The numbers just don't work for me at that salary level. Let's say you are single, never married, no kids. You work as a lawyer in a VHCOL city (say Manhattan). Let's think about reasonable monthly expenses for a lawyer with 10+ years of experience:ughbugchugplug wrote: ↑Wed Jan 25, 2023 6:03 pmContinually shocked to learn people consider my extremely nice and comfortable lifestyle is not possibleAnonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Jan 25, 2023 5:27 pmlol, okay. Enjoy biglaw.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Jan 25, 2023 4:52 pm"where are you now" doesn't have to mean 5 seconds later, it can also mean 5 years later. And for the type of social groups that lawyers keep, its going to be very tough to retire comfortably on $175k/year. For a lot of people that means 0 savings outside your 401k, with perhaps substantial debt as well. If you are going to live in rural Pennsylvania and your friends are in manual labor, then a $175k career cap on earnings can lead to a reasonable retirement. If you live in Manhattan and your friends are lawyers/doctors/bankers it is basically the road to bankruptcy.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Jan 25, 2023 3:28 pm
You can absolutely save enough for a comfortable retirement on $175k a year (including government benefits). If you compare yourself to biglaw partners, you’re going to be dissatisfied, but the vast majority of people in the world aren’t biglaw partners.
Plus I’m not sure why you’re talking about a 10+ yr biglaw person when the OP was asking about leaving as a junior. They’re not sticking around 10+ years.
Also the opportunity cost of going to law school to cap your career earnings at $175k is really really high, relative to other jobs you could have done.
Rent: $4k
Food: $3k (mostly takeout, but some groceries)
Discretionary: $1k
401k:$2k
Taxes: $4.5k
Total: $14.5k
Your monthly salary is $14.5k, so you are basically living paycheck to paycheck, and likely underwater given that you also want to take vacations, etc...
I get hating biglaw and wanting to bail after a few years, and many people do it, but there is a big difference between landing in house and eventually making $400k versus landing in government and making $175k tops. It seems like the first option can still give you a reasonably comfortable lifestyle, albeit not as comfortable as biglaw perma-counsel, but the first option is likely to leave you living paycheck-to-paycheck and regretting getting out of biglaw too soon.