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Extreme Frugal Minimalists Plan to Retire by Age 35! - YouTube
Channel: Exploring Alternatives
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>>MAT: Hey everyone in this video, we're meeting a couple from Vancouver BC
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who are planning to retire by age 35.
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They've adopted an extremely frugal minimalist lifestyle and for the past seven years,
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they've been able to save
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over 65% of their annual income.
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They've been carefully investing their savings and they plan to live off the interest when they do retire.
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Although early retirement isn't
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accessible to everyone, we do think that what Stephanie and Celestian are doing is really interesting
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because frugal lifestyle choices could help make some financial goals like getting out of debt, for example,
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easier to achieve.
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We're really excited to share their story. So let's go meet up with them.
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>>STEPHANIE: So basically about seven and half years ago, we decided to pursue early retirement.
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We figured out a system
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involving lowering our expenses a lot, so we could get our savings rate really high
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up to about 60, 65%
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and just investing that and then just over time
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the money just kind of accumulates
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and now at this point we're probably about
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2-3 years away from having just enough in investments that we don't need to work anymore.
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So at this point, we're nearing the end of the journey we started.
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[Music Playing]
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>>CELESTIAN: What early retirement means to us,
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is being able to retire at a relatively early age
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but still have enough money to be able to support ourselves
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through our investment income without needing to work.
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We might work if we want but we wouldn't be forced to work in order to pay for our bills and such.
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[Music Playing]
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>>STEPHANIE: The biggest things we do is make our large expenses quite a bit lower.
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We rent a very cheap apartment.
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We don't have a car. I do all our cooking from scratch. I do bulk meal prep.
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Generally, you know, we're very minimalist. We don't really buy things.
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There are all these categories for a lot of people that just don't exist for us.
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I mean, we don't have a restaurant budget; we don't have an alcohol budget;
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we don't have a car budget.
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Most of those categories are $0 spent in those categories.
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So, it just means our cost of living is very, very low
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which allows us to...you know
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even though we don't make that much money, we are still able to save consistently
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65%, 70% of our income every year, despite making only very average income for our city.
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[Music Playing]
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So I'm a receptionist at an accounting firm and Cel is a freelance editor.
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>>CELESTIAN: So I mostly do novels, like
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people self-publish novels on the Amazon Kindle Store and similar markets.
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So those are the main people that I work with.
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>>STEPHANIE: Usually, our combined income is around $80k/year.
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We spend about $9,500 on travel, about
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$9,500 on housing, and about $2,500-$3,000 on food per year for the two of us.
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To keep our costs down for groceries,
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it's really just a matter of cooking everything from scratch and
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not buying frozen meals or things like that, but just actually cooking and baking everything from scratch.
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It drives the cost way down.
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We spend less than $300 a month on food for the two of us,
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and that's no trouble because we shop at the kind of places that are very cheap.
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We buy a big sack of flour every month. That's at Costco, a $6 sack of flour. That's all our bread,
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pizza dough,
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baking, you know, muffins...
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I buy big sacks of rice.
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>>CELESTIAN: We buy like cases of soy milk from Costco and that's a bit cheaper as well.
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So there are some things that we buy in bulk that are cheaper and
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then we also go to a local market and buy pretty cheap vegetables.
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It's called Sunrise Market. So that's part of it as well. And we try to get produce
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that's pretty cheap and in season.
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We take two big international vacations a year,
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usually one in the summer and one in the winter and then we do a few little trips to local places
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here and there.
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It's something that we really enjoy just going to new countries, new cultures
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trying new experiences, trying new food.
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>>STEPHANIE: I think every trip we do is really just inspiration towards
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early retirement because it's like a taste of it!
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We spend close to $10,000 a year on travel.
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So it's not like we do a travel budget.
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A lot of it is just we do the same kind of stuff when we travel that we do at home. We tend to
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go to the grocery store, get ingredients and cook. When we travel, we tend to go
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to maybe a local market or
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the outdoor markets or something get ingredients, bring them back and cook or at home
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we don't use a car,
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we walk places and bike places. When we travel, we do the same.
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We take public transit or bike or we walk places.
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So I think there's just a lot of it is just living the same lifestyle that we live at home,
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definitely cuts into the cost of traveling a bit.
