BiggerPockets Money Podcast - 492: How Much Do You NEED to Retire? It’s Less Than You’d Think
Episode Date: January 16, 2024Everyone tells you you’ll need millions to retire, let alone retire early. You hear it all over mainstream financial media, “You need FIVE million dollars” or “Three million dollars is enough..., but you have to be frugal!” Even having half a million dollars in investments seems like a lofty goal for most Americans. Are these financial “experts” just out of touch with the everyday person? And if so, is there a way to retire with less than a million dollars? Surprisingly, yes! Wes Moss, certified financial planner, money educator, and author of the best-selling book You Can Retire Sooner Than You Think, is here to show you that retirement isn’t that far away. Through some simple calculations, Wes enlightens us on how many Americans are already in the position to retire and why you don’t need many millions to live a comfortable post-work life. But that’s just the tip of this financial education iceberg. We get into a much deeper discussion with Wes about what a happy retirement really looks like and the key signs that you’ll live a satisfying retirement life. There are two main factors to a happy retirement, and if you haven’t been paying attention to them, you can almost guarantee you WON’T enjoy financial freedom when you achieve it. So, if you want a happier, healthier, wealthier, and longer retirement, stick around! In This Episode We Cover The two most crucial factors of having a happy retirement (it’s NOT money) Why you DON’T need to be a millionaire to retire or retire early The wave of “unretired” and why those over fifty-five are going back into the workforce Why eighty percent of Americans DON’T like their job and how this is hurting retirement investing The multiple streams of income you need to retire on your terms Social security, pensions, and other retirement income many Americans forget about in their calculations And So Much More! Links from the Show BiggerPockets Money Facebook Group Network with Other Investors on The Path to FIRE Through the BiggerPockets Forums Finance Review Guest Onboarding Join BiggerPockets for FREE Mindy on BiggerPockets Scott on BiggerPockets Listen to All Your Favorite BiggerPockets Podcasts in One Place Apply to Be a Guest on The Money Show Podcast Talent Search! Money Moment Bill Bengen (The Inventor of the 4% Rule) Talks Retirement, Past Crashes, and How You Can Withdraw Even More! Motley Fool: The Retirement Planning Roadmap: 401(k)s, Real Estate, Bonds & More Michael Kitces: Does the 4% Rule Hold During 2022’s Stock Market Crash? Click here to check the full show notes: https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/money-492 Interested in learning more about today's sponsors or becoming a BiggerPockets partner yourself? Email us: moneymoment@biggerpockets.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, my dear listeners, and welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast.
Today, we talk to Wes Moss about the common traits of people who are able to retire early
and the ones who are able to maintain a happy retirement.
Yeah, you're going to learn from Wes here, an expert who has worked with thousands of retirees.
And in addition to his game plan for getting to retirement, we're also going to get a deep dive
on maybe the more important work that he's done in the research that he's conducted onto what makes
retirees happy and unhappy. So lots to think about there. This is a great show. Hello, hello,
hello. My name is Mindy Jensen and with me as always is my 4% rule-loving co-host, Scott Trench.
Awesome, Mindy. Great to be here with my always banging on about the validity of that 4% rule co-host,
Mindy Jensen. That was always banging on. I love it. Oh, Scott, you're so good. Scott and I are here to make
financial independence less scary, less just for somebody else, to introduce you to every money
story because we truly believe financial freedom is attainable for everyone, no matter when or
where you're starting. That's right. Whether you want to retire early and travel the world,
go on to make big time investments in assets like real estate, start your own business, or cultivate
today the things that will take decades to bear fruit but lead to ultimate happiness in retirement,
will help you reach your financial goals and get money out of the way so you can launch yourself
towards those dreams. Scott, I am so excited to talk to West Moss today. He is fabulous and this show
is awesome and I don't want to wait another minute to bring him in. And without further ado,
let's bring in West Moss. West Moss is a seasoned financial educator and a certified financial
planner. He is the host of the podcast Retire Sooner and the longtime host of Money Matters,
a weekly call-in financial show on 95.5 WSB Atlanta's News and Talk.
Wes is also the author of four books, including bestsellers, you can retire sooner than you think, and what the happiest retirees know.
Wes, welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast.
I'm so excited to talk to you today.
Awesome to be here.
Thank you so much for having me.
Wes, you write a lot about retirement.
What got you so interested in it?
So early retirement is something that I think that I've always thought about this relationship, Mindy, between money and happiness.
So, you know, what's enough, what is enough money to be able to stop working?
And I'm always fascinated by Gallup does this.
There's a bunch of other, there's a bunch of research firms that do research around job
satisfaction.
So how much do people like working in America?
And if you look at LinkedIn, you'd think that everybody loves their job in the United States,
right?
And the reality is, as much as we.
like to say we are the best working culture, and I think we are, by the way.
Most people just don't like their work.
They hate it.
And or they could take it or leave it.
And the Gallup poll that originally opened my eyes to this was, I don't know, 15 years ago.
