Paging @Nords aka Doug Nordman
Thanks, Nereo!
FFE, help out your fellow military vets here and hold your fire while people post their responses about your spending. I’m going to append a comment about “face punching” to the end of this response.
Spouse (37) and I (38) are both disabled veterans receiving VA disability compensation for injuries and medical conditions incurred during our military service; spouse receives Individual Unemployability (IU) and thus cannot work.
Because of spouse’s VA IU, we pay $0/yr. in property taxes on home we own in DC’s Maryland suburbs. We just refinanced our home with a $0 down, $453,000 VA IRRRL, 30-year fixed at 3.37%; it is worth $480,000-505,000. House is 1,400 sq-ft., 3 bed, 2 bath; we have already replaced electrical panel, furnace/heater, A/C, water heater, windows, new roof, self-remodeled our kitchen, built a shed, and moved to slightly more expensive renewable energy.
I understand all of this and I’m frequently asked about it by others. I’m receiving VA disability compensation myself (as are others on this forum) and I know several vets with IU.
Getting to “20” with nine more years—when I’m 47—is tolerable, but with nearly $5,000/month VA compensation, do I need to?
The simplistic answer to your root question is “Yes, you can stop working now, as long as you hold your expenses below your VA disability compensation.”
I have several military readers who’ve retired on very little savings. They live within their federal income (and its inflation-fighting cost-of-living adjustment).
If they want to spend more on a certain aspect of their expenses then they find part-time work or barter or make do with other cutbacks.
As already mentioned, one big issue is that your VA disability compensation stops upon death. If one of you passes away suddenly, will the other be financially stable until Social Security? Would either of you survivors be eligible for Dependents Indemnity Compensation?
Should I just pay off the mortgage and call it a career? And, since we have no savings or investments, should I focus on that, or on the mortgage?
Paying off the mortgage is a perpetual debate with no right or wrong answers. For example, if you and your spouse are uncomfortable with keeping a mortgage when neither of you has a paycheck, then you should pay off the mortgage. It’ll help you sleep better at night and it’ll improve domestic harmony.
However if you can afford mortgage payments with your current VA disability compensation, then that compensation gives you the advantage of a reliable inflation-fighting income stream to pay a fixed liability (eroded by inflation) which expires in just 30 years. You could have more control to pay it off at your 30-year pace. That’s math & logic which is unrelated to sleeping well at night.
Because of spouse’s VA IU, we pay $0/yr. in property taxes on home we own in DC’s Maryland suburbs.
Electricity: $50-$150 depending on season (higher in summer; windows open morning to night—until the neighbor comes home from work and starts smoking and the smoke drifts into our house)
- We’re considering buying a used VW eGolf, paid via trade-in value + cash. The 89-mile range of the first generation battery + very affordable used cost ($11,000-13,500) + little to no maintenance makes sense for 100% of spouse’s driving; she would also drive me to metro and pick me up, saving $83/month.
My spouse and I bought two used Nissan LEAFs earlier this year, with similar logic.
We also have roughly 90-mile ranges on their batteries, which is perfect for two retirees on Oahu (a 30x40-mile island). For example, my older 2015 Leaf gives me two trips to the beach before I need to recharge it. My spouse’s 2017 model gets a couple of drives into town (and back home) before she recharges. Our “worst case” of needing to drive further than our battery range would be an occasional Uber or rental car.
We also have a rooftop photovoltaic array that provides all of our home’s electricity needs. We’re expanding the array a little (used PV panels from Facebook Marketplace) to accommodate the battery charges of our cars, and reduce our fuel expenses to zero.
One of my shipmates lives in Maryland (near Andrews AFB) and recently installed a PV array on his home. If you’re living in your home for another 10 years then it might be worth your time (and expense) to install a net-metered PV system. It’s an up-front cost with a long-term payback, but you’ll accelerate the payback if you’re recharging your EV for free.
- A reduced rate in the future is possible but unlikely. Worst-case scenario is a reduced rate (2019 value) as low as $1800-2,700/month FOR LIFE
If you mean that your VA disability compensation could drop, then you’d want to work with that worst case.
If your disability ratings are considered “permanent” then you’re unlikely to see the VA re-evaluating your disability. (It’s about the same risk as worrying about an IRS income-tax audit.) Over the last 17 years, my military pension (linked to the CPI) has risen over 40%... and there were three years of zeroes in those CPI COLAs.
3. I can draw TSP at 62, I think.
You can withdraw some of your military TSP account right now, unless you’ve combined it with your civil-service TSP account. When done as part of a Roth IRA conversion ladder, it’s free of penalty and possibly free of income taxes.
Here’s a list of all the ways to tap a military TSP before age 59.5, free of penalty and possibly free of income tax:
https://the-military-guide.com/early-withdrawals-from-your-tsp-and-ira-after-the-military/You’d have to be finished with your civil-service employment before you could tap that TSP account for withdrawals before age 59.5.
If you’re referring to the minimum age for totally penalty-free withdrawals from a TSP then it’s age 59.5. (Withdrawals from a traditional TSP are still subject to income tax.) Required Minimum Distributions start no later than 70.5.
The Roth TSP also has the same RMD rules as a “designated Roth account” with its own RMDs, but they’re totally free of income tax.
In addition to TSP withdrawals as RMDs, you could satisfy the withdrawals through TSP annuities. You already have a lot of inflation-adjusted annuity income from the VA and your FERS pension, but if you wanted an annuity with a survivor benefit then you could buy that version from your TSP accounts.
4. I don’t know anything about Social Security, but I’ve been paying into it for 20 years.
I’d talk with your Veteran Service Officer about Social Security Disability Income, especially for your spouse. I know a couple of vets who are earning SSDI in addition to VA disability compensation.
Otherwise you’d look at SS as early as age 62. With your VA disability income, your potential mortgage payoff, and your low savings then you could treat SS as a safety net. If you needed the income at age 62 then you’d start withdrawals. If you’re still able to live within your means at that age then I’d defer the SS withdrawals until as late as age 70.
Age 70 is the age of your maximum withdrawal amount from SS, and the system is set up so that the payback for waiting this long is your mid-80s. Depending on the nature of your military injuries, your genetics, and your lifestyle— your life expectancy might be a lot shorter than mid-80s.
However if you defer the SS as long as possible then you’d have that much more lifetime income for long-term care (if necessary). In addition if one of you died then the other would be entitled to the higher of your earnings record (survivor benefit) or their own SS earnings record. Deferring your benefit as long as possible gives your survivor a potentially higher survivor’s benefit.
Freedom and ability to travel to and hike national parks several times per year
You might already know this, but the National Park Service gives free lifetime passes to vets with a VA disability rating.
https://www.blogs.va.gov/VAntage/60590/disabled-veterans-eligible-free-national-park-service-lifetime-access-pass/I ordered mine through the mail and it came in a few weeks.
You probably already know this too, but in addition to the national pass, you may have considerable state benefits for vets with a disability rating. You’d be able to learn more from your VA VSO or your state Veteran’s Affairs office.