Retiring in Elk Country

Beendare

"DADDY"
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Pretty good article on Retiring in elk country- The Montana guys are going to love this- Not!

Its on Yahoo finance by Drew Wood at LINK

So many different guys asking about this in the various threads, this guy does a good job of covering the potential expenses.
 
The author writes an article about retiring on $300k, then says this:

"Most Americans drastically underestimate how much they need to retire and overestimate how prepared they are."

I don't know about anyone else, but I would be pretty nervous to go into retirement at $300k.
 
The only way $300K will do it is if you're house is paid for any you have $10K/month coming in on a pension and SS. Not too many can claim the latter.
 
I think the described scenario would be reasonable for a local (with social connections) who has a paid off house where the roof and other major maintenance costs are all recent (won't need to be replaced in his remaining years living there) in addition to a vehicle that is going last them the rest of their driving career.

If someone from, say, Mississippi, is dreaming of retiring solo in "elk country" Montana at age 67 on $2,800 SS and $300k in savings/IRAs, then the answer is no: its going to be a huge mistake and you don't know what you're doing, how to do it, you're too old to learn and don't have the runway left to justify trying to get that retirement dream in the air. Best to hope that your adult son has a good job and can afford to take you both on some guided elk hunts for a few years.
 
That’s funny. I’ll stay in the Midwest, rotate thru all the elk states and all the other points I have. I plan to buy a van so I can live down by the river close to wherever I want to hunt that month, or that spring or that fall. Or fish…

It’s coming!
 
If thats what its like now its not looking good for me in 20 years lol
 
I appreciate the breakdown and specificity but I don't know anyone planning on retiring on 300K + SS. I'm not saying it can't be done, but boy is that running a tight line.
 
Looking forward to finding out :) being better prepared than how he describes...not seeing how that would be feasible.
 
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