And they've continued to update this research.
And it's still similar to this.
But it's essentially such that of one in five people in America, so 20% do love their job.
They're totally engaged.
They're good at it.
And then three and five, Mindy, are.
They don't hate work, but they don't love it either.
They're just take it or leave it.
It's okay.
And then one in five dislike their work so much that they're trying to bring their company down.
They would like to see their company do poorly.
They'd like to see their boss get fired.
They'd like to see their co.
So think of it.
Think of how that is in the world that we live in.
80% of people don't love work.
But 100% of people want.
to get to economic freedom.
A hundred percent of us want total economic freedom.
So to me, this idea around just shaving off a year of retirement or two years or five
years for the Retire Studenter podcast and the books I've written is really about helping
that 80% of people in America just get to a financial freedom a little bit sooner than
they otherwise would have here in the United States.
People in the personal finance space mean all sorts of different things when they say retire.
What does retirement mean to you?
So I think very simply, it's economic freedom.
It's not having to work at the job that you don't love.
Okay, so it sounds like you are defining retirement as synonymous with financial independence.
Correct.
Okay.
For the most part.
Okay.
You know, the other thing to Mindy, too, that I've written more about in the last year is
unretirement.
This to me is, I discovered this.
in two different ways.
One, our mission statement for the Retire Sooner Podcasts is to help a million people retire
at least one year sooner.
I thought, oh, that's a million people one year sooner.
That'd be a million years, extra economic freedom.
And then if you look at the 55 plus civilian labor force, it dropped by about two million
people in that year and a half in the early days of COVID.
So essentially, I remember checking in with this a year after we started the podcast, I think, wow, we just, we did it.
We helped way more than a million people retire early because the civilian labor force of 55 plus dropped by almost 2 million people.
And you can make a case that obviously not all of those people retired, but they did leave the labor force for one reason or another.
And a lot of those people were what I think of pull forward people where they weren't quite ready.
to retire. But COVID kind of rocked everyone's world and they said, I was pretty close to being
able to retire. I'm just going to pull this forward a year. There are a lot of people that just
kind of said, I'm going to, I'm going to retire sooner than I maybe had planned. And then as we
sit here today, a couple years later, almost all of those people have unretired and they're back
in the labor force in the 55 plus. So there is, there's been a movement in the last year and a half
to two years of people that said, wow, maybe I retired a little bit early.
Some of it could be, some of it is that we've had massive inflation.
And people that thought they were ready for retirement weren't quite ready for prices to go up
by 20% over the course of a couple years.
And they decided to go back.
In addition, we have a really strong labor force right now.
It's a really tight labor market.
So that experience group of people, the 55 plus, have been coaxed back into the labor force because people want them to work.
And they're entering back into the labor force, this unretirement, much more on their terms as opposed to working the job that they may not have loved.
So that leads me into a question I wanted to ask here about, you said one in five Americans loves their job.
Three is indifferent.
And one in five actively hates it so much to trying to bring the company down.
Oof, interesting stat there.
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There's an interplay with this.
you keep using the word economic freedom, and the way you've used it implies your belief that it is just a broad 100% universal wish for Americans.
I've wondered in the past if as folks progress towards that journey, let's say most of the way they're getting close to this point of economic freedom, financial freedom, is there a relationship between the way they feel about their job and the gradual attainment?
of that goal. So, for example, do the one in five Americans who love their job, are they
disproportionately folks who have good savings habits, wealth, wealth, optionality to leave if
things got bad, the ability to speak up and say, no, I'm not going to take on that responsibility
or I'm not going to do it that way if you want me to work here. Is that relationship correlated
in your mind? Yeah, so say that again. So correlated in that they are, there's a group that doesn't
they do love what they're doing.
They do have good savings habits and they're not trying to run from work.
Is that where you're...
Is the fact that I hate my job, if I'm one of the Americans who hates my job, is that
directly related to the fact that I'm totally dependent on my job?
And is the fact that I love my job likely to be related to the fact that I don't really need,
I don't, I like it, but I don't need it to sustain my lifestyle.
Yeah, that's an awesome.
That's a really, I think that's a smart question.
I think that to some extent, and again, I see this not just through these gallop polls, but just in the real world.
It is, it's hard for people to land in a spot that gives them both, which is this career.
They really feel like they're contributing to the world and they're they're being paid well to do it.
That is, that's not really, it's kind of a hard thing.
I wish we could all do that, right?
And when you get out of college, your graduation speaker kind of tells you that you can do that.
It's like, go out, save the world, and you're going to follow your passion and the money's going to come.
Like, that's, A, it does happen for a fair amount of people.
And B, we want it to happen for everybody.
But it's just the reality is that's hard to land.
And then you end up with having people that they get into a career.
America's expensive.
the career's kind of paying for everything they're paying for life.
And then they kind of get, they get a little bit trapped into it.
And it's hard to jump out of it.
So I think it's a really good aspiration.
