The Retirement Thread

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D

Deleted member 1258

Guest
We've driven down to Long Marston this morning, drove into the Barn Antiques and the cafe was shut, so we had a meander round the antiques then drove over to Hampton Lucy and had lunch in Bake 180 in the Charlotte Garden Store, So an enjoyable morning out and my little Suzuki Swift was averaging 50mpg.
 
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arch684

Veteran
Got the express bus to glasgow and as it was heavy rain i had to abandon the shopping and head for the nearest pub
 

PaulSB

Squire
I know a lot of this thread is serious p*** take - I really enjoy it . I wanted though to ask something.

I have been wondering about my own and other people’s experience of the financial aspects of retirement. First to be clear my wife and I are not wealthy but I suppose would be described as “comfortable.”

Until recently I hadn’t realised the extent to which not having a salary coming in was preying on my mind. In mid January I sat down worked through all our expenses for the previous 9 months, the period we have both been retired, and now fully understand our pension income ( we haven’t reached state pension age) is enough to run the house and give us a weekly budget of £cxc to cover clothing, food, going out, petrol etc. What I would deem “day to day” expenses. Some weeks we go way over, £90 on concert tickets last week, others we come in well below. After doing this exercise I feel far more comfortable. The budgets do not include holidays, if they did it wouldn’t work.

Where I struggle is the idea of spending capital, our savings. We need to use this money to fund travel, my wife is in India as I post!!!! It’s not spending that concerns me but the realisation I can no longer replace savings when I’ve spent them. Once it’s gone, it’s gone!

Am I alone or do others experience this?
 
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OP
OP
Dirk

Dirk

If 6 Was 9
Location
Watchet
Where I struggle is the idea of spending capital, our savings. We need to use this money to fund travel, my wife is in India as I post!!!! It’s not spending that concerns me but the realisation I can no longer replace savings when I’ve spent them. Once it’s gone, it’s gone!

Am I alone or do others experience this?
It's probably a common theme.
The trick is to find the balance that works for you.
Savings are there to be spent - it's no good to you when your dead.
We planned on drawing an amount down off our savings equivalent to the shortfall between our pensions and what we actually need to live comfortably.
When my state pension kick, we will no longer have to do that. When Mrs Ds state pension kicks in, it will just be extra pocket money and we will still have a tidy sum left over from our savings.
Financing my retirement years is not something I lose any sleep about.
 

welsh dragon

Thanks but no thanks. I think I'll pass.
I know a lot of this thread is serious p*** take - I really enjoy it . I wanted though to ask something.

I have been wondering about my own and other people’s experience of the financial aspects of retirement. First to be clear my wife and I are not wealthy but I suppose would be described as “comfortable.”

Until recently I hadn’t realised the extent to which not having a salary coming in was preying on my mind. In mid January I sat down worked through all our expenses for the previous 9 months, the period we have both been retired, and now fully understand our pension income ( we haven’t reached state pension age) is enough to run the house and give us a weekly budget of £cxc to cover clothing, food, going out, petrol etc. What I would deem “day to day” expenses. Some weeks we go way over, £90 on concert tickets last week, others we come in well below. After doing this exercise I feel far more comfortable. The budgets do not include holidays, if they did it wouldn’t work.

Where I struggle is the idea of spending capital, our savings. We need to use this money to fund travel, my wife is in India as I post!!!! It’s not spending that concerns me but the realisation I can no longer replace savings when I’ve spent them. Once it’s gone, it’s gone!

Am I alone or do others experience this?

Like you, we don't have a lot, but we are comfortable. As far as savings are concerned, there is bugger all interest on any money you have in the bank, so there is little reason to keep it there.

I am not at retirement age but Mr WD is. I have a small private pension. We sort of have a budget. Some weeks we also go over, some we don't. At a certain time of year we have to be very careful because of insurances, car MOT, servicing etc.

As long as we have X amount to pay the bills, then anything more is a bonus. Yes i realise if we spend our savings, then thats it. No more. But you will always live according to your means no matter what. I try not to worry about it, but i am not always successful. I do worry about things in the future.
 
D

Deleted member 1258

Guest
I know a lot of this thread is serious p*** take - I really enjoy it . I wanted though to ask something.

I have been wondering about my own and other people’s experience of the financial aspects of retirement. First to be clear my wife and I are not wealthy but I suppose would be described as “comfortable.”

Until recently I hadn’t realised the extent to which not having a salary coming in was preying on my mind. In mid January I sat down worked through all our expenses for the previous 9 months, the period we have both been retired, and now fully understand our pension income ( we haven’t reached state pension age) is enough to run the house and give us a weekly budget of £cxc to cover clothing, food, going out, petrol etc. What I would deem “day to day” expenses. Some weeks we go way over, £90 on concert tickets last week, others we come in well below. After doing this exercise I feel far more comfortable. The budgets do not include holidays, if they did it wouldn’t work.

