Anonymous wrote:OP, congratulations! For a 33-year-old teacher, you are amazing!
I think you sound very set, but instead of stopping tutoring I recommend you increase your rates while slowing down. Stay in the business because what you are doing is obviously very in demand. Keep your contacts and skills current this way, so if down the road you want to take some time away from school (for example, to stay hoe with a baby) you can keep up some tutoring on your own schedule if you want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not cut tutoring hours?
+1 I'd cut tutoring hours by 50% and see how that feels mentally and financially.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:also, OP .. can you share what your tutoring business is? How are you bringing in so much money?
as a teacher myself I do not believe that number. Something is off here in many ways. Not going to bother to poke holes in this, but anyone who is teacher in moco can figure it out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some background:
I'm a 33 year old single teacher in NOVA. I am trying to see if I can stop working at my fairly lucrative hide hustle and just rely on my school salary.
I currently make around $83,000 from my NOVA school district and after taxes take home another $50,000 from my side hustle of tutoring. I really like the side hustle's money, but am SO tired from the nights and weekends. Does DCUM fam think I have enough saved up so I don't have to keep my side hustle or can slow down?
Finances:
Cash: $30,000
Taxable Brokerage: $185,000
403b: $126,000
457: $63,000
Roth IRA: $90,000
My home is worth about $615,000 and I owe about $450,000 on it.
I currently max out my 403b, Roth IRA, and contribute $2,000 a month to my taxable brokerage account.
Future Plans
Not really into getting married but may become a Single Mom by Choice one day.
I plan on staying with my district and will get a pension paying about 70% of my salary when I retire in my mid 50s.
Does DCUM think I can pull the trigger and stop tutoring?
Is this for real? Those pension numbers are SIGNIFICANTLY more generous than MoCo counterparts.
NP. Start your own thread and don't hijack OP's. Sheesh.
Anonymous wrote:also, OP .. can you share what your tutoring business is? How are you bringing in so much money?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some background:
I'm a 33 year old single teacher in NOVA. I am trying to see if I can stop working at my fairly lucrative hide hustle and just rely on my school salary.
I currently make around $83,000 from my NOVA school district and after taxes take home another $50,000 from my side hustle of tutoring. I really like the side hustle's money, but am SO tired from the nights and weekends. Does DCUM fam think I have enough saved up so I don't have to keep my side hustle or can slow down?
Finances:
Cash: $30,000
Taxable Brokerage: $185,000
403b: $126,000
457: $63,000
Roth IRA: $90,000
My home is worth about $615,000 and I owe about $450,000 on it.
I currently max out my 403b, Roth IRA, and contribute $2,000 a month to my taxable brokerage account.
Future Plans
Not really into getting married but may become a Single Mom by Choice one day.
I plan on staying with my district and will get a pension paying about 70% of my salary when I retire in my mid 50s.
Does DCUM think I can pull the trigger and stop tutoring?
Is this for real? Those pension numbers are SIGNIFICANTLY more generous than MoCo counterparts.
Anonymous wrote:Some background:
I'm a 33 year old single teacher in NOVA. I am trying to see if I can stop working at my fairly lucrative hide hustle and just rely on my school salary.
I currently make around $83,000 from my NOVA school district and after taxes take home another $50,000 from my side hustle of tutoring. I really like the side hustle's money, but am SO tired from the nights and weekends. Does DCUM fam think I have enough saved up so I don't have to keep my side hustle or can slow down?
Finances:
Cash: $30,000
Taxable Brokerage: $185,000
403b: $126,000
457: $63,000
Roth IRA: $90,000
My home is worth about $615,000 and I owe about $450,000 on it.
I currently max out my 403b, Roth IRA, and contribute $2,000 a month to my taxable brokerage account.
Future Plans
Not really into getting married but may become a Single Mom by Choice one day.
I plan on staying with my district and will get a pension paying about 70% of my salary when I retire in my mid 50s.
Does DCUM think I can pull the trigger and stop tutoring?
+1Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not cut tutoring hours?
+1 I'd cut tutoring hours by 50% and see how that feels mentally and financially.
Anonymous wrote:Why not cut tutoring hours?