Tag Archives: Extreme Frugal

Say goodbye to 9 to 5 working life: Real life success story on early retirement

Hello readers, today’s post has been contributed by Amy Nickson (at Working Moms Word) sharing an early retirement success story and tips she learned. Please take a look at her site and provide feedback to her posts.  She will certainly appreciate the support.

Say Goodbye to 9 to 5 Working Life

Say goodbye to 9 to 5 working lifeThere’s nothing better than having enough time to do whatever you want. But, it’s almost impossible unless you’re lucky enough to get billions of dollars from your parents or grandparents. Sometimes the 9 to 5 office life makes you crazy. But, “where there is a will there is a way”. Yes it’s tough but it’s not impossible. You may get ample time to enjoy your life in your own way once you go for “early retirement”. But, you need to be determined and work hard to make it possible.

Here is a success story of Mr. and Mrs. Armstrong who achieved early retirement at the age of 45.

How I met them

A few years back, I had no practical knowledge about personal finances. I wanted to learn more about it. Thus, I started the small financial consultancy. One day, I displayed an advertisement “Share your financial success story and win prizes” on the front door of my consultancy office. My main motive was to learn some practical lessons from real people. One month later Mr. and Mrs. Armstrong knocked my office door.

The couple apologized for being so late as they were out of town. The wonderful looking couple told me that “It’s been 2 years since we retired early. Now our age is 47 and we won financial freedom at the age of 45. We met in college, fallen in love, and then got married”.

Mr. Armstrong was a civil engineer and Mrs. Armstrong was a part-time teacher in a college. They graduated from the same university with zero student loan debt. They dated each other and fell in love. They were very compatible and soon started a live-in relationship.

Their parents helped them to complete their studies without any financial hassles. Mrs. Armstrong got a scholarship due to her good rank and worked as a part-time teacher to meet other expenses. After completion of his studies, Mr. Armstrong got a good job and started earning a good amount of money and Mrs. Armstrong continued her same job.

During that time they had to manage their rent and other costs. So they worked hard and soon bought a house. After 2 years of courtship they got married.

They had a mortgage and other monthly bills. Soon they realized frugal living is the key to saving money. They took baby steps toward extreme frugality. It helped them to pay off the mortgage earlier.

Mr. Armstrong had to travel often for official purposes and Mrs. Armstrong didn’t want him to continue the same job anymore. This is because their busy life became an obstacle between them. Mrs. Armstrong said, “There’s no fun left in our marriage. Absolutely no time for personal life!” Both of them wanted to leave their jobs to enjoy life in their own way.

Thus, they set financial independence as their goal for their life. They were in their early 30s and continued with frugal living.

They hardly visited restaurants, they prioritized to save 75% of their income each month. They said “We optimized each expense so not to break our budget”. Their pretty good income and saving helped to pay off the mortgage and they started saving more money.

They shared more secrets for winning an early retirement at the age of 45

The couple said, “we set our goals first, we analyzed every expense and allocated money for them” and “We followed our monthly budget”. They agreed that maintaining a frugal lifestyle is tough, but it helps to save more money every time. Here are some tips to minimize your working life and maximize your golden age.

Tips to win an early retirement

The couple said you should start soon for winning an early retirement. Because if you start planning for retirement at the age of 40 then it’s already late.

  1. Make a proper plan

At first, write down your plan to build your financial security for post-retirement life. Remember, you need to take proper action to make your early retirement possible. It won’t happen magically. So make a financial goal and set the age when you want to retire. This way you can focus on your goal and make each and every decision purposefully.

  1. Prepare a budget

Check your bank statements on a regular basis and put all expenses into a category, like debt repayment, travel expenses, food and household so on. Calculate every month’s average expenditure per category to figure out how you are presently spending your money. Thus, you can track your monthly expenses. After this, deduct the average monthly expenses from your net monthly income. Now look at the amount you have saved and look for other ways in which you might increase that amount.