Where I struggle is the idea of spending capital, our savings. We need to use this money to fund travel, my wife is in India as I post!!!! It’s not spending that concerns me but the realisation I can no longer replace savings when I’ve spent them. Once it’s gone, it’s gone!

Am I alone or do others experience this?

We're on a state pension, a very small private pension and pension credit, we have enough for day to day living, can run a small car and can afford small treats. But affording any sort of holiday would be difficult, any sort of emergency involving a big bill, major car bill, home emergency, or anything like that and we'd be in trouble, we've got some home repairs to do this year and financing them is going to be a challenge.
 

Drago

Legendary Member
I do ok. Mrs D's police pension, Mrs D's salary, my police pension, my rental income from my cottage in Shetland. If I don't do anything stupid we're comfortable enough for life. No new Jags every September, or 5 foreign holidays a year, shiny iphones every 5 minutes etc and I should be fine. I sure aint working to 65 or 70 to pay for meaningless ephemeral consumer tat.
 

Oxo

Guru
Location
Cumbria
Where I struggle is the idea of spending capital, our savings. We need to use this money to fund travel, my wife is in India as I post!!!! It’s not spending that concerns me but the realisation I can no longer replace savings when I’ve spent them. Once it’s gone, it’s gone!

Am I alone or do others experience this?

When I retired I spoke to a financial advisor and she said the thing that most people who are retiring worry about is how they will continue to save. She then went on to say that most people save to fund their retirement, you've retired, so what do you want to carry on saving for.
Now is the time to do the things you saved for, just enjoy it.
 

BoldonLad

Not part of the Elite
Location
South Tyneside
I know a lot of this thread is serious p*** take - I really enjoy it . I wanted though to ask something.

I have been wondering about my own and other people’s experience of the financial aspects of retirement. First to be clear my wife and I are not wealthy but I suppose would be described as “comfortable.”

Until recently I hadn’t realised the extent to which not having a salary coming in was preying on my mind. In mid January I sat down worked through all our expenses for the previous 9 months, the period we have both been retired, and now fully understand our pension income ( we haven’t reached state pension age) is enough to run the house and give us a weekly budget of £cxc to cover clothing, food, going out, petrol etc. What I would deem “day to day” expenses. Some weeks we go way over, £90 on concert tickets last week, others we come in well below. After doing this exercise I feel far more comfortable. The budgets do not include holidays, if they did it wouldn’t work.

Where I struggle is the idea of spending capital, our savings. We need to use this money to fund travel, my wife is in India as I post!!!! It’s not spending that concerns me but the realisation I can no longer replace savings when I’ve spent them. Once it’s gone, it’s gone!

Am I alone or do others experience this?

I do not think you are alone with the above thoughts.

I will share my take on the situation, but, not the details of my income!

Words like "comfortable", "get by", "not well off" are rather miss-leading, in that, they mean different things, to different people.

Most people (regardless of income) regard themselves as, at best "comfortable", ie, in income terms, "the poor" starts and me, and goes down, every one above me, is "wealthy", "rich" or "well off".

My approach to money, even when I was working, was that, the less you had of it, the more vital you kept control of it.

Before I retired (age 60, five years before my State Pension "kicked in", and taking a 50% penalty on my Company Pension, for doing so), I sat down with Excel and worked out what I regarded as my "essential living costs", ie, Heat, Light, Council Tax, Fuel for Car(s), Clothing, Household items replacement, etc etc. These were clearly not exact figures, they were a budget, an estimate, call it what you will.

I then set up a separate bank account, into which we paid an amount of money to cover the above outgoings. From then on, all "bills" were paid from that account.

What ever I (we) have left in our current accounts is money we can spend on "frivolities", ie Bicycles, Holidays, Eating out, Drink, etc etc

We are now eleven years "in" to retirement, and, so far, we have kept our "heads above water", and, been able to pretty much do the things we want to do.

Some people have the ability to not concern themselves about money, that is fine, if they can sleep at night, not problem. I am not one of them, I need to know I can "pay my way", it sounds as if you too suffer this "affliction".

It is all about being in control of your finances, but, not obsessed with them IMHO.

Good luck in your retirement, may you enjoy good health, and live long enough to get all of your pension contributions back, and then some!

Now, back to the jokes and p*** taking, we cannot have too much of this serious stuff, the clock is ticking! ;)
 

PaulSB

Squire
Well thank you all for those replies. I found much in common with them.

@BoldonLad this is the position I think I’ve now reached:

“It is all about being in control of your finances, but, not obsessed with them IMHO.”

It feels far more comfortable than three months ago. Like you I’ve a separate account now in to which I pay a set amount each month to cover the monthly, quarterly and annual bills. Having that gives me a much better feeling of control.

Now back to the fun!! I’ve got a really good route planned for tomorrow and the forecast is pretty decent
 
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