BiggerPockets Money Podcast - Finance Friday: FI by 40? Make These Career and Investment Moves Now
Episode Date: October 25, 2024Everyone wants to become “work-optional” at some point. Having enough money in investments and the bank would allow you to choose the job you love most, whether that’s running your own business,... working part-time, or today’s guest, Travis’ dream, becoming a mountain biking guide. With a solid salary, dual income, and no plans for kids, he and his wife are on the fast track to FIRE, but can they get there by his goal of forty years old? Travis’ wife may have an option to get a significant salary bump, allowing them to travel the country while she works, and Travis stays making money from his computer. But, even this may not be enough to get them to the “work optional by forty” goal they had set out for themselves. Scott and Mindy believe they need a financial “oomph” to get them over the edge, but what’s the next best move? Should he stop his retirement account contributions to have more cash to invest for early retirement? Should he perform a live-in flip to make more money on the side while working his job? Would a side hustle or part-time job bridge the investing gap between where they are and where they need to be? If you’re stuck feeling like you can’t get to FI fast enough, this episode is for YOU! In This Episode We Cover How to fast-track your FIRE and become work optional in under ten years House hacking and why it’s one of the best ways to lower expenses and build wealth Live in flipping and how to turn your next home purchase into a money-making investment Whether you should stop investing or double down on your retirement accounts when shooting for early retirement Roth conversion ladders, HSAs (health savings accounts), and how to access retirement funds even earlier Increasing your income by job hopping and leveling up the skills that’ll make you more And So Much More! Links from the Show Mindy on BiggerPockets Scott on BiggerPockets Listen to All Your Favorite BiggerPockets Podcasts in One Place Join BiggerPockets for FREE Email Mindy: Mindy@biggerpockets.com Email Scott: Scott@biggerpockets.com BiggerPockets Money Facebook Group cFIREsim How to Access Retirement Funds Early Support Today’s Show Sponsor, Connect Invest, the Alternative Way to Earn Passive Income Through Real Estate Grab the Book “First-Time Home Buyer” Property Manager Finder Finance Friday: How to Get to Early Retirement Even Faster (00:00) Intro (01:07) Goal: FI by 40! (03:13) Money Snapshot (04:14) Work Optionality! (05:50) Stay at His Job? (15:00) Traveling to Make More Money (20:38) Stop Investing in 401(k)? (31:13) Live in Flipping (42:39) Can Travis Hit FI by 40? Check out more resources from this show on BiggerPockets.com and https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/money-575 Interested in learning more about today’s sponsors or becoming a BiggerPockets partner yourself? Email advertise@biggerpockets.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Today's Finance Friday guest is looking to hit financial independence in seven years at the age of 40.
But could his timeline be fast-tracked to retire even earlier with some slight changes to his investment strategy?
Let's see what's possible today.
Before we get into Travis's finances, we want to thank our sponsor.
This episode is brought to you by Connect Invest, Real Estate Investing, simplified and within your reach.
Now back to the show.
Hello, hello, hello, and welcome to the Bigger Pockets MoneyPod.
My name is Mindy Jensen, and with me, as always, is my blueberry-loving co-host, Scott Trench.
Mindy, I don't know how you always produce such great intros here.
Bigger Pockets has a goal of creating one million millionaires.
You're in the right place if you want to get your financial house in order because we truly believe financial freedom is attainable for everyone, no matter when or where you're starting.
Today, we're going to discuss if Travis is on track to reach 5 by 40, what to do when you're at a crossroads with investing, what could fast track Travis's financial journey,
And how can we generate more income? Travis, super excited to welcome you to Bigger Pockets Money
today. Thank you so much for being here. Thanks for having me. I'm really excited to be here.
So, Travis, let's jump into your money story really quick. What does your journey with money look like?
I really have Bigger Pockets to thank for my money journey because it all started just before I went
to buy my first house. I stumbled upon the first-time homebuyer book from Bigger Pockets.
and it just opened so many doors for me, open my eyes.
I learned a ton.
And that was really where my money story started because it wasn't until I read that book
that I actually was able to learn what I had and where I could go.
So that was really only maybe two and a half years ago that I picked that up and read that.
Awesome, yeah.
I love that book, but I can ever remember what it's about.
Who wrote that book, Scott?
Do we know?
Oh, that Mindy and I co-wrote that book. So thank you for the plug, Travis.
Well, Travis, could you give us a little bit of background on how you kind of got, you know, after you kind of read that book and how have things gone the last two and a half years and, you know, to get us to this point?
Yeah, things have gone really well. So after reading the book, my wife and I had a better plan for the house we wanted to buy and what we want to do with it.
And then we also, after that learned so much more about index funds, retirement accounts.