A fair amount of people can do it, 20, maybe 30% of Americans find that perfect balance between,
I really do love this and I'm making money.
But it's just not as easy as we'd like it to be.
And maybe, guys, it's because this economy evolves so quickly.
The Army of America productivity is great, but it also can quickly leave people behind.
That was going to be another question I would have here is, you know, we talk a lot about financial freedom.
I love the word term economic freedom.
You know, same thing here.
Whenever bigger pockets content or financial, you know, financial independence retire early content seems to get, you know, outside of the bubble of the financial independence community, it's immediately shot down by a horde, it seems.
of naysayers who say how ridiculous it is, how unattainable it is, how it can never get started,
how the folks that are pursuing financial independence can't seem to relate to normal people
who would never be able to possibly get ahead. You've said 100% of Americans would take economic
freedom, and I believe you, but I don't think 100% of Americans believe it is attainable or
realistic in any sense. What's your take on that problem set? It's Susie Orban's fault.
And here's why I say that.
Because Susie Orman says that you need at least $5 million to retire and you need to work till
you're at least 70.
A, very few people can even conceive saving $5 million in after tax.
After tax money, number one.
Number two, not all Americans want to work until they're 70 unless you're in that group
that really loves work.
And again, I wish we were all there, but not we as we know that not everybody's there.
lot of people, a half, two-thirds. I don't know what the exact number is. I don't know if Gallup's
totally right on that. But I know, and I can just think about the client base I've worked with
over so many years, most people, by the time they're ready to stop working, it's pretty rare
that people like, oh, I really love it. The other thing is that you get, even someone that does
love their job after 30 years of it, they're like, I've done this for 30-some years. Like,
I want to do something else. So that's the first step. And I'm, and I'm not. I'm not.
I'm joking about Susie, obviously, but the financial, whether it's Wall Street, whether it's
someone like a financial pundit that says you need X amount, it makes it seem totally unattainable,
right?
To most people say, look, oh, just get to $5 million.
Okay.
Talk to a 30-year-old about, is that really going to work?
And see how, and after a year, come back and say, are you on path to save $5 million?
How many people are able to do that?
So here's my answer to that is that the world propagates numbers that I think do seem pretty unrealistic.
Then I publish a book 10, 11 years ago, you can retire sooner than you think.
And the median value, median, not mean, but the median number to jump from the unhappy to the happy retiree camp was 500 grand.
So wait a minute, that's attainable.
Now it's only one of a couple financial things you need to do.
but think of it this way, 500 grand, pay off the mortgage, multiple streams of income.
And you can live in America.
And even to this day, now it's been 11 years, you can still make that work if you don't
have a mortgage and you live.
I see people do it every day.
I've got clients that are, I've worked with many families over the years that spend of their
monthly amount of spending is really low.
And they can, to some extent, live on that because they have a really good Social Security
payment, and they may have a little bit of a pension, and they're married, so they have two
Social Security payments. Now, I will say those numbers have gone up. If you were to adjust
that guys today for inflation, that median number looks more like $700,000 in liquid retirement savings,
not that worth, liquid retirement savings, and about $1.5 million for the average of that group.
those are those are still big numbers but they're also not i think inconceivable as if you give yourself
20 30 40 years to do it awesome so so one point one and a quarter million includes the paid off
house right it does that's a big part of it yep you know because because i was i was setting up for
a question around what is enough because i was the word that was a word used really illuminatingly
in the very early part of this interview and is that is that your definition of enough
for the median American who's looking for a comfortable retirement here.
And do you think that most people would agree with that definition of enough?
And it's tight.
No question about it.
But if 10 or 11 years ago, you had $500,000 and you had a balanced 60-40s, S&P 500 and bond
portfolio, which has been, it's been a terrible couple of years for bonds.
But that 500, using the 4% rule, so taking out 4% plus,
us inflation every year would be over $800,000 today.
So that worked over the last decade, even with the crazy inflation that we've had.
And let me do, let me just a quick math on that.
Imagine you have that million in a quarter.
Some people say that's too low.
Some say it's, I can't even get there.
That's crazy high.
At four and a half percent, and I know there's a debate around the four percent rule.
I think Dave Ramsey came out the other day and said eight percent's cool.
You make 12, inflation's four, you live on eight.
There are a lot of YouTube responses to that that I think Mindy just summed up succinctly,
the tone of many of those responses there.
I am going to throw out there.
If you have not yet read through the original Bill Bangin article in the journal of whatever from 1994,
I have a copy of that article.
Email me, Mindy at BiggerPockets.com.
I will send it to you.
It is fascinating.
You can do 4%.
8% don't bet on it.
And maybe I'll offer this up too.
Bingen had not updated his study for like 30 years or it'd been like 25 years.
And we had our team just, I just, we totally recreated it.
And the 4% rule absolutely works.
