Retire by 30, thanks nursing!

Nurses General Nursing

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Ok check this out, i have a plan to retire by the age of 30:

I'm 21 yrs old and about to graduate a ADN program

i will spend 1 year gaining experience in the ICU, then i will spend the next 8 years as a per-diem or traveling nurse, working no less then 60 hrs a week, 11 months a year.

so heres the math:

40hrs X $43hr = $6880 month

20hrs X $65 hr = $5200 month

total (net income) $8100 month

$2500 month living expenses so $5600 month to invest

Starting with $5,000 and depositing $5,600 monthly over 8 years (at a rate of return 12%, compounded monthly and taxed at your marginal rate of 28%), you will save $769,593.Initial balance:$5,000Total deposits:$537,600Total interest earned:$315,268Total taxes paid:$88,275Total Saved: $769,593

Now i understand that 769K will be different due to inflation 8 yrs from now, so we will say 669k so at 10% a year $66,000 a year!

Now for 8yrs i will work my ass off and be traveling and have little social life, but at age 30 i will never have to work again, and i will probably never want to in nursing cause i will be burnt out, but i think it would be worth it, what do you think?

Well, if the OP can go from a 25 year old with 2 years ICU experience in November of 2006 to a 21 year old just graduating from an ADN program in one year's time there's no doubt in my mind he can retire at 30. ~ Diane

Whether or not the OP is telling the truth has nothing to do with the fact that anyone making a decent wage can retire young. I guess it's easier to be cynical, huh?

"The OP mentioned he wants to get married and be a stay at home dad in the future. That is an awesome goal, but working 60 hours a week is going to make it extremely hard to maintain a relationship unless you and your future wife are in perfect synch, which very few people are. Don't forget the personal committments in your life. :) (Speaking from the POV of a doting girlfriend. Your future wife will very likely need as much support from you as you will from her.)"

he won't be working 60 hours a week when he's retired

Whether or not the OP is telling the truth has nothing to do with the fact that anyone making a decent wage can retire young.

I don't dispute that.

I guess it's easier to be cynical, huh?

Easier than what? ~ Diane

"The OP mentioned he wants to get married and be a stay at home dad in the future. That is an awesome goal, but working 60 hours a week is going to make it extremely hard to maintain a relationship unless you and your future wife are in perfect synch, which very few people are. Don't forget the personal committments in your life. :) (Speaking from the POV of a doting girlfriend. Your future wife will very likely need as much support from you as you will from her.)"

he won't be working 60 hours a week when he's retired

Also true, but he won't be a stay at home dad if he doesn't invest in enough time with his wife to keep her around, or to have children with her.

Also true, but he won't be a stay at home dad if he doesn't invest in enough time with his wife to keep her around, or to have children with her.

sounds like he'll have nothing but time to do that, isn't that one of the driving forces behind all this... his wife and children will be luckier than most

I do not get paid less than $15/hr as a Staff Nurse. Can anyone tell me how to retire early? I am already way beyond 30 :-)

Spend much less than you earn and buy good stocks.

Specializes in ICU/CCU, Home Health/Hospice, Cath Lab,.

Hello everyone,

I had a lot of fun browsing through the thread on retirement by 30. So, since I enjoy math I decided to look at my hospital and see what is possible to do. So here goes.

Area - Renton, WA

Expenses - Apt - 650/month (found several for this) - live within walking or biking of hospital

Utilities - 200/month

Car insurance/renters - 125/month (assume car paid off)

Food - 250/month

Phone - 75/month

Internet + Netflix - 50/month

Total = 1650/month or 19800/yr. Round up to 20k expenses a yr.

1st yr - ICU starting wage 22.61/hr. 0.9 FTE (3 12hr shifts a wk). First 6months no OT. 2nd 6 months pick up 1 extra 12 a wk - gross yrly = 52,907.4. At 23% taxes net = 40738.7. Subtact out expenses leaves roughly 20k (put in kitty fund for emergencies)

2nd yr - 11th yr.