It just kind of ran with all of it.
So in the last two and a half years, things have been really well for us.
We really focusing on financial independence.
We bought that first house.
We're doing the house hack.
And things are going really well.
Yay, I love it.
What is your retirement goal?
Yeah.
So right now my retirement goal is to be work optional by age 40.
So I know financial independence oftentimes is, you know, truly not working at all.
And that's not really what my wife and I want.
So we chose the age of 40 because it was a nice round number, I think, to get there.
And it was really only then that we would kind of decide what work optional actually look like for us.
And let's remind our listeners, how old are you right now?
33.
33.
Okay.
Let's take a quick peek at your numbers.
I see income of $208,000.
Nice.
That's both you and your partner.
expenses of $8336 a month.
The income was annual, not monthly, although boy, I'd like to talk to you about changing jobs
if it was.
Debts of $7,000.
And then your investments, I see $20,000 in cash, $196,000 in a 401k, $18,000 in an HSA,
45 in a Roth, $80,000 in a brokerage, negative $7,000 in credit cards, which means you
have a credit card debt.
But since that matches your debt load, we're going to talk about that in a minute.
And a primary mortgage of $380,000.
What is that interest rate that you have on that mortgage?
6.3%.
So that was a purchase after June of 2022.
That stinks.
But that's also like that's not horrible considering how high it did get up to.
And your retirement goals are work optional.
I love that phrasing.
Work optional in seven years.
Do you like your job?
Not really, no.
It's hard to say that, but it is the truth.
I don't really have a lot of passion for my work,
and I don't feel that it makes a whole lot of difference
or helps a lot of people.
So I like my coworkers,
and I obviously like my salary,
but the actual work itself is not that great.
Okay.
Is there something else you want to do?
Because you said work optional instead of,
early retirement. Yeah. So for me personally, two of my biggest hobbies are mountain biking and
gardening. And so a work optional setup for me could be teaching or guiding mountain biking and maybe
doing something with gardening as a side business or a small business or working at a farm here in the
local area, maybe part time. So doing both of those things part time. That would be work that I
definitely would enjoy more than what I currently am doing.
So is your goal in seven years to be financially independent or another flavor of fai like
Coast FI or Lean FI?
I think the goal really is true financial independence to where if the money from the kind of part-time
jobs was almost zero, that we could fall back on just true financial independence.
So financially, that is the goal.
But as far as continuing to work, having no job at all is not the goal.
goal. Okay. So how could Scott and I help you today? I'm here to really ask for, you know,
if you think I am on track or if there are any things I can do that I'm not seeing that would help
me for sure reach my goal or maybe even speed up my goal to get to that financial independent,
that work optional stage. I spend so much time getting to where we are now and learning so much
and making some money moves to get where we are that I am sort of like stuck in what I see. And I think a
fresh set of eyes or some experienced opinion would really help kind of give me some ideas or at
least reassure me that we're on the right path. Just a couple of observations that I have here is,
you know, one, you're in a great income. You're saving and investing a lot, $91,000 a year.
But your expenses are also fairly high relative to your current net worth in terms of retirement.
So if I just do some simple math, I see $8,300 in monthly spend, $8,300 times 12 times 25.
gets you $2.5 million. You need $2.5 million in assets in order to retire on the 4% rule with your
current numbers. Have you done that math before? Have you ever boiled it up to that level?
Yeah. And the actual expenses per year of living expenses, part of that number is more like $72,000 a
year. So what is included in some of my expenses are investments to or contributions to a Roth account,
contribution to the brokerage account.
So if I were to stop those and roll that down, truly living expenses is more like
72,000 a year.
I think that comes out to about $1.8 million for the 25X or the 4% rule.
And then, you know, I think there's something to boil down in Mindy's question there
that I want to, you know, just push a little harder on here because the fact that you don't
like your job, and it's a good job, it's a very good job.
It earns about $100,000 a year, but it's not an incredible job that is, you know, from an income perspective at this point.
I think that for me, you know, that makes me question or want to start the discussion around,
is there something active that you can begin doing in real estate or in business to some degree outside of that in the near term that can provide some of those benefits a little earlier and give you that optionality sooner than what you're doing?
Because in another observation that I'm seeing in your overall profile here is that that $91,000
in investments is heavily coming from tax advantaged accounts like the 401K and HSA, which can be
done around that.
But if you're going to go that route, you're going to have very little liquidity until
you start setting up some sort of withdrawal mechanism from those 401ks.
and I worry that you're on a path into a trap over the next seven, 10 years where you'll
become a millionaire, but it'll be hard to access that with that career.
Like, how's that sound?
Is that any reaction to that observation or that thought process?
