Retiring early doesn't mean you'll stop making money - here's how one retired millennial made more than $60,000 in passive income last year

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Retiring early doesn't mean you'll stop making money - here's how one retired millennial made more than $60,000 in passive income last year

JP Livingston

Courtesy of JP Livingston

Early retirement hasn't stopped J.P. Livingston from making money.

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  • J.P. Livingston embarked on an early retirement at age 28 with a nest egg of $2 million.
  • To her surprise, she continued to generate income while retired, earning more than $60,000 in one year, putting in less than five hours a week of work.
  • Livingston was able to do this by monetizing her personal finance blog, The Money Habit, in a way that yields passive income.

You can take the girl out of work, but you can't take the work out of the girl.

At least, that's the case for J.P. Livingston, who retired at the age of 28 on a nest egg of more than $2 million, which she saved while living in New York City. With a starting job in finance that paid $100,000 by the end of the first year, she was able to tuck away 70% of her take-home pay. From there, she invested 40% of it and saved 60%. When she received yearly raises, instead of increasing her spending limit, she saved the difference for retirement.

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But to her surprise, her corporate years weren't the last time she'd see a flow of income.

"When I was contemplating early retirement while working, I was very burnt out," Livingston previously told Business Insider. "I imagined I would want to sit on the couch and eat bonbons, sleep in late, that kind of thing."

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"I did do that, but it gets boring eventually, and I ended up getting active again with different hobbies and projects," she continued. "Eventually, one or more of those projects yielded income. It's hard to be awake for 60-plus hours a week and not find a single enjoyable way to earn some money."

She began writing a personal finance blog, The Money Habit, because the topic had been of interest to her for years, she said.

"I didn't expect it to make any money at all because there are a million blogs out there, but it eventually got big enough that between the hosting and email bills I decided I should figure out how to monetize it enough to pay its own bills," she told Business Insider. "[After] its first year, it made over $62,000 with me spending less than five hours a week writing about things I wanted to write about."

Setting up passive income through blogging

Livingston started writing on the blog in August 2016, she said, covering everything from investing and saving to planning for early retirement. In 2017, after attracting a few readers, she researched how others monetized their blogs.

It turns out that affiliate commissions, in which she refers a product or business on the blog and receives a percentage of a sale or flat commission from that company if a reader makes a purchase, was a huge opportunity. Through this strategy, she earned $60,162 in 2017.

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Much of this was passive income, meaning she didn't have to put in endless hours to see her work, quite literally, pay off. The lasting value is a bonus of the side hustle, says Livingston. "If you build your own blog or side business, you have created an operation that can continue to throw off cash for you in the future," she said.

Near year's end, Livingston began adding advertisements to the site, which earns her anywhere from $1,000 to $2,000 a month. Because she started using ads so late in the year, they only brought in an extra $2,164 in 2017.

millennial parent baby phone

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Her blog earned $14,000 over three months while Livingston was caring for her new baby.

"Earlier this year I had a kid. I was completely offline for three months, but the blog generated over $14,000 in that time," she said. Livingston had posts pre-scheduled to publish once a week during this time, few had affiliate links, so most of the revenue came from previous posts and ads.

She added that "it has been amazing getting to talk to thousands of other people who are passionate about the same things as I am."

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In fact, if she knew it was still possible to generate income while retired, she thinks she would have retired even earlier than she did.

"I wanted to be absolutely sure I didn't have to work at all once I pulled the trigger," Livingston said. "If I knew then what I know now, I would at least modify my target retirement number to need less buffer because I knew I could work part-time as a fallback to supplement our needs."

"But the reality is that if you have the initiative and discipline to retire early," she said, "you are probably the kind of person who likes to get very engaged in new projects and hobbies, which will eventually yield an income."

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