an annual contribution of about $6000, also increasing annually (math works).

This should take me way beyond the point at which the marginal utility of money tapers off. It's really not that difficult to get wealthy(ish) in this country if you think ahead a few decades, but most people are not going to be able to do this. The secret was getting a decent employer match, and living with my parents for a few years to save >100% of my income.


👤 randomopining
29.

401k - about 60k. Don't really care about the 401k much, can't touch it for a long time, but ill take the match.

Debt - none

HSA - 9k

Investments - nearly 300k total. mostly crypto, stocks, and about 20% is cash (should probably throw that in too).

No car. No house. No family.


👤 endisneigh
what's the point of this question other than dick measuring? age isn't really a relevant variable as people have had different opportunities, born in different situations, etc.

👤 retirementhway
24 years old, NW is ~300K. That's about 30k in cash, 200k invested into VTI and VT, and 70k in 401k.

I achieved this by becoming a FAANG software engineer right out of college. By my projections, and assuming no major world events occur to knock my plans off course, I should be a millionaire by 28/29 and will be able to retire by my mid/late 30s. However, the more and more I work, the more I realize that I really enjoy what I do, so we will see what happens.


👤 max_hammer
35. Total saving of approx €20,000

I won't be able to retire. :)


👤 steve_taylor
Mid-40s. Married with 2 kids. 240K AUD in forced retirement savings. No house.

👤 theandrewbailey
Early 30s, low 6 figures in 401k. On track for a few million by 65-70.

👤 brailsafe
Nearing 30, nothing.

👤 the__alchemist
35. $800K USD

👤 eigengrau5150
Early 40s. I could retire now if I wanted to, but I keep working because if I'm going to dick around with computers all day I might as well get paid for it.