So I actually think of it as a 4% plus rule because it makes it so that, you know,
it's a little, it's a dynamic rule of thumb to follow.
and it's really it's really more like four to four and a half percent and that's a range that you
always want to come back to anyway i don't know of a more important number in all the financial
planning because it solves for all the things we're looking it solves for not running out of
money that's like kind of important it's a number one thing i can't always say number i keep saying
number one it's a super important thing it's a fear it it harkens to your allocation
says you need at least 50% in equities
because that's where you get your inflation protection.
So it also solves for that.
And then it solves for inflation.
It raises the dollar amount you're withdrawing
every single year for whatever inflation is.
So it checks all those super important boxes.
Yet we have an industry that is totally at war over the number.
Wade Fu, foul, says you can only do like two and a half percent.
Dave Ramsey says you can do eight.
No wonder everybody's so confused.
Just get an email from Mindy.
She'll walk you through the number,
the most important financial rule you need to understand in order to have the confidence
to live on the money that you saved.
I wonder what the $5 million and worked their 70 advice from Susie Ormond implies.
Was that like a 1% half a percent withdrawal rate?
And then you're working until you're 70 when you don't need to.
You probably have all this money.
and then you'll like never spend it because you're 70 and you don't have any place to go now.
Not that 70 is the end I'll be all.
I hope to still be kicking around when I'm 70.
But Wes, back to what you said, you're this 500,000, which was a few years ago and now at 700,000, that is including a paid off house.
Having a paid off house is difficult if you're constantly upgrading your house and you're constantly spending all the money that you have in your account.
But if you buy a good, solid house that's going to fit your needs forever and you don't move,
it's very easy to have a paid off house and then retire on this $500,000 that you were saying
and you can still live a comfortable life.
Can you go on extravagant vacations every single week?
No, you'll need more money, but you can have a very comfortable retirement.
Yes, you can retire.
and the people that are arguing against this, I just, I have to be nice because they're probably
listening, but I want to just shake them and be like, could you please listen to what I'm saying?
I'm saying it's possible.
Let me show you how.
I agree with the 4% rule.
I think we've talked about this at late.
We actually, Michael Kitsis, I think, is, you know, taken Bill Bagan's work and really evolved
it even further in a lot of ways with those studies.
You know, if people are going to argue about the 4% rule, I think first they're wrong.
And second, we're not going to convince them with more discussion this point. But where I think someone will argue with you, Wes, potentially, is saying is 700,000 enough at a 4% withdrawal rate, even if I've got a paid off house, right? I just did some quick math here. And 700 grand at 4% is $2,300 a month. And if 4.5% withdrawal rate is $2,600 a month, you know, could you walk us through how you'd envision this, you know, median, you know, American maybe maybe not living in one of the most expensive cities in the,
country, but, you know, in a suburb that's, you know, got a four or $500,000 house.
How do they make that work, that spending work, or at least bridge it until the time
where they can collect that Social Security?
So if you, let's do the math on the 700, which again, I think of this as a bare minimum
in liquid retirement assets.
That's number one.
Number two, we have to remember that we do need a essentially to have a paid off mortgage
because that our living expenses are ultra low.
And then the third really important piece to this is multiple streams of income.
Now, if you have no other streams of income, then that combo doesn't work.
So think of it, think of it this way.
$700,000 and $4 to quarters about $30,000 a year, right?
It doesn't sound like a ton, but it's $30,000 plus whatever inflation is over time.
That's one.
Two, Social Security one, husband, Social Security, two, wife.
Now you're talking about $3,000 a month for one, $2,000 a month for the other.
That's $36,000 a year.
then it's $24,000 a year, that's $60,000.
So people, this is the other thing that gets a bad rap.
Now, you could also say those social security numbers sound a little bit high.
I see social security numbers like this all the time for people that have had decent,
pretty good wages over time.
Put those two together, and now you've got $30,000 and $60,000,
and that's without even a pension.
Imagine you work for a utility company for 20 years or 15 years.
then you could maybe have an, and I see people that have, you know, 1,500 bucks a month.
I worked for a little while for, with a utility company.
It wasn't a lot, but I get $1,500 a month.
$30,000 from your savings, $60,000 from Social Security 1 and Social Security 2.
That's 90 a year.
To Mindy's point, you're not, or to your point, Scott, you're not maybe living extravagantly.
But if you don't, so you've got your 700 plus your social that leads to 90s,
you're going to be at a super low tax bracket by the time you get to retirement,
extraordinarily low tax bracket.
And with very minimal housing costs, if the mortgage is paid for, then that's a pretty,
that's enough to live even in America.
Now, maybe not San Francisco, maybe not New York City, but there are a lot of great places
in the United States that you could go live a really comfortable life on that.
I'm not saying it's an extravagant existence,
but it's, it's more than,
and here's the reality,
it's more than most retirees live on.
I think, like, I buy that.
I think that sounds super reasonable.
I just checked in the median household income in 2022
was 74,580 bucks.
