BiggerPockets Money Podcast - The Middle-Class Trap That Could Keep You from FIRE (How to Escape It)
Episode Date: January 28, 2025Buying a house, maxing out your 401(k), and leveraging real estate can help you achieve financial independence. But suppose your goal is to retire early. Could relying too heavily on these principles ...actually delay early retirement? Today, we’re going to show you how to break free from the “middle-class trap” that stops so many from retiring early! Welcome back to the BiggerPockets Money podcast! Is most of your net worth “stuck” in home equity and retirement accounts? This is a widespread issue in the FIRE community. On one hand, you could sell your home or refinance your mortgage to tap into your equity, but interest rates are too high! Meanwhile, you can’t withdraw money from your 401(k)—not without incurring severe penalties. In theory, you could already be a millionaire but have little to no cash flow to fuel your retirement. So, what should you do? In this episode, you’re going to learn all about the middle-class trap, how to avoid it, and, if you’re in it, how to get out! Mindy and Scott will share the “ideal” portfolio for an early retiree and the bridge accounts you need to retire today. Finally, is the FIRE community wrong about the 100% index fund portfolio? Stay tuned to find out! In This Episode We Cover The middle-class trap explained and how to avoid (or escape) it The “ideal” investment portfolio for the early retiree Tweaking your asset allocation to achieve financial freedom The power of owning a paid-off rental property in retirement Bridge accounts and investments that will allow you to retire today Why a 100% index fund portfolio could come back to bite you 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 Land More Off-Market Deals with Crucial Property Owner Contact Information from DealMachine Achieve FIRE with Scott’s Book “Set for Life” Find Investor-Friendly Lenders BiggerPockets Money 554 - Should I Pay Off My Mortgage or Invest? (We Did the Math) (00:00) Intro (00:42) What Is the Middle-Class Trap? (03:42) The “Ideal” Retirement Portfolio (10:31) Scott’s Path to Financial Freedom (16:13) Mindy’s Early Retirement Roadmap (24:12) The Power of Paid-Off Property (29:18) Middle-Class Trap “Timeline” (33:55) Share YOUR Portfolio! Check out more resources from this show on BiggerPockets.com and https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/money-602 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)
One of the biggest fears of people in the fight community is ending up in the middle class trap.
Landing here could delay your retirement for years.
But don't worry, Scott and I are going to dive deep into how to escape the trap.
There is a way out.
Hello, hello, hello, and welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast.
My name is Mindy Jensen.
And with me, as always, is my not-trapped co-host, Scott Trench.
Thanks, Mindy.
You're just so good at chaining together, all these wonderful different intros that are so relevant
to whatever we're talking about every day. Bigger Pockets has a goal of creating one million
millionaires who are not caught in the middle class trap. You are 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. Mindy, I'm super excited to get into this today
because we ran a YouTube poll to the Bigger Pockets money audience and the middle class trap
was one of the top two problems that folks wanted us to provide answers to. The other being
most of my wealth is in index funds and I don't know how to actually harvest that.
for cash flow, which we need to cover at other times and something I've been grappling with as well.
But this is the one we're going to focus on today, the middle class trap.
And we should start by defining it.
How do you define the middle class trap, Mindy?
The middle class trap is what happens when you have been super good with your finances.
You bought a house like you're supposed to.
You invested in your 401k like you're supposed to.
And all of a sudden you find yourself a millionaire on paper.
All of your net worth is actually tied up in your home equity and your pre-tax retirement.
accounts. The problem is you're not going to sell your house in order to access that equity. You
still need a place to live or you're probably not going to sell your house. You are also not going
to refinance and pull some of that equity out because chances are really good. You have a better
rate on your mortgage now than you would get if you refinance. On the same token, your pre-tax 401k
is awesome for reducing your taxable income. But you can't access those funds until
what age, Scott, can you access them at 55?
59 and a half, right?
59 and a half.
And if you do access them beforehand, you're paying a 10% penalty, plus you're paying
taxes on all the money that you're taking out.
So millionaire on paper is awesome, but you need to be a millionaire accessing that million
dollars in order to be able to spend it.
So that's why we call this the middle class trap.
I agree.
