| You should check out the curly girl group on Facebook and read Lorraine masseys book. |
| Your take home seems very low for $45k/year. Are you sure that your aren't withholding too much for taxes? |
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Your take home does sound very low but it's good you are putting 10% in a 401k. Do not pay more than $240/month on the car - that is a super low interest rate and you need to be saving more than $100/month. A healthy 401k or paid off car isn't going to help you if you have no emergency fund.
Definitely definitely babysit on weekends to fund your hair! I make 2x what you do now, but made 45k out of college and still to this day babysit for spare cash. |
That is so not true. I cannot believe you are advising her to stop saving at 2k. What about an emergency health issue, down payment on a house, etc? |
NP, but I think pP was talking about car insurance not car loan. |
PP is correct. Your 401k reduces your taxable income down to $40,500. Your gross pay after federal taxes should be a couple hundred a month more. Check //taxformcalculator.com/. Are you in DC, MD or VA? Do your parents use a CPA who could take a quick look at your pay stub and guide you? |
Ah, you're right. Thanks for pointing that out. I will look into a 6 month option and see if that saves money! |
Thanks for the feedback. Although I'd love to knock out the car loan in the next 8 months, instead I think I'll save $350 a month (plus any baby sitting money) and pay only the $240 on the car loan. When the loan is paid off in seventeen months, I'll be able to divert that to my savings. |
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Embrace your curls. You'll save money and not look like every other girl in the bar.
Sign, A curly-haired sister. |
How is 10-20k going to help in an emergency health situation? It won't get her anything. There's honestly no point. An emergency fund is very different than a downpayment fund. And once she owns a property she will need an emergency fund for repairs and other things that can happen to her property. |
OP, please don't listen to this crazy person. OF COURSE having 10-20K on hand will help you during an emergency health situation. Everyone needs a good emergency fund in place and not just home-owners. This PP has no clue what he or she is talking about. |
Can you get Keratin treatment to get straight hair? It is one time cost but then you do not need to get a blowout for a few months? There are some DIY treatments too. Research online and on youtube. |
+1 I am also curly and 28. I used to get blowouts, bought myself expensive dryers and irons. When I started traveling internationally on a regular basis for work I switched to Keratin. Price depends largely on your length. Mine is nearly to my waist and was over $300. My neighbor has shoulder length and it's $100. I get my roots touched up every 4-6 months for $100. Even if you're on the high end like me, that's less than your monthly blowout cost. |
In my experience, the six month, pay your car insurance all at once, doesn't save much in the grand scheme of things. If the OP can do that, great, if not, most insurance providers have a monthly payment plan, or half now, half in 3 months going, or something else. I get why the OP would want to almost double up payments to pay the car off sooner, but maybe lower that slightly, and still manage to pay the car off sooner until a new job arises. |
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I am probably your parents age....mid 50's. I think you are doing fine.
When I first started out (earning less with a PhD), my expenses were similar. The big thing is to keep putting the money in the 401K. And to not take on any (additional) debt. At 25, not many things can go wrong (health wise), except avoid pregnancy. The reason for the safety cushion of 6 months is because 1) the time it takes to find a new job, and 2) what happens if you get sick and can't work? The medical bills will blow past 10K in no time -- except your insurance probably has a maximum out of pocket. (that happened to me at 48, but I had disability insurance). When your car is paid off, pocket the extra money. Your rent is reasonable. Hair care? I am not one to ask; I get a $15 haircut every three months. Health insurance, don't touch. The only way I see for real saving is to increase the income or move home. |