So with a paid off house and the income streams that you just described,
you know, this should be, this is not,
I, I think that, yeah,
plenty of people listening to this going to say, no, I want more than that. That's totally fine.
But this is a very reasonable bar to set for the median American in terms of what enough is, I think.
And the next question is, you know, how realistic is it? How does somebody go about approaching that?
What's the simplest way that, you know, you would give advice to somebody to approach that?
Maybe they're starting this journey at 35, 40 years old and want to catch up. How do they get there?
I think that, Scott, that's the reality here is that as long as you give it enough time, it's
super possible. As long as you're giving it 20, 25, 30, pretty much any type of savings you put in a
calculator for 35 years at a 7% growth rate. And yes, the SP 500 has been more like 11, 11 and a half,
but let's just call it seven. You're going to get, it's not too tough to get to a million bucks
in savings if you're given it 35 years. So if you're 25, and here's a reality, most people
are not really thinking about saving all that much of 25.
To go to 65, that's 30 years.
It's a long time.
My wrath is right, 35, 45, 55, 50.
I'm sorry, that's 40 years.
That's 40 years.
So you can start at 35 and have, you still have 30 years to get to age 65.
That's a lot of time for compounding there.
Well, yeah.
And if you're starting then, you don't have to be putting away 50% of your income.
It can be a nominal part of your income that isn't.
really pinching. And I think that a lot of people don't understand that. They're like, oh, well, I've got to, you know, really live like a miser in order to be able to retire. And, and I mean, Scott, do you remember we had a talk at work once where we were just presenting this idea to our coworkers. And one of our coworkers raised her hand. And she's like, I don't want to stay for retirement right now. I'm young. I want to live. And I was like, oh, okay. I don't have any comment for that. Medium pocket. I don't have that pocket.
But the other thought is, I think back to our conversation, Mindy, when you were on the Retire
Studenter Podcast and your expertise around real estate and how you do it with buying a property,
fixing it up, selling a property, and doing that in a really constructive, methodical way over time.
I've had a lot of families I've worked with over the years that the liquid retirement savings part
of their overall plan is not the majority of it.
When I say multiple streams of income,
I take that super seriously.
It is social security number one.
It's social security number two.
So you and a spouse if you're married.
And it's obviously financially a little easier to be retired
because you're splitting costs if you have a partner for a spouse.
But then it's not just that.
There are pensions are still a real thing.
There's not a lot of 25-year-olds they're going to have.
half of them own their 60, but they're not, they're not dying, they're not extinct. They're,
they're very real. Number one, number two, a little bit of real estate income can go a really
long way. I'm not saying you need to be a land baron and have every green house on the
Monopoly board, but one rental property, two rental properties, cash flowing $1,000, $2,000 a month.
I mean, I'm not, again, we're not talking about, you know, the Empire State Building here.
But when I say multiple streams of income, that's, that is another one that can obviously be
extraordinarily powerful.
I love it.
I think that that's, that's the key is, right, is these additional streams of income.
And if you can, you know, we don't talk very much about social security and pensions here
on bigger pockets money because most, I think, of the folks listening are really thinking about
how to achieve this goal early. And, you know, Social Security is kind of that, I think that, you know,
it seems very distant to me sitting here at age 33 as an income stream. But it's super real. And we had a
big, we had a discussion about this a while back with Tom from the Motley Fool. And a great
discussion there. And look, you know, that is going to be there for this generation. It's not going to
maybe 100% all be there for the millennials, but something north of probably 65, 70% will be there.
And if you're not factoring it into the planning here, I think that's a mistake because that
absolutely will be, I think something that Americans can count on to some degree.
Scott, here's a, I'd say a broader example of that.
When I hear pension, I think federal government, I think utility worker, we're in, I'm in the
South.
So Southern Company is the giant utility here.
And if you work for them, you've got a pretty serious.
pension. But think of how many teachers there are in the United States. There are, think of how many
teachers there are in every single state. I've been working with a teacher for the last 20 years who,
she was so young. When we would talk about her pension, it seemed like it was ridiculously far off.
I just got an email two Friday nights ago. It's like 6.30 on a Friday night. And she goes,
I just, I found that I've only got like, you know, 11 months left. And I hit 30 years.
She started, teachers start early.
She started when she was like 24, 34, 44, 44, 54, 54, 54, 54 years old.
You do 30 years in Georgia.
And this is, I've looked at a lot of other states.
Texas is almost exactly the same.
You get 60% of your highest three-year salary for the rest of your life.
Add Social Security to that.
Add another Social Security to that.
I had a paid off house, pretty much game over.
And you two can be on a private island.
like Susie Ormond.
And this is, you know, this is coming from the book, you can retire sooner than you think.
It isn't coming from the book.
You can retire and do round trip cruises, luxury cruises around the world every single
day for the rest of your life.
Think about having a basic retirement and then, okay, I've cemented that.
What do we call that?
Coast-Fi.
Now I know that I can have a great basic retirement.
