Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments

badboyzpwns OP t1_iy6ljyi wrote

Thanks! That makes sense, but why is the number 15%? Is it based on a study like the trinity study? For example, contributing 15% of 40k salary vs 15% of 150k salary, will yield signficiantly different results!

1

MikeWPhilly t1_iy6v8ju wrote

You seem to be missing that somebody with $150k salary probably spends more day to day than $40k. Generally speaking the goal is to have the same, or better, lifestyle in retirement.

1

dslpharmer t1_iy7o3up wrote

Has to do with percent of income replaced at retirement with savings, projected spending, and growth assumptions. Fidelity has an article that says the modeled it over $50,000-300,000 per year salary. This is for replacing approximately 45% of income with savings. If I retired today, SS would replace 26% of income.

Most importantly, the general rule is when you make more, you spend more. Car, convenience, house, clothes, food, entertainment, kid activities, vacations, etc. Some of that may diminish when you retire, but to replace a big chunk of income, you want big savings.

1

badboyzpwns OP t1_iy9jm3r wrote

Thanks! I saw the fidelity article now and it make sense!

1