Yeah, that is something I have thought about.
Most of our investments are in the 401ks or the Roth IRAs and they're tied up in those.
And I have done some research on like the Step 72 or the Roth conversion ladders.
It's something I've thought about.
And that's kind of why I'm here as well is to find a way to maybe increase the taxable account, the brokerage account.
So we don't have to be locked into some strategic tax advantage withdrawal strategy.
But I guess I'll follow up with that and say it's hard to get away from the 401K investing, the Roth investing, HSA investing, because the tax advantages right now are so good.
and it's so easy to just park the money there that I, that's where I'm at kind of this crossroads of
like, do we pull back for any particular reason and do I give up those tax advantages now to have
more flexibility in the future? All right. We need to take a break to pay some of our own bills and
celebrate the sponsors who make Bigger Pockets money possible. And when we're back, Mindy and I will
discuss how on track you are to meet your goal of retiring in seven years, Travis.
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Welcome back to the show.
That's going to be the multi-million dollar question here.
I think as we go through this, and I think, you know, it comes down to how much belief do you have in your job and career?
Because if you like, and the reason I think that that's a crux question or the first place I want to probe is if you think your career has big upside on that front, then and that income is going to go up, then that makes a lot of sense to do to continue doing the strategy that you're doing right now.
but if you're not passionate about it, don't like it and are feeling stuck, you know you won't
get to where you want to be in seven years with this approach, right?
Because I can just do the math right now.
You're investing $91,000 a year.
That's $637.
How do I do?
What am I doing with my math here?
91 times seven is going to be $637,000 in aggregate contributions to this on top of your $400,000
current network.
you're not going to get quite to where you want to be at age 40 unless you get a lot of help
from your investment portfolio and the market booms on that front. And that's all going to be
in those retirement accounts. But if you think that income is going to go up and the career is
going to accelerate pretty dramatically for you, then that becomes the kicker. And that number is
much higher. I don't really see a huge acceleration in the career or in the salary over, let's say,
the next seven years. It's not non-existent. It's going to stay stagnant. But to say that I can stay in
my current career with my current company and maybe double my income to something that's really
substantial, I don't really have a belief in that. But I could see staying and having it rise a bit,
but nothing groundbreaking. Is there any opportunity for additional education without a huge expense
that can help you get to the next level at your company or going into a contractor role
or even taking like a part-time additional job in this same field or similar field?
It could be a possibility.
I think maybe with some certifications sort of like non-traditional college schooling,
teaching and certifications, there could be a possibility to get that and then maybe career hop.
It's one thing I've thought about in the past is doing something like that to really up the salary.
It's not something I've really dove into, but I think that there is a possibility to get a larger increase in salary from something like that versus just going for a promotion in my current career or my current company.
Yeah, we've spoken with several people who have job hopped their way to doubling their salary.
And the bottom line is companies have more new hire budget than they do retention budget.
So that could be something to look into that doesn't, it doesn't necessarily mean you're going to double your salary.
But if you can get a nice bump and kind of do the same thing, that could be something that could help propel you further, closer to financial independence.
I misspoke earlier.
So I actually ran the numbers just now on this.
I apologize. You starting with a $400,000 current net worth, you're adding $91,000 a year.
And if you average 7% returns over the next seven years, you will get to $1.5 million by the end of that time period.
So you're pretty darn close with that. Now, we've got to adjust for inflation.
There's probably puts and takes. You're not quite there. But you're pretty darn. You're much closer than my initial incorrect math suggested on that front.
So maybe even modest career growth would actually help get you there.
Sorry to interrupt there, Mindy.
I just was obsessing the numbers for a second.
I'm glad you did because I like those numbers better.
And remember, he's still going to work.
He's just not going to work at this career.
He's going to go do mountain biking.
I have no idea what that pays.
But even if it brings in half or a quarter of your annual spending,
then that changes.
how much you need. And your partner has a job. Does she also, does she enjoy her job?
Does she want to continue that? Or is she looking for seven years and out as well?
Oh, yeah. You can definitely Wi-Fi at seven years based on this. That seems very high probability.
Yeah. My wife, she does enjoy her job. She's a physical therapist and she really enjoys her
current role, her current company, and her career in general. And that is really kind of a saving
grace for both of us in terms of reaching five, because we are on board together to reach his goal.
And that actually might be the perfect segue to kind of answering this whole career hopping,
slightly increasing the salary to meet the seven-year goal, is that my wife does have the opportunity
to start traveling in her role rather than working at a, uh,
clinic in our hometown. And traveling would increase her salary by about $20,000 to $30,000 a year
and come with a few other benefits. And so that's one thing we're actually weighing right now
is that do we do that as sort of a salary boost and a way to kind of pursue FI on the road,
doing some more traveling and travel hacking while working at the same time. So that it's not something
we've decided on yet.
