Annieindublin
Registered User
- Messages
- 642
What kind of job? Is there any prospect you can do some/all of it yourself (or relatives you can guilt into doing it for you!) and/or is there a more affordable solution to the one you're currently looking at? Are there grants?We have a big job to do on the house.
Like what?Lots of changes coming and frankly I cannot be bothered
Just to give my situation as someone who looks to optimise all aspects of household spending;Also, getting as many solar panels onto your roof as can fit facing S/E/W is a no-brainer and I just cannot understand why so many people are reluctant to do this.
Your payback in a year is not limited to your €857 of usage, the theoretical limit is actually your usage plus your tax-free export plus other taxable export. Ignoring the last and since you said "our usage", you're somewhere between the €857 and 2x €400 tax-free export, so €1657. Then you can also look at EV's, switch to an EV night rate at 5c/kWh. Then you can consider increasing your electricity usage versus other energy sources - e.g. running an immersion overnight instead of gas (5c@100% efficiency vs ~10c @ 80% efficiency with gas). Maybe even consider a big battery plus heat-pump to eliminate gas heating, if you're on gas that is.Happy to hear any flaws in my logic.
From this and previous posts of yours, your experience/situation sounds a lot like what I went through at the tail end of 2021 and when I eventually decided to jack it in and effectively and prematurely slip into retirement. Luckily I have had the means and modest lifestyle to be able to do this without any difficulties. Out for a long walk the other day, I bumped into a former colleague who is still in the same place and he asked if I had any regrets or might do some contract work for them and I had no hesitation in saying "no" to both questions.I have burned out and lost interest.
Your payback in a year is not limited to your €857 of usage, the theoretical limit is actually your usage plus your tax-free export plus other taxable export. Ignoring the last and since you said "our usage", you're somewhere between the €857 and 2x €400 tax-free export, so €1657. Then you can also look at EV's, switch to an EV night rate at 5c/kWh. Then you can consider running an immersion overnight instead of your alternative (5c@100% efficiency vs ~10c @ 80% efficiency with gas). Maybe even consider a big battery plus heat-pump to eliminate gas usage, if you're on gas.
Not gonna lie, I've thought a lot about this particular rabbit-hole!
Soooo lucky....Re heating; I have a modern heat pump as our heating system. My €1,092 electricity for the year includes heating!
As @conor_mc says, your equation omits the most influential elements and therefore you've gotten a totally incorrect result when solving for X.Happy to hear any flaws in my logic.
A more honest statement would probably be "I just cannot understand why so many people can't do what I consider to be basic maths".I just cannot understand why so many people are reluctant to do this
I am targeting age 50, am currently 38.
Have a DB pension which will have 29 years service / 40 years max at aged 50
With a DB pension & max of 40 years service I'm assuming you're post-1995 public sector.- Use my equity liquidity to fund 50-60
- Withdraw DB and ARF from 60
I intend for my spending on travel to greatly increase when I retire, that's for sure!Another thing that needs to come into the calculations is that with more time on your hands people are inclined to spend more. Yes there are plenty of free things to do but still feel that people do spend more generally if they have free time.
I’ll re-cut my analysis and open a separate thread. I’d appreciate your input on it.As @conor_mc says, your equation omits the most influential elements and therefore you've gotten a totally incorrect result when solving for X.
With a DB pension & max of 40 years service I'm assuming you're post-1995 public sector.
I'd say you'd have a much easier hill to climb from 50 to 60 if you either took cost neutral early retirement or went 3 days a week 40 weeks a year at 50 instead of just resigning. My own numbers tell me that coasting to retirement by going part time for 5 years will be vastly more viable than fully retiring at 55.
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