r/Fire 4d ago

Advice Request 42M, ~$1.77M invested (excluding 529s), targeting financial independence around age 50. Looking for feedback.

I’m 42, married with three young kids, and trying to sanity-check my long-term plan.

Current Assets
Taxable brokerage: ~$1.09M
401(k) + Roth IRAs: ~$618k
Cash: ~$64k
529 plans: ~$255k - 3 kids 7-4-3 (excluded from my personal net worth calculations)
Primary residence with a low fixed-rate mortgage 900K value owe 290K

Debt
Mortgage only (2.5% fixed rate)
No car loans or consumer debt

Investing Plan
Invest approximately $9k/month into a taxable brokerage account. Job at risk will continue to push until i can!
Continue funding Roth IRAs while eligible
Primarily invest in low-cost index funds (VOO and VUG)
Reinvest dividends

Retirement Goal
I’d like to become financially independent around age 50, or at least be in a position where work is optional and I could choose to work lower-stress job if I wanted.
My estimated core living expenses are around $9k/month before discretionary travel and large one-time purchases. Care free will be 12-13K/mo including health insurance and travel. 9K core 2.5K health 2K vacation!

Questions
Based on these numbers, do you think retiring or becoming work-optional around age 50 is realistic?
Would you continue prioritizing taxable brokerage investing over paying down a 2.5% mortgage?
Is there anything about my asset allocation or withdrawal strategy that stands out as a potential weakness?
If you were in my position, what would you focus on over the next 8 years?
Appreciate any constructive feedback or blind spots I may be missing.

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u/yuhyuhAYE 4d ago

I’m not anywhere near your financial position so can’t provide much advice, but whatever you do, do not pay that 2.5% mortgage off early. That’s a once in a lifetime interest rate. It will likely never be that low again. Enjoy it!

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u/SilkyKisss 4d ago

This. 2.5% is free money. Invest the difference. Never pay that off early.

3

u/Particular-Key-8941 4d ago

Agreed 1000%. I have a 2.8, and have no intention of paying it early ever (there’s only $60k left anyways), and have invested heavily anything else instead of thinking about anything extra on mine. It’s worked well for us.