How far away would she be from you?
We would most likely be traveling together.
So I can work remotely.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, I work remotely.
So it would be kind of all around the country that would be 12 weeks for each job.
And then you take another contract for another 12 weeks.
And you would Airbnb your house, right?
Yeah.
So we currently house hack two out of the three rooms in the house, three bed, two bath house.
And we would find a tenant for our current.
room, that third room. And then we would, you know, obviously be renting a place on the road.
Okay. And that would increase your savings and your income, which would continue to accelerate this.
Do you want to do that? Does that sound fun to do? It does. There are some downsides, though.
So we, being in Asheville, North Carolina, we just survived Hurricane Helene. And I could only
imagine the stress level if I was not home when the hurricane hit. So there's some downside to
traveling and that now you're a remote landlord of the house hack. You're not here at the house to
kind of maintain or deal with things. There's a lot of logistics in moving, traveling. There's a lot of
logistics in the taxes for a traveling physical therapist. So it really is something we're
on the fence about because there's so many ups and downs to it. But I think we're leading to
meaning towards doing it, just maybe not immediately.
Yeah, I would try it out.
Yeah, I think that sounds super reasonable.
And, you know, for what it's worth, like, I think those are very reasonable puts and takes.
There's no right answer on this.
But I don't think you should overweight the managing remotely piece.
Managing remotely can get you into trouble if you're buying out of state in Ohio and don't
know what you're doing from someplace.
But if this is your house and you're setting things up and finding the tenants, then
yeah, you'll have the occasional pain in the rear, but it's one property that you know super well,
and I think you'll be reasonably successful with it with a couple of pains in the rear.
That will probably be well worth it, would be my guess.
So you can come back on in a year or two and tell me how very wrong that is on that.
But that would be, I wouldn't be that worried about managing one property that you house hacked.
The two rooms that you're renting out right now are those long-term rentals or are those
Airbnb rentals. They are long-term rentals, so we currently have a tenant each room that's on a one-year
lease. Would either of them wish to do a little bit of property management for you? Like turning over
the Airbnb or managing and making sure that the cleaner comes to turn over the Airbnb part of it for
you? Potentially, I haven't proposed it yet, but that is something we thought about as well,
maybe them making a little bit of side income or reducing the rent for a little bit of work in
kind of doing some of that management. So yeah, that is an option for sure. I would probably
not pay any of the tenants to do any management work. I would probably find the tenant myself,
place them, and then manage the property remotely. This is not a, you know, what's going to, you know,
if there's a turnover event or a major problem, you fly back. You work remote anyways and go deal with
the problem around it. But what's most likely going to happen is there's going to be minor maintenance
issues. You call the plumber. They come out and fix it. So you're really going to give one of the
tenants at the job of managing that. I would just do it myself in this particular instance,
especially since these are 12 weeks stints. And if it's not working out, you just end the 12 week stint.
And you have pain for three months and come back. I don't think you're going to have a major
management issue. If you had a portfolio of 10 properties, then I would
hire a property manager or figure something else out. But this is one property with three roommates
in it. Very, very standard management practice there. Yeah, totally. I totally understand.
And that extra income could go into your aftertax brokerage account as opposed to, you know,
the 401k or whatever. Now, would your wife have a 401k through the travel company or does that go
away? She would, yeah. That would still exist and we would still, she would still be maxing out her
401k. Okay. Well, I think we discovered, I think we answered the question of should your wife change her job.
Yeah, I would. Because if she doesn't like it, she could always go and get a position again.
I mean, as I recall correctly, physical therapists are in demand. Yeah, absolutely. That is something
we've talked about is that she has a good position right now. But they're really a dime a dozen
out here because it's a really in demand career field. Stay tuned after one final break to hear what investment
vehicles might be a good fit for Travis's goals and financial timeline right after this.
Tax season is one of the only times all year when most people actually look at their full financial
picture, including income, spending, savings, investments, the whole thing. And if you're like most
folks, it can be a little eye-opening. That's why I like Monarch. It helps you see exactly where
your money is going and more importantly where your tax refund can make the biggest impact.
Because the goal isn't just to look backward. It's to actually make progress. Simplify your
finances with Monarch. Monarch is the all-in-one personal finance tool designed to
make your life easier. It brings your entire financial life, including budgeting, accounts and
investments, net worth, and future planning together in one dashboard on your phone or your
laptop. Feel aware and in control of your finances this tax season and get 50% off your Monarch
subscription with the code pockets. What I personally like is that Monarch keeps you focused on achieving,
not just tracking. You can see your budgets, debt payoff, savings goals, and net worth all in one
place. So every decision actually moves in Edle. Achieve your financial goals for good with Monarch,
the all-in-one tool that makes money management simple. Use the code pockets.
at monarch.com for half off your first year. That's 50% off at monarch.com code pockets.
