Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by derekp7 1356 days ago
Household income of 100,000 (higher than typical) gives 15K per year, or 1250 a month. 8% interest gets you to $376,000 after 14 years. No where near millionaire status. And this is assuming a tax differed investment path such as 401(k), and you still owe taxes out of that when you withdraw (assume 20% for fed/state, if you don't draw it out all at once, gives you around $300k).

Of course, add another decade and you are at millionaire status. Or don't contribute any additional funds, and wait 12 years, and you hit millionaire.

1 comments

Yeah the numbers there don't add up as their savings plan changes once people pay off their mortgage, have a rainy day fund and have the kids education fund ready.They tell people to max out savings at that point. So it's starts out at 15% but ends up being much higher.