Well. It is where you live
LOL I'd probably still root for the US if I moved to Canada. Maybe not... I suppose it'd depend on why I moved to Canada.
If I move because the US pissed me off, I'd root for Canada. If I moved just to have a change of pace and maybe to return to the US someday, I'd keep rooting for the US.
Speaking of the US pissing me off... It's my own fault, really. It's still astonishing.
Money gets taxed when it moves. I bought a lot of stuff last year. That meant moving money around.
My taxes for 2021 are astonishing...
You're pretty frugal, right? You don't really spend a lot of money, as far as I can tell.
Well, you could retire easily on what I paid in taxes. Hell, you could party it up like a drunken sailor and retire on my tax bill.
And that's avoiding all the taxes I can! (Not evading. Evading taxes is illegal.)
I really don't spend a lot of money, I really don't earn a lot of money. Just enough to get by. I prefer to have more time for the things I enjoy than have more money than time. That's me. Lucky for me most of the things I enjoy the most don't cost that much. Or I would need more money. LoL
I should tax people LoL
I got to write a lot off as investments. But, I still made money on those investments.
If I invest a car at 50k and it's worth 70k, that's 20k the gov wants to tax - but only when I sell it, or if I just pay the gain immediately. It's often better to pay the current tax rate than it is to wait for a lower rate, 'cause lower rates don't really happen all that often. Plus, money gains in value. Plus, I had to pay the capital gains on everything I sold/l\liquidated.
Roughly speaking - assuming you got all the money tax free... (Ha! That's not gonna happen!)
If you took my taxes and invested in low-yield/high surety investments that pay dividends... Again, this assumes you got all my taxes as a lump sum and didn't pay taxes on them... You'd have roughly 140k to live on while keeping your nest egg untouched.
Closer to reality, you'd have to live on roughly 75 to 85k per year (after all the taxes are taken care and including your yearly taxes on the gains). If you were a little risky, you'd have about 100k a year to live off. Given your age, you could easily risk that.
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