I found this linked article a good read as I transition from early retirement (I stopped working full time at age 51.5) to where I am now 8 years later knocking on the "withdrawal eligible" retirement age of 59.5.
During the past 8 years I have worked part time. Much of that income has been adding to my Self Directed IRA. In addition to saving my part time earned income, I have been able to fully fund my HSA (Health Saving Account) with unearned income (a portion of my early retirement pension). More importantly, these last 8 years have taught me to live within my means, but live... "by all means".
I have traveled, cared for an elderly parent and dedicated some of my early time to "finding things on sale", such as a condo in a sunny warm tropical climate. I have spent more than half of my time in early retirement fixing things that I normally would have hire a professional to have done, such as renovating the condo or maintaining my fleet of aging cars. I have an appreciation for knowing where my skill set ends and where a professional skill set is needed. Early retirement has afforded me the time to hone and deploy my personal skill that has both saved me money, but also enriched my life. The concept of "time" has taken on a different dynamic in early retirement.
In any event, I hope you find this linked blog post interesting and helpful.
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Comments
May I ask, what is your self-directed IRA directed in, real estate, a business?
My SDIRA will hopefully continue to be funded by self employment income until I am 65...maybe beyond (70.5). I decided to keep this investment simple and to attempt to treat it as a buy and hold investment until RMDs kick in. My fund choices include PARWX (85% Large Cap Value Equities & 15 % Cash) and IOFIX (Multisector Bond). I attempt to keep a 70% (equities) and 30% (cash/bond) Allocation which works out to be 85% PARWX and15% IOFIX with the two funds.
We have a different definition of self directed IRA. I think of them as investing in things other than mutual funds or stocks or bonds. I see it as investing, for example, in buying and selling real estate, owning rental properties or owning a business. But, Googling the definition says it can be all the above. Thanks for the feedback.
Investopedia does a good job of describing what I believe you point out is more commonly referred to as a Self Directed IRA.
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Thanks @Ted (corrected)
Regards,
Ted
https://www.forbes.com/sites/wadepfau/2016/07/07/does-the-4-rule-work-in-todays-markets/#65b36892b336
MarketWatch article:
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/the-4-rule-desperately-needs-to-be-modernized-2018-07-20/print