Millennials' retirement and homebuying plans may be a fantasy

return2ozma@lemmy.world to News@lemmy.world – 169 points –
For some millennials, the reality of their retirement plans is that they're a fantasy
businessinsider.com
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A new survey shows the significant gap between how much millennials expect they need to retire ($1.7 million) and what they've roughly saved so far ($63,000)

Also $1.7m today is like $4m by the time millenials hit retiremwnt.

My company’s 401k person came in to sell their wares, and I did that inflation math in front of them. I think I made a lot of employees afraid for their future.

If you put your money in index funds, you can expect it to beat inflation by about 7-8% on average, especially over the course of a decades-long working career. It's usually not worth it to ever look at the non-adjusted projected value.

Did they even match? No match is madness.

50% up to 6% (so 3%). But its vested over 5 years… which is a middle finger if you ask me.

Is that vesting for each contribution? For every company I've worked at, it's 0% vested until X years, then 100% immediately vested for all contributions.

It’s 20% per year. It’s not… bad… but this 401k is going to be a joke when I retire.

My company is similar, but over 3 years. It’s a weird way for them to save a few thousand bucks per employee who quits (since you get the full amount by the 3 year mark).

Or gets laid off… if they fire them, they should have to pay 100%

I thought I was doing well and that I had a chance, but saving multiple millions for retirement sounds impossible. If I want retirement, I’ll probably have to move to a low cost-of-living country.

63000 saved?? Yeah sure. Just checked my bank account and I got a whopping $27 in the savings account.

So If I rob a bank 6 times, I could reach the average savings?