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Archive for July, 2025

June 2025 net worth update

July 1st, 2025 at 05:16 pm

It definitely feels premature to be celebrating with so much current and potential chaos in our country, but we had a second good month in the markets, almost as much as last month, and hit an exciting milestone: over a million in our nest egg!

We're Coasting along with a $106K surplus to our CoastFIRE number. I tinkered with the calculator and it says we're at Coast even if I retired at 63 instead of 65. Aiming for 62, we'd be supposedly able to reach Coast in 3 years with just the tiny amount NT is putting in his 401(k).

This is all good to see, because we just booked a European vacation for this fall that we can only partly pay for, so we're going to be carrying a bit of it as debt for a while. So that felt like a reckless decision (though I did contemplate it for months, it wasn't exactly impulsive) and I'm glad to see proof of my more sensible side as well.

Assets      
NT's UK pensions:      
AV1: 29,509 pounds $36,886    
SW: 37,117 pounds $46,396    
AV2: 7,971 pounds $9,964    
NT's trad. rollover IRA $143,161    
NT's Roth IRA $95,544    
NT's SEP IRA $8,214    
NT's AAC acct $11,440    
AS's trad. rollover IRA $34,387    
AS's Roth IRA $134,758    
AS's SEP IRA $96,215    
AS's Nevada acct (approx amt) $380    
CJ's trad. rollover IRA $304,501    
CJ's Roth IRA $103,180    
CJ/NT/AS house ($643,000 value -6%) $604,420    
CJ/NT/AS rental property ($599,000 value -6%) $563,060    
TOTAL ASSETS $2,192,506 retirement only: $1,025,026
       
Debt      
Main mortgage $325,765    
Rental property mortgage $372,998    
Loan from friends (main house) $9,000    
TOTAL DEBT $707,763    
       
Current Estimated Net Worth June 2025 $1,484,743    
       
May 2025 estimate: $1,448,816    
       
Change in net worth $35,927    
       
       
COAST FIRE: https://walletburst.com/tools/coast-fire-calc/    
retirement goal $1.59 million by 2039 (CJ age 65)    
       
Current age: 51      
Retirement age: 65      
Annual spending in retirement: $63,600      
Monthly contribution: $250      
Investment growth rate: 7%      
Inflation rate: 3%      
Withdrawal rate: 4%      
Current invested assets $1,025,026    
Coast FIRE number at current age $918,185    
Current status: at Coast FIRE with surplus: $106,841    
       
       
Coast FIRE budget      
Ideal budget Monthly    
Housing $0 (rent will cover prop expenses)  
Healthcare $1,500    
Groceries $1,000    
Fun $1,500    
Travel $1,000    
Utilities $500    
Giving $500    
Home improvement $500    
Gifts $250    
Transportation $250    
Monthly $7,000    
Minus add'l rental income -$1,700    
Total monthly $5,300    
Annual $63,600    
       
SSN estimates 2024 Start age 62 Start age 70  
Monthly benefit $4,200 $7,200  
Plus monthly from retirement $5,300 $5,300  
Total monthly $9,500 $12,500  

(A note about the "loan from friends" item, which I explained in comments a while back but is worth mentioning for anyone who's confused... we had a very informal agreement with our friends (who rent the bottom half of the duplex) that we would let them gradually obtain part ownership of the duplex. They helped out in the early days of ownership with a bit of money for the down payment and for some urgent repairs, and we were going to put that toward their portion of the house. For various reasons, that plan sort of stalled over the years, so I consider that money they gave us to be a loan. I'm not sure they even do, or if we're still planning on revisiting that co-ownership idea, so I just kind of let it hang out there as a "loan" in case it ever comes up. I would pay them back if we definitively decided we weren't doing the ownership thing.

One reason I'm in no hurry to settle this one way or the other is we do each other lots of favors. Their rent is basically 2/5ths of the mortgage payment and 2/7ths of the utilities, so it's WAY under the going rate for a 2-bedroom in our neighborhood. But then again, they pretty much gave us their old car (it's in their name but we have primary use of it). We've been friends for decades so there's a lot of gray area in our arrangement. Like I said, they might not even consider that money to be a loan so much as a gift, but to me it could go either way so I keep it classified as a loan.