Our way is not the "RIGHT" way or perfect for anyone else. I'm merely sharing my thoughts on the topic.
We have 3 different methods:
Sharebuilders/For fun- We have been buying stocks together via sharebuilder in a for fun type of capacity. We haven't sold any over the past few years but we've seen an 8% growth so far in our purchases.
DH's company does stock options instead of a 401K and quarterly cash bonuses.
- We take the stock
- We take the quarterly cash bonus and I set aside $100 per month into a Roth IRA in his name to max out the annual contribution limit. You can deposit $5K without penalties for 2010 (I believe you have until April 1 to do this as well). A Roth account uses after tax dollars, but you do not pay taxes on the earnings if you do not cash in early. Since we are just starting out our tax bracket is much lower than we expect it to be when we reach retirement age, and we are looking forward to reaping those benefits in the future. We have found we like mutual funds that are target date based (these become more conservative as the target date approaches......we can afford to go after more aggressive funds when we are younger with bounceback time).
- For the first 9 months of 2010 we deposited 6% into my account to get the 6% company match.
- For the last 3 months we upped it to 10% just because we had extra money in the budget and thought we should shuffle it toward retirement.
- I check the box for my quarterly bonus to have retirement deductions as well since we count that as free money in our budget and usually put them into the savings accounts.
- My company annouced today that as an added bonus for 2010 they will take the total employee contribution for 2010 and will add a 25% of that total into our retirement accounts as a kicker for a good year.
- While the added 25% retirement bonus contribution hasn't completely cleared yet I decided to review our 401K's. So far we have enough money saved for 2 years worth at our current salaries.
DH and I are trying to evaluate every purchase we make now so that we can live worry free in the future. I find the different money articles on MSN, Yahoo, CNN, etc a little overwhelming when they talk all gloom and doom if you don't have 1 million dollars saved for retirement you will have to go back to work etc. DH and I have expenses of about $35,000 per year but that includes rent, student loans, and a car payment. When we retire we will have a house and it will be paid off or we will not retire. As far as cars- we have 2 cars now with 1 payment, we will most likely only have 1 car during retirement it is less insurance, licensing fees, and upkeep.
As always email me if you have questions.
You and DH are doing great at your young ages. I am applauding you. It doesn't much matter how you save for retirement but that you do it. I am a baby boomer and so many of my generation are nearing retirement and they only thought about saving when they turned 55-60. They are going to be working a lot longer because they didn't plan.
ReplyDeleteYou guys will be so well prepared. Don't worry about what all these sites say. Just figure out approximately how many years you will have in retirement( I know that is a hard one- but guess and guess high), how much your expenses will be, and you will need that many years times your expenses. You will be able to estimate more closely when you are almost retired and then you will see that your plans are all coming true.
Thanks Precious for the continued encouragement! Definitely helps to keep things in prospective. :) We decided to continue to contribute as much as we can now to max out our allowed contributions. My parents favorite saying is "Time is your best friend with retirement, start early and you'll reap the rewards."
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