8Mes·
16
11 Commenti

immagine del profilo
The calculator is basically not bad. In my opinion, it is also perfectly adequate for a rough overview/planning. In the coming parts of my "Financial freedom" series, however, I will go into more detail on some points that are not insignificant for many people (including pension entitlements that you have already earned).
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immagine del profilo
@KevinE Absolutely. As much as people complain about pensions, they still get something out of it. Other factors also play a role. For example, I'm currently well below the amount I need, but I bought my own home cheaply and am modernizing it to reduce operating costs. You shouldn't forget that operating costs are subject to inflation and therefore generate negative returns. The same applies to your own electricity production.

But I also found it good for an overview 🙃
1
immagine del profilo
@devnerd_daddy Yes, a "zero pension" is inconceivable for me. I'm pessimistic myself and expect less than the pension statement. But it's not realistic that there will be nothing. The impact on large sections of society would be huge - no policy will be able to risk that. "Survival" has to be guaranteed somehow.
immagine del profilo
Thank you! I love gimmicks like this 😍
1
immagine del profilo
It's really ridiculous. I select the ETF calculator and have to enter the interest rate manually 🤦.

I might as well use the services of https://m.zinsen-berechnen.de/.
immagine del profilo
@DonkeyInvestor do i hear a mimimi?
immagine del profilo
@Alpalaka one? Seven!
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immagine del profilo
I can't realistically manage the 3 million (for a monthly withdrawal of €5,000) in ~ 20 years by being employed. So what the heck, as much as I can 🤓✅
immagine del profilo
@Papiertiger Is €5k your pension gap?
immagine del profilo
@KevinE for 2 (better half only part-time) roughly estimated with inflation 4-5k. You still have to roughly deduct 15-20% (full contribution AG/AN) for health insurance, if I'm not mistaken 🤯
1
immagine del profilo
@Papiertiger How many years would you have to pay KV yourself? Depending on the case, this is usually covered again when you retire.
At https://frugalisten.de/krankenversichert-als-privatier/

there are some clues. Sorry that I can't be more specific, but of course I don't know your individual situation.
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