this post was submitted on 25 Nov 2023
1 points (100.0% liked)
Entrepreneur
0 readers
1 users here now
Rules
- No Personal Attacks - criticism of ideas is allowed, attacking people is not.
- Self Posts Only - links can only provide supplementary material. Your post must contain enough content to have a discussion.
- No “How To Get Rich Quick” posts - This community is not about making a quick buck. Posts asking the community how to make $X, without making specific reference to a reasonable idea, are not tolerated.
- Avoid unprofessional communication - Please treat fellow entrepreneurs like respected coworkers, label conversations if NSFW and avoid deliberate provocations.
Please feel free to provide evidence-based best practices, share a micro-victory, discuss strategy and concepts with a frame work, ask for feedback, and create professional conversation. Treat every post as if you're at work and representing the best version of yourself.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
life is long, depending on your age, you may find yourself with a change of mind after a few years. If you're hoping to settle down after this deal, you might be better off trying to raise company value to 2-3M which is possible to live off of long term with dividend investing and a stable portfolio.
900k pounds is a lot though. You can get by with much less in Europe. I would say this is already equivalent to 1.8M USD in terms of lifestyle.
It depends a lot of where you live, both in the UK and the US. And of course your lifestyle.
exactly, £900k in the UK sounds like alot but it really isnt, interest alone on it would be sub £30k once you factor in capital gains etc.
That’s the median household income in the UK as of 2020, which is about half of what it is in the US, which is where I came up with my ratio.
Taxes , taxes, taxes
It's not a lot in the UK if you want to live in London. A nice 1-bed apartment could cost £500-600k. At age 31, that doesn't leave enough left over for a comfortable life.
Even buying a cheaper place somewhere doesn't leave enough left over at such ayoung age. It's more than the vast majority have but it's not enough to retire on.
Sure. OP never said anything about retirement. It’s definitely a substantial amount though.
Yes, it's certainly a nice amount.
Buy a house for £200k, left with £700k with 4% withdrawal rate is £28k a year with no mortgage seems pretty good to me.
The 4% rule has never been tested over such a long period of time. It's also based on past results.
But it's not bad. But 200k on a house in the UK will get a below-average house. If that works for you, that's fine. It won't work for most people. £28k ayear in the UK would be pretty grim.
But you could do the above and get a job, so that woukd be a much better life.
But if living in London, it's not even enough for a nice homein a nice area.