I'll add a couple more nuances there.
the middle class trap, as I describe it, is you do everything right. And that's the frustrating
part about this, right? You're two, like, imagine a two income householder with kids, two and a
and a half kids and a dog and a two car garage and all that kind of good stuff. Each making,
you know, somewhere between $50,000 and $80,000 a year on that front, doing well on paper,
contributing to the 401K, contributing to paying down the mortgage, maybe have reasonable
cars that are fairly new with, with some payments on them that they're making. And they're just
looking up and like, well, my net worth is a couple hundred thousand dollars, maybe even over a million
at this point. But it's all in my home equity. It's all in my retirement account. If I were to
stop working, or one of us would just stop working, we would start running out of cash in a pretty
remarkably short time period. What the heck is going on? We seem to be making all these decisions
and not getting ahead. That's the middle class trap and there are many variations of it. But the one
that we're going to talk about today is a millionaire at a $1.5 million net worth that is all stuck in
assets that seem unharvestable for the individual. And we're going to talk about how to change
either dramatically, the different ways to get out of there, either gradually or dramatically,
to access that capital and actually have it begin producing freedom in your life right now and
the tradeoffs that go with that. Awesome. So Scott, in a perfect scenario, what is the
ideal portfolio so that you're not in the middle class trap? Let's say that you have just a pile of
million dollars, 1.5 million, where would you put it so that you would not find yourself in this
middle class trap? I can give you a couple of answers to that. And by the way, there's no way to
answer this in a way you're going to like as a listener, right? Like you will have, the middle
class trap is there because so many of the decisions that put you in the middle class trap
are textbook decisions that go, that have a healthy balance of life and long term tax
advantages to them. So let me give you an example of middle class trap, right? We talked to this
couple a while back. They're based in Colorado, $1.5 million net worth. Roughly speaking,
$500,000 of that was in their home equity. Their home was worth $800,000. They had $300,000
mortgage left. Another $500,000 was going to be in retirement accounts. Another $500,000 was
going to be in two rental properties that were highly levered. So like maybe, you know, $500,000 in
equity against $1.2 million in asset values, so $700,000 in additional mortgages. And then a little
bit of a sprinkling of cash and credit card debt on addition to that. That portfolio produced
effectively no cash flow for them. And while they were able to continue contributing and paying
down these mortgages over time, they just weren't getting ahead. So that's a middle class
trap portfolio, for example, even though that includes some rental real estate. Let's take that same
amount of net worth and let's just tweak some numbers. That house, the $800,000 house paid off,
no mortgage. There's one rental property that and that clears up $30,000 a year and P&I payments
on the remaining balance of that mortgage. Then the rental property, there's a,
There's no, there's one rental property that's paid off there in the $400,000 range.
And that's producing, let's call it, 20 grand a year in cash flow.
That's a swing of $50,000 a year and less income that this family has to realize to pay for their lifestyle expenses.
And then let's say that we have, you know, maybe $400-ish thousand dollars in, mostly in an after-tax stock bond portfolio that's producing maybe 3%, 4% blended yield on that front.
That's another $12,000.
So that position is not financially free.
We're not in a financially free position because so much wealth is in the house.
But you can see how much more cash is going to flow into this couple's bank account
with that portfolio tweak.
And no, that's not what I would be recommending.
That would just be like one set of moves that that family could make that would make them
have a lot, be a lot less dependent in the near term on having two full-time income earners.
So we'll get into the nuances of how to actually think about this in the trade-offs.
I told you you were not going to like it.
That's not a, none of us like that move.
And I'm not saying they should do that.
It's just, that's the kind of thinking that we have to start with to figure out how we move the chest pieces to get out of the middle class trap.
All right.
So I hear what you're saying, not having a mortgage payment is awesome.
But you're advising them to pay off a large chunk of this pretty low interest rate loan just to free up that amount.
Is there any other, what would you say to somebody who says, I do not want to give up my three.
percent mortgage? Well, look, I think escaping the middle class trap is fundamentally, it comes down to a
question of, am I optimizing for some future state total net worth number, or am I maximizing for
nearer term flexibility? And there's not a wrong answer to that. The middle class trap is not a
problem if you do not intend to retire early. It is just a problem if you intend to retire early.
