Teacher working towards FI
Life Situation: Married, age 40, one dependent age three, Boston area
My wife and I split all expenses and have separate finances, so the following is for myself only. Her accounts are separate and she's well ahead of me on the FI journey.
Gross Salary/Wages: 85,000 before any deductions
Individual amounts of each pre-tax deduction (2018 targets):
403b: 18,500
457b: 18,500
IRA: 5,500
Pension fund: 9,500
HSA: not available
FSA: I don't see the point (doesn't rollover)
Insurance: 1680
Other Ordinary Income: none
Qualified Dividends & Long Term Capital Gains: not significant YET
Adjusted Gross Income: 34,000
Taxes: Federal: 4,828
state: 2168
Current expenses, monthly:
Rent: 800
Car lease (face-punches galore): 145 (split w partner)
Car insurance: 116
Food/groceries: 400
utilities, internet, phone: 400
everything else: 139
TOTAL EXPENSES: 2000/month 24,000/year
Expected ER expenses: same or less, depending on geographic arbitrage. If rent increases we will cut expenses elsewhere.
Assets:
cash: 15k
403b: 2k
457b: 6K
ROTH IRA: 24k
Trad IRA: 5.5k
Betterment Taxable account: 2k
Teacher pension account: 70k
Net Worth: 124.5k
Liabilities:
zero debts except car lease (145/month) done 9/2019
Specific Questions: Assuming I follow the investment order recommended here and on the Bogleheads forum, any money leftover after maxing out pre-tax contributions will be thrown into my Betterment taxable account. I am aiming for FIRE in 2022, at age 45. By 2022 I will have reached the top of my payscale (~100k/year) for three consecutive years, and that means at age 65 I can collect a pension of 35k per year, assuming I don't work any years between ages 45-65 (unlikely). That means I just need sufficient funds to cover expenses from age 45-65. The 4% formula does not apply to my situation because of the pension. It will be nice to have a supplement, though, since 35k is modest for this area. I will likely keep working part time to leave the nest egg time to grow. Does my plan seem sound??? Any other investing ideas? I have an aversion to real estate and the prices are insane in this area. Wife is French so we may move to France after FI. Cost of living is probably 50% lower than Boston. Also open to living in South America or Asia for extended time. Long live MMM!