I don't want a basic retirement.
retirement, I think I want a little bit more. Okay, then save a little bit more. Bump that number up a little bit more.
Read my 4% rule article. Mindy at biggerpockets.com, I will send it to you and just keep going up until you have the level of
retirement that you want. Wes, you do. You've done a great job walking us through kind of the basics around enough
and, you know, how people feel about, you know, retiring and moving toward economic freedom.
but I think a huge body of your work has to deal with this concept of happy retirement.
And so can you define happy versus unhappy retirement and what you've uncovered or thought through
as it relates to that, whether it's philosophical or practical?
Yeah, I think that, and I've done this through a couple different means, guys.
I've done this through research trying to, which is really kind of informed some of these areas
that are, let's say, not exactly money-based through, I did a survey, I did my first research study back in,
call it 2013 around this and asked financial questions and lifestyle questions.
But then to separate the happy versus unhappy group, really I took the top two quintiles.
So I had five quintiles of scoring, if you will, and took quintile four and five,
the happiest group, the quintile one and two.
throughout the middle and then compared those two groups.
So some of this is just through survey data.
The other is just seeing this now in practice because I did that 11 some years ago.
And then seeing how that's played out over the last 10 plus years, I can see how it works
in practice and in real life.
So I think of that softer side of retirement guys is the one core pursuits, which is you may
not have to have this grand purpose?
I got an email from a listener that said,
Wes, I feel like when you talk about core pursuits,
you're putting too much pressure on me.
Like, you're saying these need to be your life passions.
And he said, my only life passion is my family and my wife.
And then he listed all these things he likes to do.
Like plays guitar every week.
He goes to SEC football games every weekend in the fall.
He has a band.
He plays pickleball on tennis.
He runs.
runs. I was like, dude, you got a million core pursuits. That's, that's all I'm asking.
I'm not saying you need to have, be the Dalai Lama in retirement. But having three to five things
that you, you love to chase and that you love to improve on and take up time and give you
structure, that's all we need. Those are core pursuits. So that's, that's a big part of the
retirement happiness quotient is to have three point six core pursuits. Unhappy retirees have one point nine. So
less than two, close to four. That, that to me is the first one. And then socialization and then family.
Those are the three really big pieces of, and health, which is kind of goes without saying.
But that's the softer side of retirement. That is really insightful data here.
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What does socialization mean for what you were talking about?
Is the second point there.
How does one set themselves up for success in early?
or traditional retirement.
One organized social group, at least.
So what is it?
How do you actually, what's the rubber meet the road there?
Where's the rubber meet the road?
You got to have one organized social group or more.
And my only definition for that is that it meets once a month regularly.
That's it.
And that's not, if somebody doesn't have an organized social group,
then that I think is a pretty attainable goal.
And it sets the foundation for your,
socialization. Now, of course, you can do way more than that. And I'm sure you get your listeners
like, well, I'm, I have church and Bible study, and I've got a running group and a tennis team and
my golf buddies. Like, for some people, that's no big deal. And for some people, it's like,
well, what do you mean? Like, how do I, how do I do this socialization thing? All I was, all I did was
work. And a lot of entrepreneurs are like this. Like, I made all this money. All I did was really work,
though. How do I get, how do I have friends outside of work? And work friends are cool too and they're
fine. But they don't, they're not there forever. Unless we work forever. So that is one very practical
thing that I've seen people do. It's it that absolutely works to give you a social foundation.
This is all in your book, happy, what the happiest retirees know. I believe so, guys,
but I get it confused on which book is in what? I don't even know. Okay. So you got to buy all the books,
All the books go. No, no, no. It's this book. I love it. I think this is super fascinating here. And I wonder how many of these patterns are set, not in the years leading up to retirement, but all of your adult life heading up into that point. Is that, is that right? I think of the word, I didn't use this in these books, but as I write new things about this, is that I probably miss the word cultivation. It's such a key, we all know that, like, again, we just talked about retirement. You've got to have a really long run day way to make.
it to get to the 700, to get to a million and a quarter, to get to whatever it is.
You've got to have 20, 30, 40 years.
Minimum for most people.
To some extent, it is better and more helpful to do these other areas like socialization,
like core pursuits, to cultivate them all along the way.
So you're doing them in your 30s, so important because it's harder to just kind of reset
and start when you are 60.
And you've probably know folks, maybe your listeners,
can visualize this where you have friends, you have a couple, where one of the two says,
they need to get stuff, they need to have more hobbies.
They need to have more things to do.
I do a lot of things.
I do this and I do that.
But Jim doesn't do anything.
He just likes to work and he pittles around and has only, there's only one thing that Jim
likes.
And so Jim can go get a bunch of core pursuits and he can go start being maybe social if he's
not already. But I think it's really hard if you're in your 60s and you're kind of starting this.
