I'm reluctant to lock money away for the long term as we will receive substantial assets/gifts/inheritances over the coming decades (houses, blue chip stocks, land, etc) with a current after tax value of approx 4 million which would make us wealthy as we approach retirement.
It's hard to imagine how you are saving 70% of your take-home pay with three kids under 5 but congratulations! In your shoes I would recommend one partner cuts back on hours if possible. Kids are only that age once and you can well afford it. It depends a bit on where you live but if I had four young kids and a job in Dublin I would prefer the space and live in a >€1m house if I could afford it.Monthly take-home pay
Me: approx 7K, wife approx: 3k,
income from rental property €1.8k (this is gross)
Type of employment: e.g. Civil Servant, self-employed
Both public servants
In general are you:
(a) spending more than you earn, or
(b) saving?
Saving approx 7k per month
I'm not an expert on the single scheme but for your age and income you might be bumping off the standard fund threshold of €2m when retirement comes already. So I think it's probably too early too be investing in AVCs. If you do it now you could be in your 60s wanting to stay in work but building up further pension benefits that would be taxed at penal rates. Also the SFT might not be in the same place in 25 year too. So all too early.If I were to contribute to avc would I be at risk of breaching any pension limits?
Hi Brendan,I don't understand this point.
The fact that you expect to get substantial inheritances means that you can lock money away in a pension scheme?
People are often reluctant to put money away in a pension scheme, in case they need it for their kids' education.
Brendan
In effect the extra money sacrificed at this stage in our life would not change our lifestyle then but might impact it now.
Buy to Let Property worth €400k with no mortgage rented for 1800 gross pcm.
Cash of €90k
Saving approx 7k per month
Thanks Early Riser, I admit to not understanding much about our pensions so I think I need to do some research and see what they options would be re early retirement and how AVCs could fund this. I feel I know much more about the older schemes from listening to conversations from my older colleagues but know very little about the one I am in!PS pensions are good but the Single Scheme is considerably less generous than previous schemes. Your wife especially should top up her pension with AVCs. Even more so if at some stage she might consider taking a career break or going part-time (at the risk of sounding sexist here).
Normal retirement age is State Pension age in your scheme - likely to be 68 plus by the time you reach retirement. Either or both of you might appreciate the option of retiring before then with the assistance of an AVC enhanced CNER pension.
Get life cover! You have the public service cover (1 times salary and 50% of the pension you would have received if lived to retirement) but with 3 kids, one on the way and you want more, you need to protect each other financially. That is your biggest exposure as a family.
Max out your pensions
Create an investment fund for future education. We don't know your location but if you have to pay for rent as well as fees for 4 kids, that's expensive.
Steven
http://www.bluewaterfp.ie (www.bluewaterfp.ie)
I'll look into life cover, I never actually considered that but it makes sense to think about.
It's hard to imagine how you are saving 70% of your take-home pay with three kids under 5 but congratulations! In your shoes I would recommend one partner cuts back on hours if possible. Kids are only that age once and you can well afford it. It depends a bit on where you live but if I had four young kids and a job in Dublin I would prefer the space and live in a >€1m house if I could afford it.
I'm not an expert on the single scheme but for your age and income you might be bumping off the standard fund threshold of €2m when retirement comes already. So I think it's probably too early too be investing in AVCs. If you do it now you could be in your 60s wanting to stay in work but building up further pension benefits that would be taxed at penal rates. Also the SFT might not be in the same place in 25 year too. So all too early
That is awful advice Brendan. He'll have 4 kids soon! 500k is about 5 years net income.The case for a wealthy person not needing life cover is much stronger than the case for not needing a pension.
You have no mortgage.
You have about €500k in assets.
You expect big inheritances.
I am not convinced that you need life cover.
Brendan
Putting it in a child's name is to gift them money in a tax efficient manner. It is their money. If you want to use it for education, keep it in your own name.Re the investment fund - should I be looking to put the money/investment in the children's name now or just give them money when the time comes?
Re 3rd level expenses - we don't live in Dublin but have a property there in the center that the children could live in so rent should hopefully not be a issue but we would of course lose the income from the rent.
That is awful advice Brendan. He'll have 4 kids soon! 500k is about 5 years net income.
I think you are both right and both wrong.That is awful advice Brendan. He'll have 4 kids soon! 500k is about 5 years net income.
Basically you have to work out the likely value of your pension and lump sum at normal retirement age. Then you multiply the annual amount by 20 (the standard capitalisation factor) and add the lump sum to see if you are over the SFT. This is the Revenue manual. But please do own homework on this and search other AAM threads on this as there are much more expert posters than me. Likewise for the Single Scheme where you will get useful answers to well-formulated questions. Rule of thumb is that for Single Scheme members almost only medical consultants will be impacted by the SFT as most other public servants just won't have a salary long enough and high enough to build up a pension and lump sum largeThe standard fund threshold is a concern, I don't know how to calculate if that is an issue or not.
Basically you have to work out the likely value of your pension and lump sum at normal retirement age.
That is awful advice Brendan. He'll have 4 kids soon! 500k is about 5 years net income
Steven is right, it's terrible advice. The OP is wealthy for their age but they also have a larger family than most and plans to expand further. The family would really struggle if anything happened to the OPWhat you mean is that you disagree with it. You are wedded to the life industry propaganda that everyone must be fully insured for everything that might possibly happen.
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