I find the key is determining WHAT makes the most impact for YOU. It's a treat---what splurge will make you the most happy. Try to decide and then treat yourself at set intervals. |
| We hadn’t done any of those things specifically when our HHI was below $300k but we did travel more than most people at our income level. Everyone has their priorities and I think you should be frugal where it doesn’t matter (to you) and splurge when you care. Concerts and golf don’t matter to me. But I want to go somewhere warm every winter without fail. It matters a lot to me. |
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I splurge on ski vacations and some other travel items like restaurants and significant historic locations.
I never spend at all here in the DC area. I won't even pay for parking anywhere. Concerts? Hell no. I have a nice stereo. The DC area offers practically nothing worth paying for in that regard anyway. It's mostly 2nd rate. |
Same here. |
| 300k is a lot if you don’t have many obligations/expenses. |
Agree with this. I spend my hard earned money on travelling abroad or out of state. I only make 135K so not much to spend for anything fancy anyway. But even if I was making a lot of more, I would rather either keep investing my extra income in brokerage account or travel more. |
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I have 15M+ and don't pay for those... but I do pay for other things that are very expensive.
Only you can decide how you allocate your money, OP. |
| No, our income is under 200k and we don't do those special fancy things anymore. We previously did occasionally for a birthday or anniversary, but they aren't particularly affordable anymore if we want to take one modest vacation a year. |
| My HHI is under $100K, and I went to a fancy tea once but someone else paid. I would never pay $500 for a concert ticket. There was a year when I survived on $19k and I kept telling myself things I wanted were "for other people". And even though I'm doing much better financially now, I still believe that. Regular people don't fly on private planes. Regular people don't have weekly cleaning ladies. Regular people don't use Waymo. Or regularly get boba or whatever else. I have a cousin who joined her county's ski club and went on skip trips this winter. She's always posting pictures of her eating /drinking out with friends. Bars, wineries, restaurants. I can't afford that. That's for other people, not me. |
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No.
I think about it and then I think I won’t really enjoy it. I’ve always wanted to go to a final four game. My husband actually finally went and the freaking game didn’t start till 9 PM and while it was exciting and somebody lost it the last minute. He was like I wouldn’t pay for that. (The tickets were a gift) I’m actually going to Europe for the first time and part of me thinks I’m just not even gonna like it but I’m doing it because everybody’s like you’ve never been to Europe. Some people told me it’s gonna be life-changing. I really doubt it. My SIL is the same way except she spends a lot of money on travel and she collects houses. Otherwise, she doesn’t spend money on anything. We just discussed this because we’re retiring and it feels so weird to spend all the money we’ve spent our whole lives collecting. I spend money on spending time with family and people to clean my house and do my yard so I don’t have to do that stuff. That makes me happy. But I’ve always thought about doing tea actually at the Boston Public library and then I think I’d rather go to the north end. |
| I’m super frugal, like cut my own hair, wear drugstore makeup if at all, nondesigner purse I use for years, but I did go to the Little Inn at Washington to see the hype of a three Michelin star restaurant. It was fun, whimsical and charming. I wouldn’t go again but I’m glad I did. |
| Nope |
What if you doubled your salary? |
And not so much divided by 4 family members, especially if you have teens. |
afternoon teas, not high teas. High tea is working-class dinner. |