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So our transportation costs normally would be about $40 a month
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that would be with bus fare, but it can often be less than that,
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especially during the summer, where we would just walk and bike more.
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We really got serious about it, once we realized early retirement was even a possibility which was
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about 7 years ago.
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So we've been sort of taking it more seriously and working on it
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and really focusing on investing a lot and getting our high savings rate and making progress
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just for about seven and a half years now.
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When we first started,
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Cel had a small net worth. He was just finishing up school.
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I had about seven thousand dollars of debt.
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I did one year of post-secondary before deciding I didn't want to do any more of that,
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but that was gone really quickly.
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We invest in index funds. We just have very simple
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portfolios through a robo-advisor.
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When we get paid, we deposit money, it's dealt with, and we don't
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think about it and it just kind of grows in the background.
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Once a year, we get our tax slips and file our taxes. That's the extent of what we have to do with our
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investments,
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but we don't really do any kind tricks or psychological stuff to spend less.
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We just really look at our spending as a whole and sort of decide how we feel about that and
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we're either happy with this amount or we're not and if we're not, we would just spend less.
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>>CELESTIAN: We try to set it up such that being frugal is easier than not.
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Because people only have so much mental energy and so much discipline they want to use every day, right?
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One example is that we do bulk meal prep on the weekends
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and then we just put all of our food in the fridge
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and so then after work on the week days,
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instead of eating out and going
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to the restaurant or getting takeout, we can go to the fridge and
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put something into the microwave. Not only is it the more cost effective option
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but it's the easiest option.
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>>STEPHANIE: I would say in regards to that
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I think another one of the things people run into sometimes is they make this plan and they say
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everyday i'm gonna go home from work and I'm gonna cook a healthy dinner.
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I mean maybe for some people that works. For me, it doesn't. For me, when I get home from work
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I'm kind of tired. I want to just eat something. You know, I don't want to cook a meal.
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So I might be able to sustain a system like that maybe I could manage it for a week,
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maybe two weeks, but after that, I don't think I could do it every day.
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So I plan around that so that
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I have food ready to go, ready to just basically reheat during the week which makes a big difference.
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>>CELESTIAN: There are downsides, but it depends on...
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they are kind of subjective downsides. It depends on your values or your preferences like your personal preferences.
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For example, a lot of people would see not drinking alcohol as a serious downside. For us,
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it's not because simply we don't want to drink it.
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Some people would see that not having a car and not having the flexibility to drive, wherever they want
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as a big downside.
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So for us not having a car and not driving, are not downsides, that's just how it is.
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>>STEPHANIE: We have a blog. We're not super active, but we have a lot of information on there.
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It's called Incoming Assets.
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It's pretty easy to find. We have sort of updates in our lives, places
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we travel, sort of how our
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net worth is going, and then a little bit about investing and self-employment and
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frugal living in general, sort of some of the things we do.
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We would like to do things
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like maybe longer-term travel. We've talked about
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maybe moving to an island, building a cabin and sort of doing a bit of a
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homestead thing.
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There are lots of different things we'd like to do or just having the
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flexibility just to to move to different places and not have to think
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"Well, what about getting a job there or whatnot?"
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Just be able to sort of have that freedom to do sort of some unorthodox lifestyle choices.
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I think that's one of the real appeals of early retirement is to
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have that freedom to basically live your life the way you want.
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[Music Playing]
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So as for how our lifestyle will look once we retire compared to how it is now.
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It really depends. I mean if we decide to stay in a city, it would be identical.
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If we do decide to move to an island and build a cabin,
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there would probably be some fairly substantial differences.
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But I think at the core a lot would remain the same.
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>>CELESTIAN: For sure we have no intentions after retirement suddenly spending a lot of money on
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restaurants, buying tons of stuff on Amazon.
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It's definitely still going to be a frugal lifestyle post retirement.
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[Music Playing]
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>>MAT: If you want to follow Stephanie and Celestian's journey towards early retirement,
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you can check out their blog which is called Incoming Assets
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where they share all kinds of information about their frugal lifestyle and travel adventures.
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Please share this video if you liked it and thanks for watching.
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