And the mortgage payment's a great example of this. We had a very lengthy debate about paying off
your mortgage or not a while back. And you did not want to pay off your mortgage. And I decided
do pay off my mortgage on that front. And I think that there's, when you're getting close to the
journey in finishing the play to financial independence, not having a mortgage payment drastically
reduces the amount of income that you need to realize, either from your work or from your portfolio,
which makes the game a lot simpler. And you know over most 30-year periods, you're going to do better
investing in the stock market and taking an index fund 7 to 10%
at long-term yield that stock market historically produces almost over every
30-year period. But you know you're going to be freer if you pay off the mortgage
sooner. And that's the fundamental, again, that's why this is so hard when we think about
escaping the middle class trap. While we're away, dear listeners, we would love to be able to
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Welcome back to the show.
I like that you acknowledge that it's hard.
This is not an easy fix.
This is not an easy solution.
Scott and I aren't going to say, oh, just do ABC and blam.
You have escaped the middle class trap.
It's not that easy.
I think you hit a good point, Scott.
You said, do you intend to retire early?
We've spoken with a lot of people on this show who are pursuing the FI part of financial independence,
but they like their job.
They're not actually looking to retire early.
So if retiring early is not your goal, the middle class trap is far less of a problem.
However, that's real easy.
Okay, those people are taken care of.
Now we're going to talk to the people who do intend to retire early.
Again, you haven't done anything wrong by maxing out your 401k and buying the house and having, you know, equity build up in your home.
But you have done, and I mean, that's been the advice.
Oh, max out your 401K, build your wealth.
That's great for traditional retirement.
If you find yourself a millionaire on paper, there are things that you're going to have to change in order to be able to retire early.
And one of those things, the biggest thing you're going to have to change, is your asset allocation.
Are you investing in your 401k, maxing that out?
Do you have a Roth option?
You are trading the reducing your taxable income for accessing your retirement funds early.
So talk to your employer if there is a Roth option.
Perhaps that's the way to go for you.
You can pivot from investing in the stock market through your 401K to investing in the stock market,
investing in the stock market in an after-tax scenario. Again, if you're not maxing out your 401k,
you are not reducing your taxable income by that much. So you will be paying more income taxes,
but you're building after-tax wealth that allows you to access these funds until you can
access your retirement funds. Let's make up another example here. Let's say we have somebody
with $500,000 in equity in their home, an $800,000 home, and they've got a million dollars in
retirement accounts, essentially all in a 401K. Super simple, unrealistic example. Many people have
more complex situations than that. But let's just take this situation here. How do we help this person?
This person is sitting there, and they got 10 grand in their bank account and $5,000 in the credit
card balance. So they run out of cash and two paychecks if they stop working, basically.
And this is how a lot of people I think live. There's cars, there's loans. There's all these
kind of other things in place there.
But generally, they're getting ahead and contributing to their retirement.
And they're a millionaire.
This is a millionaire.
This is a $1.5 million net worth household.
And we've talked to people that are actually fairly close to a situation like this on
bigger pockets money in the past.
So you say, I want to be financially free tomorrow.
Well, we have one answer to that that you're really not going to like.
I want to be financially free in five years.
We've an answer to that that you might like more.
And I want to just continue what I'm doing through to retirement.
There's three different approaches to how to handle this. Let's take the middle ground for how we can
move this person on a path toward financial freedom in five years at the framework level, right?
Again, let's say they have $300,000 left in their mortgage and that million in the 401k.
One answer is to say, okay, this couple, this person, this couple is probably, I assume it's a married
couple, our married couple with two and a half kids example here. They're probably able to,
to generate, they're clearly generating more than they spend because they're contributing heavily
to 401k. That's how they have a million dollars in that 401k. But they're also facing a problem here,
right? This is not a couple that's earning so much that they can go through the classic finance
influencers playbook that are all slight permutations of a formula that everyone uses right here.
How do you save? Well, first you max out your emergency reserve. Then you take your 401k match.
Then you max out your HSA. Then you do your Roth. Then you do.
your 401k until the balance and then you invest in your after tax brokerage. Almost everyone you
talk to is going to have a variation that's almost verbatim that particular flow here.
The problem this couple has is they can't quite get through that whole thing because they don't
have $75,000 to invest. They have $50,000 to invest. And that's why they never get to accumulating
wealth outside of that 401k or those retirement account balances is because they go down that
need stack and there's just not enough income, not enough left over before their expenses,
to actually build up wealth meaningfully anywhere else. So to begin unwinding this problem,
if they wanted to retire, if this is a 40-year-old couple and wanted to retire in five years,
an approach that could work might look like this. We're going to stop contributing to the 401k.