  1.  Reduce unnecessary expenses

Mr. Armstrong said, people with high paid jobs are still working at their age of 50 because they all are reckless spenders. So, if you want to achieve financial security early, then you should focus on saving, no matter how much is your annual income. So, try to uncover those unnecessary expenditures. You may be surprised to look at the amount you’re spending by going to the movies every week or how frequently you are eating a lavish dinner in an expensive restaurant. There’s no point in living in a bigger house than you need. Try to buy or rent a modest apartment, according to the size of your family. It would be wise on your part to reduce these unnecessary expenses and save for your forthcoming retirement days.

The couple marked some mistakes that can delay your retirement planning

You need to be very clear about your dreams. If you’re planning for early retirement without knowing all the advantages and disadvantages, then it will be your biggest mistake. It is very important to research thoroughly before making any decisions.

  1. Not re-allocating your excess finances

If you have some extra money, then use the money to get out of debt or other payments (if any). You can also use the amount that you save from your net worth to pay your mortgage. Remember, the more you reduce your expenditures, the quicker you’ll be able to pay off your bills. If your debts are cleared, you’ll be able to save more money for your retirement days.

  1. Not living in the right place

Mrs. Armstrong suggested that, if you’re living in a big city, then it’s quite normal that even a cup of coffee is much costlier than a smaller town. You should think about relocation if you want to save more money for the future. It’s not possible to maintain a frugal life in an expensive place even if you want. So, it will be a good decision to relocate to a smaller town to stretch your retirement savings.

  1. Not consulting with a financial planner

A consultant always has some better insight than you. So, if you’re planning for early retirement, then it is advisable to sit with a financial planner to judge if the plan is suitable for you. They might have some tricks that can help you to achieve your dream faster.

Conclusion

The whole discussion was for 3 hours. They won some goodies and I won some real life financial lessons. The couple travels a lot. They rent a portion of their house to earn money. They grow their own veggies in their yard as well. Lastly, they told me “make sure you’re saving a good amount when you’re young. Making wise investment decisions is very important to grow the money as well. Because without adequate financial support, financial independence is not possible”.

Extending my thanks to Amy, this is the Leisure Freak site’s first contributed post.

Author bio- Amy Nickson started the Working Moms Word site  in loving memory of her mom – sharing thoughts and opinion to help single parents, child, working moms.

Common Mans Journey to Early Retirement

My Real Life Early Retirement Success Story

My life voyage to become Leisure Freak Tommy could easily be called the Common Mans Journey to Early Retirement. Although I have provided my post-retirement details and what has been a very positive experience living a passion-driven retire early and often lifestyle I have felt uncomfortable discussing details of how I got to my first early retirement. However I have had a change of heart.

One of the knocks that early retirement and financial independence sites/blogs get is that the only advice for the common person to reach early retirement is to adopt extreme frugality and save 50% to 75% of your income.  Doing so is difficult for some to contemplate if you aren’t making a six figure income or close to one.

My thought now is that detailing my journey will show that someone with less than a six figure income, a home buyer, and a parent can set a realistic plan and still find their way to early retirement. So I pulled my Social Security Statement to dump the official wage numbers to help with this article (Numbers will be rounded up/down).

What is early retirement anyway?

I call early retirement as being before the minimum age of 62 when you can apply for early Social Security benefits here in the U.S.

As to what retirement is itself I can’t help but take another shot at the retirement traditionalists and say that the absence of needing to work defines retirement, not never working again.

I only bring any of these defining details up because many early retirement sites/blogs speak of reaching early retirement in their 30s and 40s. That can be a tall task for some on the lower end of the salary curve. It took me until age 51 for my first retirement and I still consider that a very early retirement. So does anyone who is still in their 50s wondering how they will ever retire at any age.

Here is my success story where I achieved early retirement at the age of 51

My Life as an independent adult begins

I grew up low-income so maybe that was an advantage. You know, having lower financial expectations and having the skill to have a fun and an enjoyable life without much money.

I graduated from high school in 1976, married my high school sweetheart in 1977, and we bought our first home (a small starter home) which was new construction in 1978 using a FHA 30 year loan. We did all the interior paint work on the home for down payment assistance. Presto-Bingo, I was a homeowner at the age of 19 because my wife insisted we get out of the apartment life.

