Pointedstick wrote:
That article perfectly illustrates the power of lowering your expenses to retire early. Once you're able to comfortably live below the "poverty level" on an income derived solely from investments, you're paying zero taxes, collecting checks from several nice tax credits, and you're probably able to take advantage of some of the more stupidly constructed welfare programs that don't check your assets (I know that SNAP does).
I've looked into this recently. It's not as easy to qualify for government handouts as the right wing wants you to believe. For one, while many government programs ignore retirement assets, they do consider your car as an asset. I find a $5k car to be the bare minimum acceptable vehicle to drive that gets good gas mileage and is reliable. Right now that might be an early 2000s Honda Civic. Below that, you're driving a beater that will break down all the time. A lot of government programs exclude you if your assets are around that $5k mark so you'll be screwed.
Additionally, most government programs are directed towards single mothers. As a man with no children, you won't qualify for much. You could likely access a food bank, but they are privately run and the ethical boundary changes when you're taking from private enterprise rather than government (at least to me it does).
Section 8 housing might be a possibility with low assets but there's waiting lists and you will be living with people low on the socioeconomic pyramid. Most people at that level are not brilliant libertarian early-retirement gurus who have graduate degrees, and figured out how to retire cheaply at age 33.
I do, however, have a viable strategy that maximizes government benefits, primarily the standard deduction and personal exemption. You should defer a large chunk of retirement assets into traditional IRAs/401ks so you can convert $10k per year (adjusted for inflation as the levels change over time), into a Roth IRA. Assuming you're not actively receiving distributions to live off from those accounts that would otherwise be taxable, you'd want to do the conversion up to the point where you can do it for "free."
Part of my master fantasy involves buying a house in Texas or Florida where your primary home is sheltered from creditors, putting $100k into an immediate annuity so you can pay the annual property taxes in perpetuity (and the annuity is an insurance account, not a money account, and protected from creditors in these two states, and $100k keeps it under the state insurance level in case the insurance company goes under). Then have another $200k or so in a mix of Roth and Traditional IRAs. Convert any amount up to the point of "free/no taxes" each year into a Roth. You could live really nice and pay no income taxes for the rest of your life, because your annual expenses would be under $15k since you own your own home, and won't have a job to commute to each day, so low transportation budget and low food expense if you cook your own meals.