Roboadvisors basically do this for very minimal fees. Depends where you live what the options are. Even cheaper are ETFs that track your target portfolio.
FIRE (Financial Independence Retire Early)
Welcome!
FIRE is a lifestyle movement with the goal of gaining financial independence and retiring early.
Flow Charts:
Personal Income Spending Flow Chart (US)
Personal Income Spending Flow Chart (Canada)
Personal Income Spending Flow Chart (Australia)
Personal Finance Flow Chart (Ireland)
Useful Links:
Mr. Money Moustache - a frugal lifestyle blog
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I mean, if you’ve been FIRE’d a few years, you’ve lived at/below your SWR rate, and your portfolio has grown at all, you’re pretty much past the worst of the SORR. Leave your bonds (if applicable) in a bond index fund and your stocks in VTSAX or similar.
If I met the above conditions, I’m setting my portfolio to < 5% bonds, turning off reinvesting dividends, and then the only thing really left to do is withdraw monthly, quarterly, twice a year, or annually to meet your spending needs and/or target income level for healthcare subsidies or whatever.
Maybe it’s more complex then that (can’t speak from experience) but there isn’t really a ton to do. Live your life.
Can’t edit from the Mlem app at the moment, but just to be clear — don’t rebalance stocks/bonds in retirement if it’s going to trigger pointless capital gains taxes. Just withdraw in such a way to reach the ratio you want in time.
Why turn off reinvesting dividends?
Honestly you're probably right in that window where you want to be looking into family offices and/or managed strategies like you'd find on Darwinex or Collective2, depending on your country.