There is the 4% rule, popular in the FIRE movement (Financially Independent, Retire Early). It is a rule of thumb of how much you can withdraw from your portfolio per year, taking into account future returns and a 30-year retirement horizon.
So, roughly, will you get by with $40,000/year? If so... maybe you could?
Even within the same country, if you live in a big city versus countryside the cost of living is vastly different. So your milage may vary.
No. Definitely not with a family in the US.
I tried "retiring" for a year about 6 years ago, and living off the income of my digital products. I realized it is more exciting to be building.
I won't. While monetary benefits are just one way of seeing work, I just love working. And I don't think I'll be happy without doing what I love. So retirement isn't my cup of coffee. :)
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@emmanuelonuoha not exactly. If you know how to build a custom financial pipeline to put the money into it and make it grow, you can continue to work but the definition of that work will change. Maybe before you were working for a paycheck but now you have the financial freedom and you can work on projects close to your heart without the end result being monetary.
Not sure. Depending upon your life style you might or might not. But If you can make some really awesome investments you might. But its a bit of luck TBH
Are we talking about 1m liquid with no other assets (liquid or otherwise).
Presume no other assets are in play and we've got a way to make 4-8% a year (market is stable and you're diversified enough)
Take home pre tax: 40-80k
After Tax/ take home (Vancouver BC) 30k - 58k
No kids / partner / dependants in this scenario
Rent (average): 2300/month = $27600
Food: 500/month = 6k
= $33600 already
In a bad market year you'll be dipping into that principle / making next year a little harder. I guess it depends on your run rate and how long you anticipate living but I don't see it as a sustainable retirement plan if you're retiring early.
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