We Retired in Our 20s - Here's How to Invest & Retire Early Too

Early retirement means we get to spend more time doing stuff we love - like traveling - instead of working our lives away. And to be honest, it was pretty easy to achieve thanks to some lessons we tweaked from the FIRE movement.
Realizing that we didn't need to spend a lot of money to be happy, we reduced our expenses, invested more money into stocks, bonds, and real estate, and eventually quit our full-time jobs forever. Along the way, we had fun, traveled more, and stressed less.
If you want to reach financial independence and retire early ("FIRE" for short), make sure you check out our blog at tripofalifestyle.com - it's free!
00:00 - Who Can Retire Early
00:23 - How To Get Rich
01:06 - How Much Money You Need to Retire Early
02:34 - How We Retired in Our 20s (with Numbers)
05:29 - Our Early Retirement Investment Portfolio
06:18 - Fun & Freedom from Your Employer
07:01 - Where To Learn More
#financialindependence #financialeducation #investing
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We're Lauren and Steven, and we followed some simple financial guidelines that allowed us to quit our full-time jobs forever by age 29. We created Trip Of A Lifestyle to share the knowledge that changed our lives for the better. All of our content is free.
Get rich. Work less. Travel whenever.
www.tripofalifestyle.com

Пікірлер: 15

  • @investor.z
    @investor.z15 күн бұрын

    I wish I had a partner who shared the same ideals but all she ever wants to do is spend spend spend, and consume consume consume. I really want to end things with her and find someone that wants to work hard and save early on instead of constantly wanting short term gratification.

  • @dy4109
    @dy41092 жыл бұрын

    It would be interesting if you could do a video about your current expense and net worth so we could understand how much it takes to sustain a travel lifestyle that you are living now.

  • @TripOfALifestyle

    @TripOfALifestyle

    2 жыл бұрын

    You can find a lot of that stuff on our blog (which has way more content than our KZread channel, tbh). Here's an example of our household expenses in one year of early retirement: www.tripofalifestyle.com/money/our-spending-revealed/ And here's an example of the cost of a typical trip of ours: www.tripofalifestyle.com/gear-and-tips/cheap-travel/ You can use these as rough starting points to think about what you might want your own lifestyle to look like, and come up with your own target numbers, which might be different from ours. 🙂

  • @christinab9133
    @christinab91332 жыл бұрын

    You guys are amazing! Love ur shorts and use them to help teach a finance class! 😍😍👏👏🎉🎉

  • @TripOfALifestyle

    @TripOfALifestyle

    2 жыл бұрын

    That is so cool! What grade? And where did you hear about us originally, just out of curiosity? Thanks for sharing our stuff with students; that's exactly who we'd most like to reach.

  • @Weekend_Adventures
    @Weekend_Adventures2 жыл бұрын

    Hey new subscribers here. Great video. We are shifting our lifestyles to be able to travel full time too. Great to see others are doing it too!

  • @TripOfALifestyle

    @TripOfALifestyle

    2 жыл бұрын

    Welcome to the club! 🙂

  • @LilJRider
    @LilJRider2 жыл бұрын

    I have been following you both for a good amount of time and you guys as well as Dave Ramsey inspired my wife and I to change our lifestyles. I truly am hoping to clear all of our debt within the next year and join the FIRE movement sooner rather than later

  • @TripOfALifestyle

    @TripOfALifestyle

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's great to hear! Thanks for following along 😊

  • @quintonrichards4805

    @quintonrichards4805

    4 ай бұрын

    Following up to see how things are going?

  • @iTzKubus
    @iTzKubus4 ай бұрын

    Well, if my salary was 70k or 90k a year, I would be able to retire at 30 too. Unfortunately here in Italy the average salary is €1000 or €1200, so doing some sums, saving 80%, in 10 years I would only have 120k instead of your 800k x2

  • @TripOfALifestyle

    @TripOfALifestyle

    4 ай бұрын

    Thanks for your comment! Here are some things to consider... 1) The beauty of financial independence is that only the savings rate (percentage) matters for determining time to retirement - not the absolute amount of money. If you save 80% of a lower salary, then you must also be living on the remaining 20% of that lower salary, meaning your expenses are much lower, and thus, you need proportionally less to retire. Only the percentage matters. 2) Your math doesn't seem to add up. It's possible you are neglecting income taxes, investment growth, or making some sort of arithmetic error. You can see a chart of our actual net worth over 10+ years here though if you like: www.tripofalifestyle.com/money/how-to-save-a-million-dollars/ 3) According to Statista, the average wage in Italy in 2024 is about €31.5k/yr ($34.5k USD), or €2.6k/mo, not €1k - €1.2k. It looks like there may be some significant room for growth in your income, which is a good thing: www.statista.com/topics/7167/earnings-and-wages-in-italy/#topicOverview 4) We didn't make $70k - $90k/yr for our entire careers. Here's an example of the progress we were able to make earlier in our journey (with all the math included): www.tripofalifestyle.com/money/we-saved-100k-in-2-years-on-teacher-salaries/

  • @dustinadams601
    @dustinadams601 Жыл бұрын

    Pretty tough to do when you have kids

  • @TripOfALifestyle

    @TripOfALifestyle

    Жыл бұрын

    If you'd like to check out a couple real-life examples of people who have done this with kids, try: - Modern FImily: modernfimily.com/ - Mr. Money Mustache: www.mrmoneymustache.com We're personally more aimed at people following a path similar to ours (starting toward financial independence right out of college or high school).

  • @Nopanop
    @Nopanop2 жыл бұрын

    How do you keep a sizzling hot gf like that without splashin the cash