So I think if you're cultivating it in your 30s, knowing that it is absolutely 50% of the equation
for a happy retirement, the money side's one half, lifestyle is the other half. And yeah,
I think it's much better to cultivate them over time. Because this core pursuit and the socialization
thing are obviously interrelated, right? I mean, like what you just said is like here, here are the
socialization one group. Well, if that's your pickleball group, then
you're good. If that's what, you know, whatever the core pursuit is, there seems like a really
high overlap between those two things in my mind there. And then that leaves the family piece,
which is another one that's cultivated over a lifetime, of course. And in one of my, I think,
the most practical statistics out of that research, and I see, I see this in play over and over
and over again, is that there's something, there, we don't want, we, we want independent children. I think
The Millionaire Next Store book talked a lot about millionaires have independent kids.
Along that same theme, if you don't want your kid, you don't want your adult children to live
with you, but you want them to live near you.
And those parents that live near half their kids, so let's call it, you got four kids,
you live near two of them, and they're in the same city, let's say, or the same states.
so you can see them on a relatively frequent basis.
The happiness levels there are through the roof relative to someone that has three kids
and all three kids live in a different state.
That's not great long term for the retiree.
And it's not great.
And you don't have a ton of control over that.
But it's something that I just think that it's super important to be near your adult kids
in one way or another.
As an adult kid, not close to where.
my parents are currently living, I agree. It has changed our relationship. It's changed their
relationship with their grandkids because you're just not there to see them. I completely agree.
Mindy, here's the other thing. Is it the question I have on all of this? Is it just a statistic
or is it prescriptive? Like, can you do something about it? And the answer is on this,
this is one of the harder ones to do something about it, but it's not impossible. And I've seen
families that are, and I've seen, and I think about our family, I've got four, I'm one of four
siblings and one of my siblings, just by work and school, he was pulled from the East Coast
to the West. And once you go to California, you get like sucked in. And it's really hard to leave
because you can surf and you can snowboard it all in the same day if you really wanted to.
And if you've married somebody from there, their family's from there. And guess, guess,
what, you ain't leaving. So it's not like, it's not the parents' fault that the kids just scattered
all over the country. But I've seen, I've seen very often a family in their 60s or 70s
make the conscious decision to say, gosh, I think we really like, I thought we were going to
like Florida, but I have three kids and six grandkids and they're in Georgia. And I'm going,
I'm going back to Georgia because that, that is, that is home for me. And it's home because my
kids are still there and my grandkids are there. And that's something you can do, you can do something
about it. You can move. Yeah, it's, it's got to be a conscious decision and it has to be something that,
you know, everybody's on board with. And if you can't be by all of your kids, maybe three of them
are in, you know, a certain location or close enough that you could be by most of them. But yeah,
it was not meant to be for me and my family. And that's, you know, that's just the way it happens.
And you can pick your favorite.
Exactly. Yes. Pick your favorite kid. That always works out well. You have four kids, right, Wes? Which one's your favorite?
They're not adults yet. So I'm sure I'll have a favorite, the owner they get. Right now, they're all, they're not super. Yeah, they're still young enough that I would say I still love them equally.
Yes, yes. I love my girls equally as well. Scott only has one so he can have a favorite right now.
Yeah, I got a lot of, I got a lot of work to do in pursuit of retirement here and getting first those kids and then those grandkids and then, you know.
Your baby's one.
You can't have grandkids for a while.
Got a lot of cultivation to do.
Okay, Wes, this has been so much fun.
I really appreciate your time.
Do you have any final thoughts for our listeners?
I would just say that the theme today, and I know that this is a theme for you guys,
but it's this attainability that it's not impossible to get to, whether it's financial
freedom or economic freedom, but to me, that's the term that resonates.
and all of it's hard and it's all and it takes a long time.
And if you look at the wealth statistics in America,
you can just, they're pretty dower.
You know, you can easily, if you just scary retirement statistics and it's 60% of people
have not, you know, I have one year of retirement savings, you know,
so you hear a lot of scary statistics.
And I think it knocks people down before they
get started very often. I can't even, I can't even win at this game, so I'm not even going to
start the race. And I think the work that you are doing and we're trying to do as educators,
as we're trying to make it more attainable for more people. It'll never be for everybody.
But if we can take it from only 5% of people can really do this to 25% of people that can
do this, I think that's a good thing for the world.
I'm sorry, I know we just asked for a rapid question, but I do have one more here.
You mentioned that there was the cultivation of court pursuits, the socialization, the family,
did wealth, the number end up anywhere on the list and how far down was it?
Yeah, okay.
So the answer was yes, but then it plateaued.
It absolutely was.
It was a, there was more, there was absolutely more happiness, whether it was income,
whether it was savings, liquid retirement savings.
happiness levels rose, the more income rose and the more overall liquid savings rose.
However, at a certain point, there was diminishing marginal happiness per new dollars.
That's a fascinating topic, and that's what I found in my research.
However, there's research out of Wharton that says that's not true.
And happiness levels just keep going up and up and up and up and up the more money we have.