I loved the apartment’s low rent to income percentage but it’s a good thing she was insistent. At this time my bride was still attending Community College and working part-time which covered her school costs.

My salary working for a Bank’s operation’s center as a clerk in 1977 was $7200 a year, $600 a month. Our one bedroom apartment on the less than good side of town was $155 a month or roughly 26% of my income so not bad. Although we did have our primary car stolen from the parking lot which was a total bummer.

At the age of 19 a mortgage begins. It took 1/2 my income.

My income in 1978 was $7800 a year, now $650 a month and we moved into the new starter home. We paid $32,800 and now had a $308 monthly payment. That equates now to  47% of my before tax income. At this time retirement saving was nowhere on our radar. My wife graduated from Community College and started working full-time also making around $650 a month.

We started making a home, putting in the landscaping, buying furniture, curtains, saving a little money and living a basic debt-free life  other than the mortgage.

1965 VW

Our primary car (yes previously stolen, later recovered minus motor, new motor installed) was a 1965 VW Bug. We traveled all over the western US and had a blast. Imagine, no air conditioning and little if any heat in the winter. Crazy kids!

My starting a long Telecommunications Career.

I started my career in an entry-level position in late 1978 at the age of 20 as a Customer Service Rep making $167.50 a week ($8710 a year). I have a pay-stub from then showing I took home $330 a payday. It is framed along with my last rat race paycheck.

A year later (1979) I got a raise and earned $9950 for the year with overtime. I was doing great but at that time there was never a mention of 401K or retirement saving in our world. The company did have a pension plan if you could last 30 years.

In 1980 we decided to start our family. My wife initially worked part-time after our son was born but once our daughter came in 1983 we decided it best for her to stay home with the kids.

In 1983 when I was 25 years old my income was $23,200 which is more than twice what I made when I started due to my moving to a semi-skilled technical position. That job came with a slightly higher salary because I had to work nights adding a 10% differential. There was also a lot of overtime. My house payment was still in the low $300s which shows how inflation protection is a benefit of home ownership.

In 1985 our third child was born. I was still a semi-skilled tech and working a second job to make ends meet. My income for 1985 was $29,400. I worked a second job in one way or another for 13 years.

Age 27 – Ground Zero for my 401K

In 1985 I started contributing to this 401K thingy I had heard something about. It was ground zero for my retirement savings. I was age 27. We had two fund choices. A guaranteed cash interest account or my employer’s company stock. The company matched 66% of the first 6% contributed with their company stock. I started with the 6% contribution rate and tried to increase each year with my raises.

It was 1990 when my wife started working part-time again when our youngest started kindergarten. My 1990 total income was $32,000 and I was now on my way to maxing out my 401K contributions. In 1990 the maximum was just under $8000 which was 25% of my before tax income.

Promoted to fully skilled technical technician.

In 1992 after completing my engineering course work (two-year course of study through Ma Bell) I finally made fully skilled tech and with my second job that year I made $36,700. I was now 34 years old. We had accumulated $16,000 in credit card debt over the years while my wife wasn’t working which averages to < $2500 debt a year. That total revolving debt amount figures to be 44% of my now yearly salary. In today’s dollars that percentage of credit card debt to salary would still be considered devastating.

We had always had a frugal lifestyle and budget and I was diverting every extra penny to debt pay-off but still maxing out my 401k contributions. Slow and steady wins the race. In hindsight I believe I should have dropped my 401K savings rate back to 6% and kept debt under better control but the thought was we would pay it back once my wife returned to work.

Patience pays off on Common Mans Journey to Early Retirement

Promoted to Engineer but with a catch.

In 1995 I was offered an engineer promotion but I had to relocate to Colorado from our home and the home of our extended family in Utah. My job was going there so staying in Utah meant I was facing layoff or at best getting a clerical position and huge pay cut to start over again.

We took the deal and my engineer income in 1995 was $44000. My retirement savings strategy was limited to maxing out my 401K which was about $9000 a year. That was still pretty good as it worked out to be 20% of income.