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All right, let's jump back in with Travis.
What other questions do you have for us?
Besides the questions around, you know,
slightly increasing the salary or pursuing a different job,
is there anything else with money moves or investing
that we could make to speed things up
or to get away from the 401k investing.
As I mentioned earlier, it's so easy and the tax advantages are so nice of the 401k
that I always gravitate toward that.
But I fear that we're not seeing an opportunity either in real estate or in investing in the
taxable account first that we're not taking.
That's the hard question, right?
I mean, like, it's so textbook to go down the stack like you're doing, right?
I see, like, I'm looking at your statement here.
And it says 401k, 46,000, 401k match, 4,000, HSA, 8300, Roth IRA, 14,000.
Then we have the ESPP, which I imagine is a purchase at a discount, 10, 15% off the market value of the company stock.
Is that right?
Yeah, it's 15%.
Awesome.
So you got to take that from a free money perspective.
You got to take your match.
You got to take your ESP, right?
Those are the no brainers.
this stack. You're just never going to get a better deal than those two things in almost anything
else. And then the question is, how much further down this list do you go? Do you continue to max out
the HSA? Do you continue to max out the 401k? That will free up $25, $30,000 a year after tax to go into
your savings account. And I think that that's just really hard in your situation because you're
doing the textbook play here. You've got to have really high conviction that you'll actually use it
for something that will give you freedom in that in a much earlier fashion.
So if you wanted to go and flip houses or build a portfolio in Asheville,
for example, I'd say that's the time to make that change.
But I'm not hearing that from you.
I'm not hearing a business idea or an itch to become an entrepreneur
or to kind of go into the small business world or just get out of that job way earlier.
I'm hearing, I kind of like the situation.
I want to travel.
I'm thinking about actually travel in 12 months.
12 weeks of the year to different locations from this and want to enjoy that. And if that's
the route you want to go, I think what you're doing is great. You are, to your point,
missing opportunities that you're probably not even thinking about right now because the cash
liquidity in the after tax bucket is not going to, is not growing very meaningfully right now
and won't with this approach. But that's okay. It's just a matter of knowing that and making out
a conscious decision. Yeah, if I was in your position with your numbers and your goals, I would
continue to max out the HSA, assuming that you are in generally good health and that you are
keeping all of the receipts for all of the expenses that you are incurring. And then when you,
when you do retire in seven years, your HSA account is going to be significantly larger. You can start
cashing in those receipts.
and that can supplement your income, which reduces the amount that you need, the total amount that you need to retire.
And the same with the Roth IRA.
That's just, you pay taxes now and then it grows tax free.
The HSA, you don't pay taxes now.
It grows tax free.
And then you pull it out without paying taxes, which is my favorite kind of account.
I wish that limit for contribution was a billion percent.
But it's not.
It's like $7,400 a year or something if you have, if you, if you, if you, if you, if you,
of a family, and it's less if you don't, and I don't know what those numbers are off the top of
my head. You've got 46,000 that's going to the 401K. Have you put any of that into a Roth 401k that gets
rid of the taxable advantage, but then it grows tax-free? I have not. It was really just kind of
started with the 401k and then followed up with the Roth IRA afterwards. I wonder, Scott,
He wants to retire in seven years.
The Roth conversion ladder, the Roth money has to be in there for five years before you can start withdrawing it.
But then if you're putting money in, you're paying taxes on it before it can, I'm thinking out loud.
I'm sure nobody's following along.
But could you start that in a couple of years so that it's there for you?
I like the 401K for Travis, right?
I put my money into the Roth because I have different goals and different pursuit there.
Travis, I think, is right to go the tax deferred route first.
Once that's exhausted, then to move into the Roth situation because your income's high right now and it's going to be lower.
That's your plan.
You seem very convicted in that plan after the age of 40.
If that's the case, take the tax deferral now and shift it over at that point in time.
Yeah, there's a risk that tax brackets go up or whatever around.
on that and you're missing some opportunity in the Roth. But I don't, I think that that's,
I think that with basic information we have today, that's the logical choice in the, in this
route. And once you get to that retirement bracket, you're, you're going to have to do the math.
Your, your net worth is going to be heavily concentrated in your 401k at that point. And you're
going to have to think through one of several options, including the, you know, the, the
substantially equal periodic payments route or the Roth conversion ladder. But I think that you're
going to get clave and you're going to need some sort of extra oomph over the next seven years
in order to actually finish the play with a good margin of safety to retirement. So something on
top of this approach has to be done. And that could be something in the physical therapy world.