We might take our match, and that's it. We're going to stop maxing out the HSA. We're going to not do
the thing that the finance influencer textbook says to do.
And instead, we're going to pay our taxes and we're going to be left with $35,000 after tax
that will actually hit our bank account.
And we're going to pay off that mortgage early.
And that is going to have a whole bunch.
That means I'm going to pay more in taxes.
And I'm not going to invest in the stock market over that time period.
But what you're going to end up with is three, five, seven years from now.
You're likely going to have that mortgage paid off.
off and the $30,000 that you need to pay in principal and interest on that mortgage are going to be gone,
which is going to reduce the pressure on your situation for both parties to work, for example.
One could maybe do some sort of entrepreneurship or whatever.
The second thing that's going to happen is over a five to seven year period, historically,
this may not happen.
You cannot count on this happening, but you can analyze formulaically that this is the average outcome
that has happened is the stock market will roughly double every 7.2 years at 10% yield.
So if your 401 accounts are in there, they will still grow. You may end up with $2 million
at that point and a paid off house. Now things begin to get interesting. Now we still have the
problem of the money in the 401k, but we can actually start beginning to back in our minds into
how can I actually harvest that? Can I put some of that into a bond fund, something very
very, very safe, for example, or maybe even like a syndication or something like that that would
produce some yield. And can I start to harvest some of that? There's a program called the substantially
equal periodic payments, for example, where you can begin, if you commit for life to taking out
some amount of money from your 401K, you can do that penalty-free. You'll still buy taxes on it.
But now, hey, okay, at 47, I have this portfolio. I've got a paid off house, and I've got my 401k balance
that has grown to some degree, I take some percentage of that, and I begin harvesting just one
or two percent of the balance of that on an annual basis. That makes a big difference. Two million
times one percent is 20 grand. With $30,000 and less P&I payments from your mortgage and $20,000
coming in from your 401k through these substantially equal periodic payment plans, the pressure
begins to ease dramatic. That's a $50,000 swing in cash flow. That's a full-time $65,000 a year
job from one of the spouses here that does not have to be worked in that situation. So that would
be a way to begin thinking about bridging this difference to the, and achieving some sort of
freedom from someone starting in that traditional middle class trap position. Again, I told you
you weren't going to like it, though. That's one example. So what do you think, Mindy?
I don't like it, but I see where you're going. So that isn't the route that I would choose.
I do like the 72T. I do have to make a couple of corrections to what you shared. You don't have
to take the 72T for life. You have to take it for a minimum of five years or until age 59 and a half,
whichever is longer. Sorry about that, yes. Thank you. Yes. And the stock market tends to double
every seven or eight years, not every five to seven. However, all of the rest of that, absolutely.
I'm picking nits. I don't want to pay off my mortgage. I don't want to get rid of my 3% loan.
So instead of doing that, I take that extra, I think you called it 35,000, and I start investing in accounts that I can access without paying fees, that I don't have to be a minimum age to access.
So your Roth IRA, or if you make too much money, a backdoor Roth IRA.
That allows your money to grow.
You can access the amount that you put in at any time, even though.
you can't access the growth, the growth still stays there, still keeps growing. So that's a great
way to access some of those funds. I would also start funneling funds into an after-tax brokerage
account. I have done well in the stock market. I have done well with, I mean, index funds have
done amazingly well. So that's another option. Going into the stock market in your after-tax brokerage,
that's money you can access at any time. And just for you.
for fundzies, you can actually access a lot of the money in your after-tax brokerage account
tax-free once you stop working, once you don't have income. It is something like $96,000
that you can access. You can pay no capital gains taxes on. I got this from Jeremy Schneider
from Personal Finance Club over on Instagram. You can access up to $253,400 tax-free
when you have an after-tax brokerage account.
And that's per year.
So in his example, he says,
Will and Whitney retired early.
They withdraw $253,400 per year from their taxable brokerage
and pay $0 in tax.
Here's how.
$96,700 is the top of the 0% tax bracket for capital gains.
$30,000 is your standard deduction and $126,700 principal of investments sold.
