The PP was claiming that they were living on $1600 (now changed to $2000) a month, taking nice vacations, and buying expensive furniture. To me, that seems like a stretch, even without childcare costs. |
| Well being that my net monthly take home is just under $4,000, you bet your ass I could! Where do I sign up? God, that sounds so luxurious! |
| You guys are lucky you don't have student loans - our household student loans are around $900k/month. Makes a SERIOUS dent. And where are all of these 2k and under mortgages? My mortgage is for about $420k and monthly payments including taxes, insurance, etc. are just under $3k. |
Wow almost a million a month in student loans. |
The key for us is that we bought in 1997. We have added to the loan for one major renovation, but we currently owe <$200k due to timing and over paying. |
By over paying I mean we prepay some of the mortgage each month. |
What kind of HHI can afford 900k a month in student loans? |
AGREE. Also, sounds like they live in a cheap place (condo, maybe). And no transportation expenditures at all? That sounds like an oversight (unless said condo is walkable to everything, but then it wouldn't be $2000/month). This PP obviously doesn't have kids, so their situation is not at all applicable to OP's. Kids are expensive little critters, even when they are out of expensive care and into publics (heck, the food budget alone goes up exponentially by then, let alone activities, etc). |
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Is this a trick question?
What are you spending your money on if you can't live on that amount (yes, even in this area) |
| I would feel very solid and maybe a little decadent on that. We are a family of four on about 5k net. |
Okay, maybe since you bought in 1997 you are close to retirement and that's why you do this. But it's a terrible idea when interest rates are so low. Almost any decent investment is going to give you more than prepaying a mortgage at this point. I'm only in my 30s, though, so clearly if you're at the end stages of working (say 50s or 60s) and can't take risks by investing your money elsewhere, this would not be the case. |
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We live pretty comfortably on less than $5,000/mo take home (taxes, retirement and insurance taken out). 2 adults, 1 kid in public school.
Rent: $2300 Cell phone, internet: $150 Aftercare/Camp: $250 Utilities: $150 Transportation (one paid off car, daily metro fare, gas and car insurance): $250 Student loans: $300 Food: $600 Medical (meds mainly): $100 We don't save as much as we'd like, but we're comfortable. We have everything we need and a lot of what we want. We vacation 3-4x/yr, but to Maine and Florida with family or camping in NC, we're not going overseas. I'd LOVE to have an additional $2500+/mo and a lower rent/mortgage. |
| Not comfortably but we could scrape by. |
| Yes. We are a family of 3 living on $5k/mo with $2800 mortgage. |
We are 15 years away from retirement. The reason we prepay is that house assets are different from savings assets when colleges look at the parent's ability to pay. They allocate 10% of parents assets to college costs. Each year. So if you don't want all your savings to be decimated every year for four years- you prepay and do ROTH as much as you can. |