Is that before or after tax?
When I retire there'll be no ni to pay, no mortgage, very little tax, less in travelling costs, I reckon we could easily afford to live more than comfortably on a cut of around £800 to £1k from my current wages. Certainly won't need £3k
Take the money out and put into houses or your business. but don;t think like a one man band. Build it up sell or run through your retirement.
when we retire a loaf of bread may well cost £10
that's if the government haven't increased the retirement age up to 102 lol
When making plans for pensions you will also have to factor in that you may well end up divorced so your pension pot will be reduced by at least half and you will have to find the cash to pay her out out of your pocket

Happy little soul aren't you![]()
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Daryl is right, buy houses, rent them out. Has worked out really well for my uncle.
This thread just reminds me that I should stop messing with cameras and get my first house!
) but it's not like going out and buying a new telly. Until you've actually bought your own house, lived in it for a while and maintained it (all while working a day job), then it's not quite as easy as you make it sound...
That's a defeatist attitude. You can make it happen if you put your mind to it
That'll be Net.
I like toys, travel and subsidising our kids. Well, the first two anyway.
joescrivens said:If you can't help yourself then screw you pal!![]()

That might just be the best title for a self help book ever![]()
You have a different outlook to me. I will look out ways round the situation rather than concentrate on why it's not easy.
What's wrong with that?My view on it is that it's the biggest load of tosh ever... what happens if your throw a seven 2 years after retiring after contributing for all those years? The only people who benefit are the buggers you've left behind.
This.
My dad paid into pensions for years. When he turned 50 he changed his mind. Cashed in his pension and put the money he was paying into it into property. He started small with one house, bought it derelict, done it up and rented it.
He now has 15 properties and rents them all. The rent covers the mortgages and gives him a pay packet.
But the bottom line is that he has over 2 million pounds worth of property now. He'll have a good life when he finally stops doing stuff, 64 now and showing no signs of that though :bonk:
What's wrong with that?
When I retire I plan on taking the largest lump sum I can and we'll still be more than comfortable living on the monthly payment without even considering whatever the state pension is likely to be. The lump sum can be reinvested for extra income although in all liklehood a major portion will be invested for my two sons for them in later life or whatever. If I die before my wife, she get's half of what my monthly pension income would have been if I hadn't taken a lump sum, which isn't far behind what we'll be getting anyway so she'll be ok. I won't be taking it with me but it certainly won't go to waste.
There's always the "miss-sold pensions" scandal compo to come when they've finished with this loan protection malarkey.
To be fair Joe, your Dad started that 14 years ago when loans and money were freely available. It's not so easy to do that now!
Daryl is right, buy houses, rent them out. Has worked out really well for my uncle.
This thread just reminds me that I should stop messing with cameras and get my first house!
are those figures what YOU pay or combined with your employer? Im on a good salary and have had a pensionplan in place for a long time and dont pay anywhere near that...
Well I've paid into a pension all my working life and currently pay around £450 a month with my employer paying in around £700 so that's nearly £14k per year but I am clinging onto a final salary scheme at the moment.
Pension contribution rates (for both employee and employer) vary so much from employer to employer it is difficult to directly compare.
I don't mind paying this as I view it as money i never had and i know I have a very good pension as well as providing some life insurance and a spouse / dependents pension.
I'd never have no pension - I know of a few that have no pension or other vehicle for their retirement - one colleague who is 21 said she didn't see the point in it but in 40 years time I wonder what her view will be?
£1250 a month ! No idea how old you are, but based on that you only need what went in to retire on a nice number. If you retired at 50 starting at 20 that would be over half a million.
This thread has got me looking into my company pension scheme now but I have two question. When I go on the aviva website it estimates that I want to have an income of 66% of my current income when I retire.
Is that the most common calculation? I have no idea how much money I am going to need when I want to retire. Also is it best to do the calculation on retiring at 70 instead of 65 as the government are going to change the rules anyway at some point.
New car every few years? If only I had that to worry about.... and the chap selling the 'Big issue'.
lots are reaching 90. Pension will be gone before that time, then what?