In total, that means the couple can spend 253,400 of their investments in a year and pay $0 in tax.
Of course, Scott and I are not tax professionals, and you should absolutely consult one
before you start doing this and be like, oh, well, Mindy and Scott said so.
The IRS is going to be like, Mindy and Scott, who?
But anyway, you can actually access a lot of these funds without paying taxes.
So that's another way to go.
You said don't contribute to the HSA.
I am going to say maybe continue contributing to the HSA and stockpile your receipts.
That's another way to pull money out of your retirement accounts and the things that you've been
saving so that you can get that money without paying taxes on it.
I think that when people hear the middle class trap and we talk about, oh, it's just everything's
in your retirement accounts or your home equity and they're like, oh, man, I'm stuck.
You're not stuck.
You have a lot of options, but you're not.
You do have to start redirecting your money in order to be able to take advantage of those options.
That's the big thing here, right?
The middle class trap is this feeling of being stuck in a slog.
And that's the idea, is you can do this by diverting flows of cash, which I think is going to be easier for most people.
Or you can continue what you're doing and have a plan to make a hard cut and begin accessing the money that's in the HSA.
So, for example, if you want to continue contributing to the HSA, and like Mindy said, store all your,
your receipts over the course of the next five, seven years. Maybe you spend 25 grand on health care.
Actually, you can put your insurance premiums on top of that as well, right? And the HSA can
reimburse. So store all of those, too, on that. So you're probably spend significantly more than
that, depending on whether your employer pays most of your plan or not. But you can, you could
potentially have $50,000 or $60,000 worth of expenses over a five, 10-year period for health care.
that can then be pulled out of your HSA tax and penalty-free, and the growth in that HSA will have
occurred tax and penalty-free.
So that's a great way to do it as part of that.
And you have to get really savvy about these retirement accounts.
But that's going to be a hard pivot for someone who's, you know, 35 and has a – or 40
and has a million dollars in that 401k or they're about grows it over the next seven to 10 years.
And then all of a sudden starts harvesting their HSA and starts pulling out.
out of the 401k. If you can do that, that's great. Have a strategy there. The mad scientist has
put together some really thoughtful ways to do that. The challenge you're going to have at the
fundamental level is most of that wealth is going to be in pre-tax accounts, most likely, like the 401k.
And rolling that into post-tax accounts will involve a decades-long time frame play. You know,
you have to be thinking 10 years out. How do I actually, when I have low income, begin to roll that
money out of my 401k into a Roth in the early stages of retirement. It can be done, but I think it's just
a lot lower probability than beginning now to build wealth outside of that retirement account,
either by paying off the mortgage or by beginning those after-taxed brokerage account contributions.
And again, the problem you're going to run into is the textbook of maxing out the HSA, taking
the 401K match and max out the 401K is likely going to leave you with nothing left to really begin doing
that unless you actually make the hard suboptimal long-term wealth choice of stopping,
continuing to pile up wealth into the middle class trap.
Yeah.
And Scott, even hearing you say maybe you stop maxing out your 401K, I'm like, oh, that sounds
so wrong.
I didn't max out my 401K last year.
And I did it on purpose.
And, you know, I funneled that money into different investments, but it was weird to not
max it out. And I'm not in the middle class trap personally. I chose to, there were other
investment opportunities that I had that I wanted to take advantage of. But it was still really,
really weird to on purpose not hit the max, especially now that I'm over 50 and I can get an
extra 6,000 on top of that. I didn't get that either. All right. What if you're already in the middle
class trap? Don't worry. We've got you covered after the break. 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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Let's jump back in.
It comes down to cash and cash flow.
If you have no cash and you have no cash flow
and you have large cash outflows,
you're going to be stuck working at the job
for a very long period of time until that changes.
And there are multiple ways to change that.
That again, you have to kind of grapple with here.
My favorite is to begin building up
some kind of cash outside of the 401K
in the retirement accounts here.
I like the paying down the mortgage.
Mindy disagrees on that front
because paying down the mortgage so has such a drastic reduction in cash outflows for the next X amount of years, in many cases, two decades or more, which some of the best years of your life, where you're going to have the energy and time and inclination to do all the big things in a more robust way.
And then I think building up investments outside the 401K or having a specific plan to access it like the substantially equal periodic payment, 72T concept here, or real estate,
or after tax brokerage investments are all ways to do it.
