Approx. 100K Home Equity, Owe 225K Mortgage Balance.
< 1K credit card debt, paid off every month. Both cars paid off. No student loan or any other debt. Emergency Fund: 26K. Diversified Retirement Assets (90% stocks): 75K (401K, 403B, ROTH, & Trad. IRA Total). 529 College Plan: 18K.
Wife has company pension, but still contributes 20% of salary
I contribute 10% to 401K and 4K to ROTH. We both have Term Life Insurance policies.
Doug M 2:38 pm on August 25, 2010
You’re way ahead of the average, of course, because your finances are headed in the positive direction. The average person is in debt. No debt other than your mortgage is perfect. You’re socking away 15% or so of your income — great.
I see nothing to quibble about here. You don’t say how old your kids are, but if you’re planning to put them through college, you should plan on working that long. After that, it’s just a question of whether or not you *want* to work — my guess is that you’ll be financially set.
Here’s an easy rule of thumb to track your progress — I call it the FTI (for "Forget This Index" — when it reaches 1000, you can walk into your manager’s office and say "Forget This!"):
Age * Net Worth / Yearly Expenses
Age is your average age
Net Worth includes everything, including home equity and pension balances
Yearly Expenses doesn’t include payroll taxes or investments
You’re at 35 * 219k / 55k or so — I’m guessing on your expenses, based on your description. That’s already at 139, which is great for age 35. It’ll continue to go up as you age and as your portfolio grows faster than inflation.
When your expenses drop (kids finish college), you might be all set! Pay off the home to lower expenses further, cut your income down as well, remove your itemized deductions and take advantage of the standard deduction, pay next to nothing in taxes, and enjoy the rest of your lives!
Good luck,
Doug
astatine 2:38 pm on August 25, 2010
Looks excellent. If I could I’d up the 10% to the 401K. Pls dont make the mistake we made in moving some money to our kids accounts (UGMA) when they were young to take advantage of their lower tax rate. The money becomes theirs with no strings attached … The 529 direction you’ve gone is so much better – we belatedly went with a prepaid plain where you buy future credits at today’s prices.
The only other thing we have is disability insurance with a 6 month wait period to lower the premium (ie., only for real emergencies).
People are reading:
How am I doing financially, how am i doing financially for my age, how we are doinging fininally, how well am i doing financially, how to i compare financially at 40, How do I compare to others my age with their total investments, how do i compare financially, how are you doing this year finacially, how are we doing financially free, how are we doing financially, how am i doing financially against others my age, how well am I doing financially?