If you’ve been fantasizing about chucking it all and retiring in your 40s, then it can take some serious planning, money, soul searching—really, all of the above. Let’s see if it’s realistic to achieve your retirement fantasies and, if not, learn what’s possible.
Is It Possible To Retire At 40?
To start, whether you can retire at 40 depends on how you define “retirement.” The traditional definition of retirement for our parents and grandparents was to permanently and totally disconnect from the paid workforce. Using this definition, here are a few ways to retire at 40:
- Have a boatload of money
- Marry someone with a boatload of money
- Be fanatical and disciplined about managing your income, saving, and spending in your 20s and 30s, and then continue managing your spending in retirement.
Nowadays, however, people are defining retirement differently, with the possibility of some type of paid work, at least in the early years of retirement. The modern definition of retirement can mean a few things:
- Having free time to pursue your interests
- Not being tied to full-time work
- Financial independence
It leaves open the possibility of working part time at a job you enjoy.
Whether you use the traditional or modern definition of retirement, you’ll need to balance the common-sense formula for retirement security:
I > E, or income greater than expenses.
How Much Do You Need To Save To Retire At 40?
One serious challenge is that you won’t be eligible for Social Security or pensions at age 40. Instead, you’ll need to rely exclusively on your investments and paid work to generate sufficient regular cashflow, paid indefinitely, to cover your living expenses.
One way to generate cashflow from investments is to spend just the interest and dividends and preserve the principal. In today’s environment, the rate of return from dividend-paying stocks and bonds could range from 2% per year to 5% per year. Using these rates, if you need an annual income of $100,000 per year, you’d need $5 million in savings if your investments earn 2% per year or $2 million if your savings earn 5% per year.
Another possibility would be to use the 4% rule to determine your annual withdrawal amount. In this case, you’d need $2.5 million in savings to generate that amount.
In addition to any money you’d receive from investments, you could also supplement income with part-time paid work, if that’s necessary to pay all your living expenses.
What Should Your Spending/Budget Look Like?
The short and obvious answer is that your total budget for living expenses should be less than your retirement income, with a margin for surprises. As a result, you’ll want to prepare a budget for your retirement living expenses before you retire to determine whether you can afford to stop working full time. Be sure to estimate the expenses that might drop when you retire as well as those that might increase.
The largest items in most people’s living expenses are housing and transportation. These costs represent the best targets if you need to reduce your living expenses to fit your retirement income. To lower your housing expenses, you could relocate to a less expensive area, find a smaller, less expensive home to buy or rent, or both. For transportation, you could consider eliminating one of your family cars, relying more on public transportation, or drive a used car with higher gas mileage.
One serious challenge regarding expenses in retirement is medical insurance. If you’ve been covered by a plan at work and now you need to buy individual insurance on the insurance exchanges, your medical insurance premiums could increase substantially.
For example, the website ehealthinsurance.com shows that a 40-year-old could pay at least $500 per month per person on health insurance, and often more. And these plans typically have annual deductibles ranging from $2,000 to $7,500 per year. An important part of your retirement budget will be to shop for the type of medical insurance you’d prefer and learn the amount of premiums you’ll pay.
To afford retirement in your 40s and beyond, most people will need to be resourceful and creative to spend the least amount of money to meet their needs and still be happy with their life.
One More Challenge
If you can really manage to retire at age 40, you won’t be earning much income from Social Security once you begin drawing benefits in your 60s. As a result, you’ll need to understand the impact on your finances once you reach your 60s and build sufficient investments to support the rest of your life. This is particularly important if you need to work part time in your 40s and 50s to make ends meet: It’s inevitable that you’ll reach an age when you’re no longer able or willing to work. This can be another reason to preserve your investment principal until your 60s.
Who Can Consider A Retirement Goal Of 40?
If you’re single or married without children, you’ll more likely be able to retire at 40 if you do all the hard work described here to analyze and manage your finances. If you have dependent children, retiring early might be very difficult, if not impossible. It will all depend on your financial status and how well you can manage the common-sense formula for retirement security described above.
If you can make the numbers work out and are willing to fit your living expenses within your retirement cashflow, you have a chance at retiring at 40.
What Are Some Tips To Work Towards Retirement At 40?
Many people might prepare the analyses described here and learn that it’s just not realistic to retire at 40. In this case, what steps can you take to make your life better and feel more like you’re retired?
Think about the reasons you want to retire and look for other ways to realize these benefits. For example, can you find a way to do more of the work you enjoy and less of the work you don’t? Can you reduce your hours somewhat to free up time to enjoy your interests?
Even if you determine that you can’t afford to retire at age 40, and if you go through the steps described here, then you’ll gain a better understanding of how to build a financially secure retirement. By putting plans in place now, maybe you can figure out how to retire at 50, which is still far earlier than most people.
Retiring at 40 isn’t for the faint hearted! You’ll need to do a lot of work to make it financially sustainable for several decades, but the effort you make will be worth it.
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