Here are my thoughts on investing and becoming a millionaire. Pretty basic stuff.
If you are a normal 9-5 person:
- Focus on your career and try to earn at least $100k/year.
- Spend significantly less than you earn
- Put a reasonable to large amount into stock index funds (or a diversified portfolio) each year in a retirement account or just a normal brokerage account if you want to use the money earlier.
- Buy a house you can easily afford at a time when housing prices aren't overpriced.
- Start a small side business such as AM or real estate investing that doesn't distract you from your career.
If you are a small business owner:
- Focus on growing your business
- Spend significantly less than you earn
- Put as much as you can into stock index funds
- Buy a house you can easily afford at a time when housing prices aren't overpriced.
In both scenarios, if you are doing well, you should be able to save at least a million relatively quickly. Depending on how the market is performing of course. If you keep your money invested in the market for 10+ years and put money in each year you should do extremely well. Also spending significantly less than you earn is extremely important. Accumulating wealth is like making a snowball. If you are just starting out and you are wasting too much money, then it is going to be much harder to accumulate money over the long term. It is much easier to take big chunks out of a huge snowball than a small snowball.
I don't like real estate investing, but that is just me. For me, I will probably only ever invest in my primary residence. I don't like real estate because it is not easy to liquidate if things go wrong, you have to pay insurance, taxes, and fees on a property. You have to manage the people that will live there or pay a company to manage it for you. You have to pay repair costs and fix anything that breaks. There are too many things to manage, too many fees, and too many things that could go wrong.
With a stock index fund you just buy it, pay an extremely small fee, and over long periods of time nothing usually outperforms it. If you happen to need the money for something else (like your business is doing really well and you need the money for better cashflow) just sell it right away and use the money.
Basically: good income/business + saving large percent of income + stock investing + home ownership = easy to accumulate at least a million over about 10 years.
Im not trying to disagree bro, but you know how hard it is for a reg 9-5 person to hit 100k a year? pretty fucking low chances..
Considering the "avg" person makes about 1/2 less ( actually even less then 50% in some parts ) then that 100k and that the "avg" person is also not a small business owner, your advice only falls on a small set of people.