It sounds like it's going to be like it's the new 4%
rule. Nobody will argue it forever. There's no perfect answer. I just think that it's really just
about getting to a foundational number. And then beyond that, it doesn't really increase your happiness.
More money, more happiness. I guess we'll be having to do more bigger pockets money here for a long
time than if that research proves out. Well, and that's why, and that's why let me, and I want to
clarify this too, to me, those happy versus unhappy that that inflection point, that's that that
that median of 700,000.
And I think it's, in happiness may not be the perfect word for that.
It may just be, I've got enough financial foundation to not be, I'm not worried,
I can make things work forever.
I think that's an inflection point.
Awesome.
Wes, where can people find out more about you and read these books and gets access to some
of the data and the research that you've uncovered in your awesome career here?
So just retire sooner team.com.
Retire sooner team.
Thank you so much.
Really appreciate it.
Really enjoyed the discussion.
and thanks for all the work you do.
Yeah, thank you guys.
Really, it's so fun to be on a podcast.
Thank you guys.
Thank you, Wes.
This was super, super fun.
I always love talking to you.
And we will talk to you soon.
Thanks, Mindy.
Holy cat, Scott.
That was Wes, and that was a fantastic episode.
I loved hearing from him.
I loved hearing the tips for what makes somebody happy.
Absolutely agree 100% to sum it up.
You need to have something to do in retirement.
And if you don't,
are going to have a very miserable and rather short retirement because can I be very blunt,
Scott? You're going to die. Right you are, Mindy. Yeah, on that particularly dark note,
here are some things that I took away from it, though, right? Is, you know, we've talked extensively
about the game plan to get there. I love his definition of enough, right? I mean, every retirement
and every journey to financial freedom begins with defining the goalposts and setting achievable
goals and getting them, knocking those out, and not having them move and become more and more and
more and more and more over time. And I thought his definition of enough was very carefully
constructed, very thoughtful and very powerful. Now, an early retiree, someone in their 30s, 40s,
or maybe early 50s, probably going to need to be a little bit, bump those numbers up a little
bit because Social Security is so far away that they're going to need other income streams
and will probably be uncomfortable with a diminishing net worth along that journey to
traditional retirement age. But the principles are really helpful there. And I, like I mentioned earlier,
I got even more out of the what makes you happy in retirement discussion than I did that out of the
game plan piece. And lots to think about there in terms of cultivating. You know, I'm glad we had
that last question about a total net worth because there is a point to accumulating a little bit more.
And there is additional happiness probably that comes with having the more optionality with a
bigger pile of money at the end of the day. But more important.
than that are the core pursuits, are the family dynamics that you start in your 20s, 30s, growing up,
40s, 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, the friends in the social circles that you cultivate.
And, you know, that threw some light on the fact that, you know, I'm glad I played more video games
rather than going outside, growing up, because that is a lifetime hobby.
And rugby, while I loved it very much, it's probably not something I'm able to do in a retirement,
whether earlier traditional.
So what about you, Mindy?
What did you learn from today's conversation?
Well, I'm definitely not going to be playing rugby when I'm 70.
But if you do, Scott, you should play a 70 and up rugby league.
I bet there's other ruggers out there that are wanting to play.
You know, there's sevens rugby, so 70s.
I can think like that.
Yeah.
There you go.
I could not agree more with his core pursuits.
Yes, you need something to do in your retirement.
And I have seen this, I like that he says core pursuits.
I have seen this in Carl's early retirement where he is pursuing everything.
He wants to do this and this and this and this and this.
And he is busier now than he ever was when he had an actual job and, you know, figure it out now what
it is that you love to do because Carl has started to, he's been retired for five years.
he is starting to figure out what he likes to do and what he doesn't like to do.
But it's been a process.
And he could have been paying attention to this a little bit sooner, but he was so focused
on the end goal of retiring early that he didn't, he knew he had to have something to do in
retirement, but he didn't really focus on core pursuits.
So, you know, just like you've got a bucket list, think about your retirement bucket list.
What are the things that you want to spend your days doing?
I just think that there's
there's not enough thought given to actually what you're going to be doing after retirement,
especially in the early retirement community.
So think about how you're going to be spending your days more so than just collecting the money.
Yeah, running to something rather than away from something, right?
Exactly.
Oh, wow.
Thanks, Scott.
Sucinct is his middle name.
All right, Scott, should we get out of here?
Let's do it.
That wraps up this episode of the Bigger Pockets Money podcast.
He is Scott Sucinct Trench, and I am Mindy, not Sucinct Jensen, saying, see your roundhound.
If you enjoyed today's episode, please give us a five-star review on Spotify or Apple.
And if you're looking for even more money content, feel free to visit our YouTube channel at
YouTube.com slash Bigger Pockets Money.
Bigger Pockets Money was created by Mindy Jensen and Scott Trench, produced by Kaelin Bennett,
editing by Exodus Media, copywriting by Nate Weintraub.
Lastly, a big thank you to the Bigger Pockets team for making this show possible.