That could be something in the mountain biking space, although I'm very curious to see how you're
going to make money from mountain biking. I would love to re-hear that one more time on that front.
But there's going to be something, you know, there's going to be something extra that you can
have to do in order to finish this play unless you get lucky with returns over that. And that will
probably, whatever that ends up being, that will be your bridge to accessing the money in the 401k
would be my guess. Can you make sure how you make money on mountain biking real quick and then
on to the, that overall thought process? Yeah. So the idea was actually to either be
coaching or guiding, either on my own, through my own small business or working for a guiding
company.
Mountain bike tourism is really big here in Asheville.
We have lots of trails.
So it's an industry that does exist out here.
So that's the way to make money through that, not just riding, but coaching and guiding
other people.
And then to answer, well, I'll go back and answer Mindy's question on the Roth conversions.
Part of our plan, so you're right, it is like a five-year window, as you mentioned, on the
Roth conversions, but part of our plan was to start those conversions once we had reached
financial independence and that we had really stepped down to our kind of part-time jobs or those
work-optional jobs and that our income was much, much lower before we started making those
conversions and then living on that part-time money, that much lower income while we let those
conversions bake. And then Scott, to answer your question, the greatest opportunity we have
right now, I think, is maybe that this traveling kind of physical therapy job.
because it's the quickest way to get us kind of that bump in income, that small bump that we need to really give us that margin of error in the next seven years, that coverage over the next seven years.
Yeah, I mean, maybe that's it. Maybe it's as simple as go travel around the country for 12 weeks at a time. You love some, you hate some on it. But that that's the missing link that gets you that last kind of 300K to that 1.8 million mark that you're looking for on it. But yeah, I think your plan is great. And what you're doing is a very reasonable way to go about it. And it seems like you understand the consequences and how what you'll have to do from a planning perspective to actually use that to fuel retirement at 40.
Travis, do you and your wife have children?
We do not.
And no plans to have any in the future.
No plans to.
Okay.
That could also impact the number that you would need.
Yeah, I really like a lot of these ideas.
The only issue I'm thinking is if you look into potentially job hopping, you could get a job that says you need to be in the office.
There's no more remote work.
and that would hinder you traveling with your travel PT wife job.
I'm wondering if you could read that mad scientist article,
how to access retirement funds early.
He talks about the Roth conversion ladder.
And since you have so much time, you can plan ahead.
You know that the Roth conversion ladder takes five years.
Could you save up money during these next seven years that you could
live off of during those five years so that you could do the Roth conversion ladder when your
income is much lower and you don't have to pay all of those crazy income taxes. So I just, I love the
opportunities that you have because you have seven years. And, you know, listeners, listen up,
if you are thinking, oh, I have seven more years before I can retire, no, you have seven years
to plan your perfect retirement.
You don't need to wait, Travis, until you are retired to find a mountain biking job
or to look into starting a mountain biking tour company.
You can start looking into that now.
You can start doing that on the weekends.
You know, build up your company now so that when you retire, you're not starting from scratch.
You've already got a big loyal following because you're the most awesome mountain biker
in all of Asheville.
But yeah, you've got all of this time.
to plan. And like Scott said, running the numbers that you're doing right now, you're going to be
weighted heavily into your 401k, but you have a lot of options and you can start thinking and running
numbers. Have you run any of your numbers on the C-FIR-Sim calculator? I have not. Okay, that's another
homework assignment. It's the letter C, F-I-R-E, S is in Sam, I at like simulator. C-F-I-S-F-I-S-S-M-com.
Check that out. That has a lot of different opportunities to run all sorts of numbers and see how it's going to work for you.
I want to address one last question, it seems you had. You mentioned in the notes here that you were interested in live in flipping as a strategy.
Could you share that interest here and let us know, you know, how that factors into what we're talking about?
Because that was one of the things I was thinking about when I was talking about extra oomph to get over the finish line.
Something I've kind of been doing at the current house and sort of been on the fence about for a while.
Obviously, Mindy, I know you are like the queen of the live and flip and that strategy.
And I love it.
It is something I do.
So I am handy at the house here.
We've already been doing a lot of remodeling.
So it is kind of a skill set I have to pursue sort of live and flip.
But the same time, there's a lot of cons that come with kind of the stress of, you know, remodeling
renovating a house. And I'm not 100% sure if I want to be on board for more of that in my future.
