Doberman wrote:I am a procrastinator cubed and want to pass on some advice I wish I had followed. Saving just $5/day at the end of 10 yrs amounts to $29,000, after 20 yrs $105k, after 40 yrs over $800,000.
Those numbers are based on investing your savings at a modest 5% per year - Not hard to do, but if you were in the stock market with it all the whole time (over the past 40 years, say) then your $800K would easily be 5 million or more . . . . probably LOTS more, especially if you bought Microsoft or some of the others early on
You can still do well, even if you start much later. After getting out of the Air Force at 20, I had basically no savings (but I did manage to have a paid-for house, cars and everything else - No debt is the
big secret to saving money) and when I went to work in a civil service position, I stuck the minimum into the 'Thrift Savings Plan' and let it grow, first with all of it in government bonds and later with half of it in the stock market. I had saved and grown it to $19K when I retired after just 7 years and that was in 1994. Now, without adding another dime (can't when you're not working . . . . they won't let you) it's now grown to $75K
Once you pass 55, you can stick huge amounts into your 401K (if you're still working) and that builds up pretty fast. My wife makes a paltry $21K per year and she puts $14K of that into her 401K and then we are allowed to put up to $5K each into an individual IRA, so that grows pretty fast as well. We ran into a snag last year though because with my military retirement not being 'earned income' and her putting all but $7K of her salary into her 401K, we were only allowed to add $7K into our IRA's - You gotta have $10K in earned income before you can stash the same amount into your IRA's
At any rate, we've managed to get a sizeable nestegg stashed into tax free investments over the past 5 or 6 years. We've deposited about $100K and it's now worth over $150K and growing - Nice thing is, it keeps growing even when you quit adding to it
Don