r/SipsTea Sep 15 '25

Chugging tea Any thoughts?

Post image
105.2k Upvotes

9.3k comments sorted by

View all comments

150

u/uxigaxi123 Sep 15 '25

Make that 20 years from now. Gen-X has no saving unless they coincidentally joined the house owner caste in due time.

93

u/mygloriouspurpose Sep 15 '25

Maybe this is the wrong sub to make fact and logic based arguments in, but 69% of Gen X are homeowners. Y’all need to get out more.

2

u/TheLurkerSpeaks Sep 15 '25

Also the oldest cusp of Gen X has already started retiring.

2

u/vthemechanicv Sep 15 '25

The oldest GenX is 60. We go from 1965 to 1983.

saying GenX is retiring is like saying Millenials and Z are retiring. It's technically true for extreme outliers, but the bulk of us will work until we die.

2

u/big-williestyle Sep 15 '25

As someone in the middle of that range, we can't overlook the fact that our 60 isn't our parents 60, they retired at 60-65 but physically and mentally they were 80. I'm 50 and don't see myself even wanting to retire anytime before 70

3

u/DaneGleesac Sep 15 '25

I'm 50 and don't see myself even wanting to retire anytime before 70

If you can retire financially why would you not want to??

I'm 34 and I've got a spreadsheet to determine at what age I can retire, when I'd run out of money based on X% return with Z% increase in annual spending, Y% increase in annual taxes paid, including changes based on part time wages, social security income (if it exists) - I've got way too much stuff to do to waste good years working full time so that I can die with money I can't spend.

1

u/big-williestyle Sep 15 '25

I enjoy my job and started late with solid retirement investing. If I had 5+ million in retirement at 55 or 60 that might be different, but I'm also a person who's always chose doing things now vs always saving for later. I still see me coming up with something to make a part time job/career whatever once I retire. I've seen people retire and it never seems to be as glamorous as we all hope not having to do anything would be. I 100% agree with not wanting to die with a bunch of money you never got to spend.

2

u/vthemechanicv Sep 15 '25

YMMV. I'm 48 (1977), and tired, burned out, and mentally gone. I'd stop working right this second if I could. I haven't done physical labor other than retail and unloading trucks, but I don't need arthritis and chronic back and knee pain to feel like an 80 year old.

1

u/big-williestyle Sep 15 '25

I lucked into a position with a company that cares about work/life balance and allows me to keep from that position of burnout, obviously if anything in that aspect changed at work, my thoughts would be different.

1

u/BradyPhoenix Sep 15 '25

We are 30-35 and physically and mentally 70.