There's already been quite a bit at the current, the house hack house. But it is another strategy
that we're interested in. Just again, not maybe 100% sold on it, right, to jump in tomorrow
on another house. Okay. So live and flipping is awesome and awful simultaneously for all the
reasons that you said. You've got this, like, potential to make a lot of tax-free money,
but you're living in a construction zone. The good news is you can, like, vary how much you're
going to be doing in any particular type of flip. You know, you can, you can just paint walls.
I mean, I have walked into some houses and been like, what were you thinking, painting the walls
these colors? But everything else is okay. I mean, there's various levels of live and flip. I've
also pop the top. Don't do that. That stinks. That is a horrible experience. Both times I did it were
horrible experiences. I'm never doing it again. And if I ever say that I want to, please come punch me in
the face because it's the worst experience ever. But if you're in construction, maybe that's your jam.
You can control a lot more if you own a construction company and, you know, popping the top.
We're in a property now that is hideously ugly. Every wall, every floor needed to be.
touched. We're not done yet because COVID, thanks, really derailed our timeline. But painting isn't
that hard. Installing flooring isn't that hard. Moving walls is a little more work. And remodeling a
kitchen isn't that hard. So when you start looking at potential live and flips, look at what it's
really going to take. Take a, you know, go to an open house or have a real estate agent schedule a really long
timeline and take a notebook in there and just write down in every single room, it needs this
much work.
It needs that much work.
These are the projects I'm going to have to do.
We have replaced electric and plumbing.
And we have done roofs and new windows.
And, you know, there's a lot of things that you can either do yourself or hire out inexpensively.
There's a lot of things you can't hire out inexpensively and it's going to cost you a lot of money.
So, you know, just and be really honest with yourself.
What is it that you like to do?
What are your strengths?
If painting is really the only thing that you're handy at, then a live and flip
might not be the right choice for you.
But if, like, I mean, the reason that Carl and I make so much money with our live and flips
is we do almost all of the work ourselves.
We hire out very little.
We hired out two people to pop the top.
It's hard to find good contractors, which is why we do everything ourselves.
But it also takes longer because we're doing it ourselves.
After work, before the kids get home from school, before bed, over the weekends.
I mean, there's a lot of things that I'm missing out on with my friends because I'm choosing to work on my house.
So if I can talk you out of a live and flip, great.
That means live and flipping is not for you.
But if you have a series of things that you like to do, maybe you love laying tile.
My husband loves laying tile.
that's like a large part of the bathroom remodel is putting down a new floor.
Anybody can, well, not anybody, those toilets are really hard.
I was about to say anybody can install a toilet by themselves.
I actually can't.
They're so awkward and I'm not strong enough to do it.
But you can paint a bathtub so that pink bathtub can very easily be turned white.
Don't believe what the box says that it only takes two coats.
It takes like 26 coats.
But like all of these little things are, there may be time.
consuming, but if you have the time to do it and a live and flip, you do it over the course of two
years. If you're going to be traveling, I wouldn't live and flip then. But if you decide that you want to
come back to Asheville or you decide that traveling isn't for you, a live and flip with a moderate
amount of work could be a great way to boost your income or your bottom line. I'll just chime in on
some of the things that Mindy said and frame it where a live and flip, again, I use that word extra oomph,
that can really get you through to your goals much faster and provide a lot of optionality.
The live and flip is not scalable.
You can only do it once every two years if you want to take full advantage of the tax benefits.
I don't know Asheville, but many cities around the country are putting laws in place that say,
or, you know, rules around short-term rentals that don't allow you to, that only allow
owner-occupants to do that.
something is bubbling up from a thought process perspective around is there an opportunity to
purchase a live and flip turn it into a short-term rental and combine that with these 12-week
traveling stints is that owner-occupant like is that your house and your Airbnb being it for
12 weeks around there at a time coming back taking a look or whatever spending enough time
in Asheville as your primary to make sure that everything is above board and getting some really good
benefits that are not scalable, but that a single investment could put you over the finish line.
Is your high income going to be a really nice asset in that world as well, allowing you to do something
that's going to be a nice quality short-term rental for that area? So I don't know where that leads,
but those are the types of questions that start to come up for me. And I think there might be something
there. It will not be as fun as not living in a live-in flip. You'll have to decide if it's
$200, $300,000 and more money at the end of seven years from that decision. Is that worth it?
Maybe. Yeah, cashing those big checks is super fun. After tax. Mindy, do you kind of sounds like you were
saying that live-in flips can be all variety of levels and flavors. So I would have asked,
you what makes a candidate for a great live and flip, but it sounds like the answer is up to the
buyer and the amount of work they want to put in? That's one factor. Another factor is the neighborhood
itself. It doesn't matter if you take this garbage house and make it amazing if it's surrounded
by other garbage houses. I live in a neighborhood where the price point now is starting around
$600,000. But there's a goal.
course that borders one edge of the neighborhood and the houses on the golf course are far more
expensive. I think there's like a $1.7 million house in my neighborhood. But the thing is, my
neighborhood isn't a $1.7 million neighborhood. So in the middle of the neighborhood, that would be a
terrible house to make a $1.7 million neighborhood. On the golf course, it's a little different people
like living on a golf course. So make sure that the house that you're buying is, you're buying,
much less expensive than the other houses in the neighborhood, but that you could make it
to the same level as the house in the neighborhood.
