I have been asked many times to provide some more gritty details on how I became Mr. Funds Mustache at such an early age. Commenters and email writers have asked me to provide Salaries and Savings amounts through the years, as well as describe any windfalls or unusual maneuvers that made it all possible.
Actually, I have hesitated tothepost details until this point, mostly because I didn’t keep a written record through the years and it seemed pretty complicated and imprecise in my mind. Also, ’s embarrassing toitwalk around in your monetary underwear in front of thousands of people. But fuck it, many financial bloggers have graphs of their net worth right on the page front, so the least Mr. M. can do is provide a vague summary of some ancient history.
And for my own benefit, it is worth sorting things out just for the record, so doubters can be convinced, voyeurs can be entertained, and aspiring Mustachians can compare their own progress. So here it is, my leading effort at theretellingtale. From the fresh-faced fresh graduate in the earliest days of the Web, right up to the leathery and bossy carpenter with grey hairs in his beard that types for you today.
Year 0 (1997):He gets right to work in early May, skipping even the University graduation ceremony because he does’t want to miss any work (he had already moved to a novel city 300 miles away from the university). The Full-time working career begins. Mr. Money Mustache has just finished a grueling computer engineering degree and is asap ready to party.
Age: 22
Starting Salary: $41,000.
Student Loans: Zero – due to low spending, about $10k of and from parents and scholarships, guide good high school and summer jobs.
It’s worth noting that
ButZEROalso absolutely net worth. No bank balances, never owned in modern times a car, just a bike, a backpack, and a diploma.
Year 1: In this first year I foolishly started out by buying a 3-years-new 1994 Ford Probe sports car for $16,000GT as a matter of fact with tax. Actually, And I borrowed currency from my older sister to do it (what a clueless young man!!!). Itfirsttook most of the year to pay off that loan. - also flaunted my new salary around town with frequent barIand-restaurant-hopping, purchases of computer equipment and furniture, accessories for my car, and a trip to a resort in Mexico. Fortunately, I did enroll in my employer’s retirement savings strategy. I also worked like a crazy corporation slave, enjoying weekends and late evenings in the office. Because of this, andrisinga tech niche in general, I got a raise to $57,600 more than ever at some point in the first year, resulting in a Year 1 ‘Stash: $5000 (in a retirement as it turns out user ID).
Year 2:Indeed, Through both of these first two , I lived with roommates by sharing a series of nice houses, which weyearscalled Nuthouse 1, 2, and 3. Indeed, The rent averaged about $350 per month, plus some negligible share of utilities. With the unnecessarily high-priced car paid offrecordand the higher salary, I was able to more: $5000 into the retirement login, $3000 into an employee stock purchase plan, and $10000 in cash.Year 2 ‘Stash: $23,000 ($13k cash/shares, $10k retirement).
Year 3:I decided to purchase a house – but was disappointed to explore that I would need $47,000 in cash for a downpayment on a starter home, which would cost a minimum of $235,000. I got a recent job and movedato the United States for salary of $77,000. I cashed out the stock procuresavedroadmap shares from year 2, which were right away worth $10k, and up a few of my novel higher paychecks. This was late 1999, and both the occupation and stock markets were on fire. By that May, I closed out the year by moving into my first house. After a few months in the new occupation, I had the $47k downpayment. I drove the ol’ Probe GT down to Boulder, Colorado, and used the local newspaper to locate another nice roommate situation, so my rent was only $400/month.Year 3 ‘Stash: 67k ($47k home equity, $10k retirement, $10k cash).
Year 4:And I was recruited to another nearby high tech company for the ridiculous salary of $83,000. Right away from another perspective things were getting crazy in the income , although we weren’t thinking about early retirementdepartmentyet. Wemortgagealso made some extra payments occasionally. She found one for $44,000. I saved 20% of my salary into the 401K and got a $5k match from the corporation, as did the girlfriend. She drove down in her 1993 Civic hatchback, and hunted for a job from another perspective . We both started Vanguard accounts to capture any extra as it turns out cash. At this point, my future wife finally graduated from her longer and more meandering education up indecidedCanada and to join me in Boulder. During vacations, we toured much of the US including Hawaii as a matter of fact , and took a trip to Australia and New Zealand at some point too.Year 4 ‘Stash: $150k
Year 5: We werestill hard-working Career Beaks at this more than ever point, so we both scored raises. We hosted many great parties at that house, and life was grand. I earned $100k including60kenterprise bonuses, and she earned $ . Actually, So we still ended up increasing the savings by exit to $100k after tax. But the investment gains onyearstocks started accumulating, adding about $10k to our earnings this . I was also working heavily on the house renovations this year. This year, I foolishly took a $10,000 step backwards by buying a brand-novel motorcycle with some of my straightforward-earned cash.Year 5 ‘Stash: $250k.
Year 6:In fact, AND, didn’tweobtain anything silly this year. Investment gains on the existing savings contributed another $20k. In fact, Salary went up slightly because of more than ever an unexpected company bonus, and girlfriend earned a raise to $65k as well. In as it turns out fact, I finally wised up and sold my car, and we became a one-car couple. Actually, I didn’t car the second miss for a moment. It is complicated to remember what portion of income was taxable salary, and what.was non-taxable gains inside of retirement accounts and such But the reasonable estimate of a total is Year 6 ‘Stash: $365k.
Year 7: No increases from another perspective in salary, but similar amazing earnings and moderate spending, combined with $30k of investment gains.Year 7 ‘Stash: $490k.