Join Float pool. Pick up 2 extra shifts a week (total 60hrs/wk). Learn charge role. Work nights.

Salary 23.54/hr (each yr add $1 plus 4% COLA)

Night shift differential - 3.42/hr (3.75 for 8hrs and 2.75 for 4hrs)

Float Differential - 5/hr

Charge differential - 1.5/hr (2.5/hr for 3 reg shifts a week, none for OT)

Weekend - 4/hr (Fri/Sat - every other week)

Hrly = 33.46/hr * 48hr (2wk block) = 1,606.08

Wknd = 37.46 * 24hr (in 2wk block) = 899.04

OT = 45.23 * 48hr (2wk block) = 2,171.04

Gross = 4,676.16 / Net @ 36% taxes = 2,992.74

Yrly gross = 121,580.16 / Net = 77,811.30

Subtract out expenses and place rest in account (modest 6.5% return).

After 3 yrs pension kicks in (hospital places 10% of your gross into account, you can match with up to 10% of gross). So starting yr 3 subtract expenses and 10% of gross pay, rest goes into account.

Figure both accounts earn 6.5%.

After 10yrs (fuzzy here, not sure if my math is correct) 1st account = 958,386.84

For next 20 yrs live off around 76k/yr (first yr take 145k, half for down payment on home)

After 7yrs pension = 301,443.18

After 27yrs pension = 1,062,178.8

Decrease living expenses to 70k and it should last 35yrs or so.

So that should get us from 21-33 (11yrs working)

33-53 living off 1st account

53-88 living off pension

And all this work comes with full benefits too. Of course the odds of every week getting 2 OT shifts is small (although most weeks you could get it) so might have to cash out vacation time to help. Odd greatly improve if you can do all specialties (ICU, NICU, Labor and Delivery, Peds, and ER).

Had a lot of fun working through this - no plans to implement it (my expenses are much higher), but it was fun to see what you could do if you wanted.

Any other people out there check their hospital to see what could actually be accomplished with enough desire?

Pat

Specializes in Education, FP, LNC, Forensics, ED, OB.

Threads merged for continuity.

Specializes in Med-Surg, Trauma, Ortho, Neuro, Cardiac.
Whether or not the OP is telling the truth has nothing to do with the fact that anyone making a decent wage can retire young. I guess it's easier to be cynical, huh?

You're right, but it's difficult to be supportive as well. In other thread the op states he is looking to apply to CRNA school soon.

hospitals are all cutting their ot budgets--so don't count on all that ot--and you'll certainly burn out with all those hours--find a hospital with good flex-time working hours and enjoy life now

Specializes in ICU.

Hi,

Your young and your thinking in the right direction. Be realistic, take at least 20 to 25% of your earned income and tuck it away in a retirement fund. Buy Real Estate in California and let it sit for a few years. Kaiser Medical Centers pays medical insureance for life after 15 years of employment in California, (no, I don't work at Kaiser), maybe their are hospitals that do that as well in your area. Think of all angels not just money. It is very refreshing to see young people thinking about the future. Also 33 is very young to quit working. I am 45 and a CCU nurse and I love working. I became a nurse because I love it. You may find the same when your working. If your only getting into nursing for the money you may want to look at a different carear.

Respectfully,

Wicked R.N.

Hi,

Your young and your thinking in the right direction. Be realistic, take at least 20 to 25% of your earned income and tuck it away in a retirement fund. Buy Real Estate in California and let it sit for a few years.

Wicked R.N.

Long term, stocks grow faster than real estate.

Hi,

Also 33 is very young to quit working. I am 45 and a CCU nurse and I love working. I became a nurse because I love it. You may find the same when your working. If your only getting into nursing for the money you may want to look at a different carear.

Respectfully,

Wicked R.N.

Smoking is fun too, but it is physically unhealthy just like nursing. Look at the injury thread....

https://allnurses.com/forums/f8/what-injuries-illnesses-yours-has-been-result-being-nurse-272053.html

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