Like if you're buying a $500,000 house and you turn it into a million-dollar house,
but you bought it in a $500,000 neighborhood, people who want to live in a million-dollar neighborhood
aren't going to buy your $1 million house in your $500,000 neighborhood.
So the house has to be – it has to have enough of an upside.
that you can still make money when you sell it,
but also when you sell it,
that price point is in line with the rest of the neighborhood
in an area that people want to live in.
Nobody wants to live in a house that backs up to a busy street
or a train track or like a school.
You think it's great because it's all open space,
but it's not. It's loud.
Kids are loud.
But yeah, there are, you know,
choose the kind of house that you want.
to do the work in. I don't touch broken foundation houses. I don't touch houses that have been
contaminated with meth. I don't know anything about that and I don't want to live in a house
that has meth in it. So, you know, call me picky, but you want a house that you can live in too.
Now, you have 60 days to move in after you purchase the house if you buy it with a mortgage.
So you can do all of the heavy lifting, the stinky work in that 60 days if you have that opportunity.
That could be another way to live in a live-in flip without living in a construction zone.
There's lots of different ways to do a successful live-in flip, but don't take on more than you can chew.
Don't tackle a house that isn't in line with other houses in the neighborhood.
And don't ever buy in a busy street or backing up to train tracks.
Okay. Noted. Thanks for the tips.
You're welcome.
Travis, anything else that you want us to cover?
I think we've gotten through some of the questions that you came in today with.
Have any new ones emerged?
Or are there any other areas of your situation that you'd like us to take a look at?
No, I think you guys have answered the questions and looked at the numbers.
And I've already learned a lot.
I'm super grateful and happy to be on just to have the time to chat and get you guys
take on everything is motivating and really helpful.
So no other questions.
And I'm really thankful right now.
Awesome.
Well, you're in great shape because you're saving.
to invest so much every year. So you're going to win, whether it's in seven years or 10 years or
six years, it's just a matter of fine-tuning a couple of things and whether how much
activity you're willing to layer on top of the current really strong base that you've got here.
So congratulations on a great position and look forward to, you know, see and you retire and
live that dream life mountain biking in a couple of years. Thank you. Yeah, I think you are really on
the right track. Like Scott said, you've got your numbers almost there. A few more things will help
get you all the way there within about seven years. And don't do what I did and just like
beeline right for it. Make sure you enjoy the journey on the way there. Because if it takes you
seven hard years or eight fun years, eight fun years is better. Definitely. I mean, I wouldn't know
from experience. All right, Travis, thank you.
so much for your time today and we'll talk to you soon. Thanks guys. Bye. All right, Scott,
that was Travis and that was a really good set of circumstances. I have some homework assignments
for him, but I want to know what you thought of the show. I think this is a guy who's well on track
for financial for early retirement. This Travis is right up the alley of the average Bigger Pockets
Money Listener. Bigger Pockets Money listeners, as we all know, earn more from a household
income perspective than the average American. That's why they're on track to fire to actually
financial independence retire early, as we've discussed in other topics there. He saves a good amount
of his income. Think no kids. He'll get there. Just a matter of speed and degree is taking that
formula that he has got. He's going right down the money guy or Dave Ramsey or whatever, all these
different stacks for which retirement account bucket to fill up first. He's doing it right and making
ensure to take advantage of the free money and the tax advantages that are coming in there.
If he wants to get there a few years earlier, layer in a couple of real estate plays or a
house hack or a live and flip on top of the house hack that he's already got.
But he'll get there, no problem, I think, to financial independence, as long as he gets
some help or anything close to the historical average from a returns perspective in the stock
market.
So obviously that can throw everything off, but I think he's well on track and control and what
he can control.
A couple of fine fiddles with this plan.
And, you know, I like that you made a point of noting that he does not have kids.
We get a lot of people with all different scenarios.
So if you've got a scenario that you haven't heard before, let us know, Mindy at Biggerpockets.com,
Scott at Biggerpockets.com.
You can drop us a line.
We're also looking for people on the single path to financial independence.
So if you're single and would love to share your numbers, we would love to talk to you.
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 the Scott Trench, and I am Mindy Jensen saying farewell, Snowbell.
