How big of an investment portfolio should I have to be financially freeor start feeling free? This is one of the most common questions people starting on their financial independence journey ask.
Sometimes telling them they should accumulate at least 25X their annual expenses or 20X their annual gross income may seem too daunting. As a result, they may get discouraged and not even start.
Therefore, to boost motivation and momentum, I’ve come up with the minimum investment portfolio amount for financial freedom seekers to shoot for. That amount is $300,000. Once you have accumulated $300,000, you will start to feel financially free.
Let me explain by sharing some key investment portfolio levels based on our personal accounts. Never let a financial review go to waste.
Starting The Financial Freedom Journey Early
One of the interesting things about having kids is that you get to start over financially. As a forward-thinking parent, I’m certain my adult children will have wanted me to build an investment portfolio for them while they were young. After all, compound returns are some of the most powerful forces in finance. The sooner we can start investing the better.
The main way we can help our children build an investment portfolio is by opening up a custodial brokerage account and/or a custodial Roth IRA. If you expect your estate to be above the estate tax threshold when you die, gifting the maximum gift exemption limit each year may be a smart idea.
The custodial Roth IRA is especially attractive if you have a business because:
Your contribution serves as a business expense
The income by the child is earned tax-free if it is below the standard deduction threshold
The investments get to compound tax-free
Withdrawals are also tax-free
Your child develops a work ethic
Your child will better appreciate the value of money
You don’t need a business to open up a custodial Roth IRA. Your child just needs to have earned income.
When Your Investment Portfolio Is Too Small To Matter Yet
Below is my son’s Roth IRA portfolio. It was up a respectable 25.49% with names such as VTI, TWTR, TSLA, NFLX. VTI slightly underperformed, TWTR and NFLX underperformed, and TSLA drastically outperformed the S&P 500.
Most of us would be pleased with a 25.49% annual return given it is about 15% higher than the historical return average for the S&P 500. However, in this portfolio’s case, a 25.49% return amounted to only $2,682.44.
For an adolescent, the absolute dollar amount returned is good. However, for an adult, $2,682.44 doesn’t really move the needle. It could pay for a month’s worth of living expenses for a frugal individual, but that’s about it.
There is no feeling financially free with only a five-digit investment portfolio balance. Therefore, the only thing to do is to keep contributing. Hopefully, the taste of sweet returns keeps an investor hooked.