Sold our First Home and Bought Another

We sold the first and only home for $85,000 and paid off the rest of our debt. We then plopped $30,000 down on our second and still current home that we paid $157,000. There was a huge difference in home prices between Utah and Colorado. Going from selling for $85,000 to paying $157,000 was a huge financial bite. My house payment was now $1185 a month even with buying down the mortgage points to get it at 8% interest.

My wife took a part-time job as a bank teller in town. Our priority was for her to find a job where she could stay close to the kid’s schools. I was still just maxing out my 401K and living financially responsibly.

Promoted to Lead Engineer but there were cracks in the career dream.

There had been incremental raises but in 1998 I was promoted to Lead Engineer. I was 40 years old with 18, 15, and 13-year-old teenagers at home. My income ended up at $68000 which included a bonus that year. I was really loving what I was doing but I was seeing a lack of life balance and a stressful responsibility load. My job duties had me traveling the country 12 weeks a year (25%) and all of it was wearing on me. I made it to the top but it wasn’t so shiny anymore.

I decided there has to be something more to life than this.

In 1998 I decided that I wanted to retire early and sought financial advice. There was the internet but it didn’t have information yet like there is today. I settled on a CFP (Certified Financial Planner) who was totally with me on my plans and I set forth on my 10 year strategic retire early plan. In 1998 my 401k balance was sitting around $100,000.

Cutting expenses and saving more.

My plan had me doing more than maxing out my 401K which then was $10,000 a year. I kept to my plan and continued to save through the market ups and downs in my 401K and newly opened Roth IRAs. I also continued to receive salary increases and when I retired in 2009 at the age of 51, eleven years after I got serious about early retirement I was making a bit under 6 figures in salary.

The last few years as an engineer I had saved $30000 to $35000 a year. I took a lump-sum payout of what was left of my raided and diminished pension and rolled it over into an IRA. I have details about my pension decisions on my How I Fund My Retirement page.

My Pension Wasn’t Really Worth It

I am not really sure that the amount I received with the pension buy-out was worth it. Worth the 31 years of suppressed salary, suppressed opportunity, interstate relocation, and being golden-handcuffed to a company that went to hell because of a bad merger. With today’s 401K and IRA investment options and all the information available I believe people have a better chance of creating a successful early retirement plan.

My wife and I had split our budgets long ago. Since I made more than she did I paid for almost everything. The budget has her paying for groceries, anything she wants to buy for herself, and her gasoline. She didn’t retire in 2009 when I did. She was still saving to fund her own retirement expenses for her soon but later retirement. Once I retired the budget arrangement was kept. She joined me in early retirement a couple of years later.

The early retirement message here in this long article.

Hopefully I have shown how I didn’t make a blazing salary. I married, raised three kids, and still retired early. If anything I had a few things going against me.

  • No four-year degree.
  • Married young at age 18.
  • Started having children at the young age of 22.
  • Took on a high amount of credit card debt to support our early family decisions.

I also want to show that even if you aren’t making good money today and can only save a small percentage of income doesn’t mean you will never get there. I didn’t start maxing out my 401k until I was 32 years old. But the early smaller investment rate on my lower salary added up to make a good start.

Patience is a skill that will help make it all happen.

I had no idea where my career would end up until I was already working over 15 years. It would have been totally unrealistic for me to think I could achieve early retirement too much earlier than I did with our decision to have a family and working through the tech-bubble burst and the great recession. Even without that bad stuff that happened my salary couldn’t support much more saving than it did. I also paid for my kid’s education and my two daughter’s weddings.

Certainly had we decided for my wife to continue working full-time and we saved her salary things may have escalated faster but I am happy with how things worked out. We lived the best life we could, making the best decisions for our family.

Maybe retiring at age 51 isn’t as sexy or awe provoking as someone who pulled it off in their 30s or 40s but it is totally awesome to me and has been well worth everything it took to get here. The key is not wasting your money on stuff that doesn’t really add happiness to your life. That boring “frugal” word is key to pulling it off.