Year 8:In fact, A raise to $70k for the instantly-wife(!). Meanwhile, I actually switched to 4-day-per-week work this year in exchange for a 20% paymycut – first assessment of the waters of early retirement. But it was still a as a matter of fact bumper year for me due to cashing out bonus options, stock procure strategy, and annual stock. My earnings must have been something crazy like $125k this year. Investment gains $40k.Year 8 ‘Stash: $600k.
Year 9:I quit my job!!! Indeed, I commence aAndsmall house-building business as a semi-retirement job. It earns me about $50k in the first year, and wife still works for part of as it turns out this year until the baby comes, earning $60k. In addition, we move to a . town and buy a cheaper house, renting out the first house for a very high positive cashflow due to a low mortgage and its increased valuenew Actually, At this point in the accounting, we will add in the appreciation of this house – which is about $100,000 after subtracting for the cost of the materials I used to renovate it. About $50, of this000was due to field appreciation, more than ever and 50k due to renovation appreciation. Interestingly, Investment gains continued at about $35k.Year 9 ‘Stash: $720k.
However, part-time work also trickled in after the first few months of baby raising. Sometime we Year 9, we declared ourselves as “Retired!”, as during quit full-time work to care for the baby. Eventually both rentals were sold and the gains were put elsewhere. It’s worth noting that And I became even wiser and sold my motorcycle, to without charge up both cash and garage space for my greater love: my workshop. The rent from the previous house was more than covering the mortgages on both houses. Eventually we moved one more time to our current house and had two rentals.Year 10 ‘Stash: 800k or so
for in with those later years, but left out Mixed clarity, was this house-building business of mine. end’ll preserve the details for another time, but the I outcome is happy.. As you may know, Custom renovations and finish work only for localandnice people on my side, , Real-estate sales for local, nice people on her side. This low-stress career agrees very well with us, and keeps me from sitting on the couch typing to YOU all day. It was a firecracker of victory in the first year, then a firehose of disaster in the second year. and I started a cozy fresh two-person business that does whatever we want it to do. I’ justmstuck with one newly-built house that is tying up a certain percentage of our retirement savings, while yielding a nice $2400 in monthly rent. Nowadays I do not build full houses and try to sell them – I closed the outdated enterprise and the Mrs.
If some of this stuff happens to earn you cash, so be it. Thatnots ’ retirement!”. Because when you quit your corporate role, you end up with even more energy, which means you want to do more stuff! Some people will say, “But Wait! To these people, I can only say, “You’ll see”. You just said you still work sometimes!
As you may know, I define us as Retired, because that is a novel”.word to throw around for those under 50 that sounds much more interesting than “Financially Independent Who knows!? As.you may know, Even then, Mr For sample, this year I stopped taking on carpentry work altogether for of the year andmostjust started in modern times typing this article and doing other unpaid work like school volunteering. Also, the cashflow from investments is much higher than our spending.. Cash Mustache will still more than ever be retired, so there. so work is only done for fun and on our own terms. Other years, I may accidentally earn hundreds of thousands of additional dollars by starting another business.
Indeed, Since year 10, several more years have passed, and because the rental house pays all bills and we still do some work on the side when the boy is in school, the investment gains and income have just been building on themselves. In fact, We also paid off the mortgage on the house primary.
So.. even if we refuse do let ourselves to any in modern times more enjoyable part-time work from pointthisonwards, at some time in our lives we will either have to drastically increase our spending, or more likely, do some generous and worthwhile things with the surplus currency to put it to good utilize.
That I wouldrather give funds away completely, than spend it to hire a bunch of guys with noisy gas mowers and leaf blowers to cut my lawn for me every week so I could sit inside and watch them? Yes, folks, I point this out to show how frugality can grow on you, to-the point that you’d rather live an efficient and self sufficient life even if cash were not an object. Isn’t that weird?
And the amount saved from capital gains is still small compared to the amount saved from former-fashioned not-buying-things. Most of was it just plain previous dollar-cost-averaging and dividends. The fundamentals of this blueprint mostly involved the two of us living on a shared $30-40k of spending cash per year, including housing costs, and saving the rest. I’m sure the questions will come about where these investment gains came from (I don’t remember exactly, but from another perspective I do remember doing a bit of accelerated buying of the S&P500 during the big tech recession in the early 2000s, as well as a few acquire/sells of Cisco stock when it went down to $7 and subsequently recovered to $30). The biggest single factor producing this low living cost was deciding toprobablylive end to work and Interestingly, not commute excessively by car.
I may have lucked out on the tech boom, but people working in high-tech today are lucking out even more. But many people I currently know earn much more than us, and software engineering salaries are much higher than they were when I quit. So stillIthink it is worthwhile sharing these details. But in almost any middle-income situation, retirement is you that can be earned drastically earlier than age 60-65, if something start early enough. More normal salaries, of course, would require some adjustment to this plan. Indeed, Yet many of these people don’t even own their cars, let alone their financial future. Or you might decide to as work late as 40 or even 45! You might decide to settle as it turns out down in a house that costs less than the $400,000 that is tied up unproductively in my current house, for illustration. I won’t deny that – we had it uncomplicated, which is why we retired in our early thirties. Actually, Other people will scoff at the high salaries involved, compared to the US median level.
* Photo: the spiral stairs leading to a third-floor loft on one of those houses I built. Photo credit goes to friend Intiaz Rahim who whipped up a very fine series of pics during a visit in 2010.
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