And again, I'll come at the cost of sacrificing some of the tax advantages in those accounts.
Scott, let's talk about real estate.
Let's talk about how somebody can use real estate to escape the middle class trap,
somebody who doesn't have any real estate right now outside of their primary residence.
I think that a lot of investors are finding that the promise of buying a levered rental property,
putting 20% down on a rental property, and then eating out a cash flow and having that compound
as you buy more and more and more is a false promise and is not coming true for most folks.
Where you're seeing real estate really contribute to financial freedom, I believe for a lot of folks,
is when it's paid off.
Another theme here, right, with the paid off mortgage.
A $500,000 duplex that produces a $20,000 cash flow, for example, that's a 4% use.
or maybe let's call it 30,000, that'll be a 6% yield, would be a better example.
That's probably going to happen for the most part when that property is paid off.
That same property that's supposed to produce $10,000 or three of them across there,
one cap-x item blows for one of the properties, blows that cash flow completely up,
and you can't really rely on it.
So I think when we see the folks who are posting who've actually retired and sit there and chill in the bigger pockets forums,
It's guys like Steve Vaughn or this guy today who has like 20 units and he produces 200 grand in cash flow because it's so lightly levered.
He's basically paid off, almost paid off the whole thing.
And so I think that's another way to think about it here is if you can just have one or two rentals alongside that stock portfolio, that's going to make a big difference on there if they're paid off.
But it's going to be, I think you're going to be disappointed in the cash flow until you get to really low leverage.
or a long time goes by if you're trying to double the penny.
I think a lot of the folks who bought, bought, bought, bought, bought, bought, and continued to scale,
they're not realizing the actual promise of that cash flow in a robust sense.
But the guys who did the unoptimal thing and paid it off are realizing that.
And probably, even though it's not going to build them as much wealth as an index fund portfolio
and an unlevered real estate play, probably enjoy freedom at a little bit earlier of a time period
than our peers in the index fund portfolio, which we'll get to in a second here.
What do you think about that?
I think I'd like you to explain it a little bit further with regards to, it's so difficult to buy a $500,000
property without $500,000.
That's right.
I think the fundamental issue here is that becoming financially free is a function of spending less than you earn and investing the difference over a long time period in a portfolio that you will actually rely on to fund your lifestyle downstream.
So we're not getting there overnight, right?
And we have to think about what is the portfolio.
if I hand you $1.5 million or $2 million in cash, the Bigger Pockets money audience by and large
says that their fire number is between $1.5 and $2.5 million. So let's use $2 million as the midpoint in that.
What is the portfolio that will actually enable you to sleep well at night without working a job
on a $2 million asset base? That's the question that we're solving for here. And real estate,
for many people on bigger pockets money and bigger pockets is a part of that, but not the entire
answer to that because of what we just discussed.
Okay.
You just hit the nail on the head about this entire scenario.
You said, we're not getting there overnight.
And I think that that's really important for people who find themselves in this middle class
trap to realize you're not going to get out of it overnight.
You didn't get into it overnight.
But you need to start pivoting where your money is going, where you're investing in, in order to be able to get out of it at all.
The other end of that is you just work until traditional retirement age, which doesn't make you a bad person.
Or you just keep contributing in the way you're doing it.
And the problem begins to gradually ease because the house and cars and whatever begin to gradually get paid off.
And the asset base begins to swell so large past the point of what you need that you're,
that the problems begin to gradually recede from the middle class trap.
But I think in the meantime, that's where we're talking about, like, let's make,
let's think about some other ways to do that.
And I think one of the challenges that I have not been able to get around is paying the
tax man seems to be a price you have to pay to actually realize the dollars after tax
that you can spend on your lifestyle and after tax investments.
And it's much harder that way.
It's, it feels smaller.
And it is smaller.
But I think that it's, it's a part of the tradeoff way.
to make. Having a conversation with a tax planner can be really, really valuable to open up your
eyes to different scenarios. Scott and I are going by what we know. And we're not tax experts.
There are tax planners out there who could look at your portfolio and make suggestions based on
where you are and where you want to be and the timeline to get there. Scott, how long would you
say on average, it would take somebody to withdraw themselves from the middle class trap.