My final comments for anyone wanting their own early retirement success story:

  • Live your life
  • Set a smart-frugal and balanced budget. One that is sustainable where you don’t feel like you are living a deprived life. Challenge your frugal threshold and always reassess it to find savings.
  • Pay off debt and avoid debt.
  • Start saving early and increase the percentage of your income saved over the years as your income increases. You just never know where your career will take you or what career you will end up in.
  • Set realistic goals in measurable increments over set time-frames so that you will stay the course and you can track progress.

So, is mine a real life early retirement success story? I believe it is.

Do you have an early retirement plan and date set?

Is your plan realistic?

Extreme Frugal Life to Retire Early?

Does it take living an Extreme Frugal Life to Retire Early? I believe there is no one plan or way for everyone to retire early. There are many sites and early retirement based articles. People who detail how they were able to retire early. Or articles providing advice on ways to reach your early retirement goals.

An article I read recently on Yahoo Finance was about people who successfully retired in their 30s by practicing what many consider an extreme frugal lifestyle. Based on what was expressed by many of those who commented on the article, the subjects of the article have retired to a lifestyle that would not be enjoyable. I am paraphrasing as some comments were a bit more negative.

I am not sure why articles about anyone who details THEIR successful early retirement strategies brings out some haters in the commenting world but I think people should read about their methods and take from it what will work for them.

There was a point made in the article which I feel is totally valid about figuring out what really makes you happy and living that life. That life shouldn’t be defined by stuff. I am sure that the frugal lifestyle that they live doesn’t feel deprived or extremely frugal to them at all.

Certainly anyone trying to accomplish early retirement should figure out what their idea of a life will cost. If you are aggressively saving for retirement you are probably already living that life. Obviously living an Extreme Frugal Life to Retire Early isn’t for everyone.

The definition of extreme frugality is different for everyone too as we all have our own thresholds of what that is. However it is a fact that the smaller your lifestyle expense footprint is, the less it will take in savings/investment money to support an early retirement. Everything has tradeoffs. I can see how living an extreme frugal lifestyle would certainly kick-start your savings. Maybe one could live that lifestyle for a predetermined period of time to pay off debts that are in the way of early retirement. A strategy of depriving oneself temporarily for a short time until financial goals are met. That would certainly be a valid strategy.

Did I Live an Extreme Frugal Life to Retire Early?

So how does Leisure Freak Tommy live in early retirement? I haven’t always lived below my means. In the early years when starting out and having 3 children I didn’t make enough to support us fully once my wife stopped working outside the home. Even with my working a second part-time job. I had enough to pay the monthly bills but any living costs above that ended up on a credit card. There were no emergency funds or vacation accounts.

We did have to live a somewhat extreme frugal life to keep expenses as close to income as possible. You do learn to be more self-sufficient. Learning how to repair things yourself, restrict going out, shopping primarily during sales and using coupons. Even though something was used when we bought it, it was still new to us. Most of the people I knew lived the same way. As salaries increased and the kids became older we really didn’t increase our lifestyle as it was time to pay off all of those debts and start saving more. Eventually there was a little more give in our budget, debts were all paid off, and we ramped up saving.

Some might say that my current lifestyle budget is a frugal lifestyle. It doesn’t feel that way to me, it’s just my lifestyle. I still have extended basic cable and I did keep my hot rod truck and sports car in retirement. I find enjoyment in my automotive hobbies. It’s my trade-off and accounted for in my budget. No different and possibly far less expensive than being a golfer. I would like to make this point. Being frugal is the easiest way to early retirement as it frees up more money for saving and then of course takes less to fund your retirement.

What Needs to be Done Frugally to Retire Early:

  • Determine what YOUR ideal retirement looks like and save, invest, and work just long enough to fund that life.
  • Find that sweet spot where you are living responsibly, below your means, and live it before you retire.
  • Try not to go into early retirement feeling like you are living a deprived life or one that doesn’t fit your vision of what your retired lifestyle should be.
  • Research and see what others have done to successfully retire early and take the parts of their strategies that works for you.
  • If your freedom is worth some extreme frugality then make that decision and go into it without feeling deprived.

So, is it worth it to you to live what others may consider an extreme frugal Life to Retire Early?