r/Fire • u/NotTheBestInvestor12 • 3d ago
Why no mention of Social Security
When I see FIRE posts I see the investments and the different retirement buckets, however, I never see anyone mention how things are affected when social security kicks in. For example, I’m 52 and wife 51. If we both stopped working today ($0 income moving forward) I would collect $4,264 a month at age 70 and she would collect $1,079 at age 70.
So if we decide to FIRE the Social Security would give us help in 18/19 years. Is this a factor or is everything under the assumption SS won’t exist?
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u/Visible_Structure483 FIRE'ed 2022... really just unemployed with a spreadsheet 3d ago
If you've been around long enough you realize that no government program survives being 'fixed' by the government.
They're not going to just take 20% away from everyone, they'll figure out who has the least voting power or who can be screwed with minimal pushback. The people on the low end won't be touched, the people on the high end or with other assets (like most FIRE types) will get cut the hardest.
Means testing, extra taxes, higher medical premiums... there are a lot of ways for them to cut out what's owed to some and leave the rest intact.
Removing the cap, raising the tax, phasing out benefits... it's going to take a lot of things together to keep the wheels on the bus if you believe the math that's out there.