And it depends on how drastic you want to be, right? If someone says, if someone says,
I want to become financially free in six months, I would tell them, sell your house, harvest the
gain, probably tax free, go start a new house hack or something like that, and that will
reduce your expenses dramatically, take your proceeds and invest them in something that will produce
after tax cash flow, whether that is a bond or a hard money note or a rental property or
depending on your risk tolerance and skill set, something else out there. Or buy a new house hack
that's paid off that then provides a couple thousand dollars of income from the other side or
other units. And that will greatly defray your living expenses. Sell your cars, pay off the car
loans, buy two beaters, one or two beaters for that. Begin packing all of your lunches and those
types of things, and you can probably reduce your cash outlays by $30,000, $40,000 a year in that
situation using our previous example, which all can go into the pot for cash accumulation.
And if we add in our $35,000 because we're reallocating funds away from our 401K,
we get a serious amount of incremental cash that begins piling up for this person.
That choice is way easier for the 23-year-old to make with nothing getting started than
it is for the family with two kids. So it's unlikely that most people will take that choice
in the current situation. But that is the fastest way to do it overnight. And you can really
reallocate in a hurry and move that. You might be able to even quit your job and begin harvesting
some of that 401K account to live a pretty good life right away if you're willing to tolerate
the house hack and the serious reduction in lifestyle that would accompany that said it moves that I just
that I just have talked about. Much more likely, again, is don't buy new cars when the current
loans in the cars pay off. Just hold it. Just keep driving those cars, whatever they are.
Another one, just like stay put in the house. Don't upgrade. Don't change. Don't whatever. Just let that,
let your income in the gradual career progression, hopefully, and a static mortgage payment,
let inflation do its work on that front and stop and stop putting theirs. Don't max out the 401k,
the whole way, but begin
piling up some fraction that's meaningful
outside of the 401k. And depending
on how fast you want that freedom
and the optionality, you can
just cut back more
on those contributions to the pre-tax retirement
accounts or less, if it's not as
anxious a need for you. But I think there's so
many degrees for ways to get out of this that
it's really hard to have a one-size-fits-all
and it's going to be so dependent on individual circumstances.
But you can't keep doing the same thing
and expect more flexibility in your life.
Something's got to change if you want out of this, if you feel stuck and like your
wealth is not actually doing anything for you and can't do anything for you in the next five,
seven, ten years.
Scott, I think our role here, our job here is to just introduce the concept of the middle
class trap, give ideas for ways to get out of it if you find yourself in there, ways to
avoid it if you're not there yet, and then give it because it is,
personal. Your finances are different from my finances or different from Kyle Mass.
Finances are different from everybody else's finances. So let's not even try to give advice.
Although I will say that the majority of people that we have talked to have reached financial
independence from a position of approximately zero net worth to financially independent in about
10 years. I think that's the minimum. Yeah. I don't know very many folks who got there faster than that.
But that seems to be the minimum.
Yeah.
So since you're already in a position of your saving, you're investing, you have your house
and whatever, even if you don't have a house, you still like, you could be in the middle
class trap when all of your money is in your pre-tax 401K.
Because you're already used to this, I think your trajectory will be or your timeline will
be much shorter than that 10 years to get yourself out of the middle class trap.
Because you're not planning for all retirement.
you're planning for the portion of time from early retirement, whatever age that is,
to 59.5, 55 if your plan allows, to when you can access those retirement funds earlier than 65.
All right, Scott, should we get out of here?
Let's do it.
I would love to hear from my listeners.
What are you doing with your portfolio?
How are you in the middle class trap?
And if you are, how are you getting out of it?
email me, Middy at biggerpockets.com, email Scott, Scott at biggerpockets.com, or post in our
Facebook group because we will have a thread for this particular episode if you would like to share
publicly. Again, please go over to our YouTube channel. If you are not already a subscriber,
we are trying to get to 100,000 subscribers because then Scott gets a beautiful plaque for his
little bookshelf behind him that says, we have 100,000 subscribers. So please go to YouTube
dot com slash bigger pockets money and click subscribes. Thank you. Thank you for listening. We really,
really appreciate you and you spending your time with us. But that wraps up this episode of the
Bigger Pockets Money podcast. He is Scott Trench. I am Mindy Jensen and I am going to shout out to my fans
Lucy and Juliet and say, take care, Brown Bear.
