Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Working on a budget so DH and I can make some important decisions about childcare and what we can and cannot afford. We have high HHI (350Kish) but we also have a lot of debt (all student loan, low interest). What's a good rule of thumb (and something preferably not too complicated) for how much you should pay yourself first/save ideally a month?
I've heard 20% a month into savings is a good barometer and we're at that. Meaning, I've got a budget worked out where we pay down some student loan debt every month, plus have a nanny, plus put away about 24% of our take home income each month into savings (including retirement). Thoughts? Is this good? Bad? Basically trying to make sure we can afford a nanny without being financially irresponsible.
We make slightly less (~325k) and we save about 35-40% of our gross (counting 401k matching), but we don't want to work until we're 65 either. 24% of take home seems good for now. Once the kids get older you can drop the nanny expense and funnel that to savings as well.
I'm assuming you have a super high 401k match because after taxes there isn't that much left to live on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Working on a budget so DH and I can make some important decisions about childcare and what we can and cannot afford. We have high HHI (350Kish) but we also have a lot of debt (all student loan, low interest). What's a good rule of thumb (and something preferably not too complicated) for how much you should pay yourself first/save ideally a month?
I've heard 20% a month into savings is a good barometer and we're at that. Meaning, I've got a budget worked out where we pay down some student loan debt every month, plus have a nanny, plus put away about 24% of our take home income each month into savings (including retirement). Thoughts? Is this good? Bad? Basically trying to make sure we can afford a nanny without being financially irresponsible.
We make slightly less (~325k) and we save about 35-40% of our gross (counting 401k matching), but we don't want to work until we're 65 either. 24% of take home seems good for now. Once the kids get older you can drop the nanny expense and funnel that to savings as well.
Anonymous wrote:Working on a budget so DH and I can make some important decisions about childcare and what we can and cannot afford. We have high HHI (350Kish) but we also have a lot of debt (all student loan, low interest). What's a good rule of thumb (and something preferably not too complicated) for how much you should pay yourself first/save ideally a month?
I've heard 20% a month into savings is a good barometer and we're at that. Meaning, I've got a budget worked out where we pay down some student loan debt every month, plus have a nanny, plus put away about 24% of our take home income each month into savings (including retirement). Thoughts? Is this good? Bad? Basically trying to make sure we can afford a nanny without being financially irresponsible.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand posts like this. We get it - you're rich. Hire a financial planner to help you figure out what to do with your money. Or is it that you just really want to talk about your money but can't do it in real life?
Anonymous wrote:Working on a budget so DH and I can make some important decisions about childcare and what we can and cannot afford. We have high HHI (350Kish) but we also have a lot of debt (all student loan, low interest). What's a good rule of thumb (and something preferably not too complicated) for how much you should pay yourself first/save ideally a month?
I've heard 20% a month into savings is a good barometer and we're at that. Meaning, I've got a budget worked out where we pay down some student loan debt every month, plus have a nanny, plus put away about 24% of our take home income each month into savings (including retirement). Thoughts? Is this good? Bad? Basically trying to make sure we can afford a nanny without being financially irresponsible.
$180k in savings is comfortable, but not too 'rich' to ask for advice here I wouldn't think.Anonymous wrote:I don't understand posts like this. We get it - you're rich. Hire a financial planner to help you figure out what to do with your money. Or is it that you just really want to talk about your money but can't do it in real life?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This question can't really be answered by anyone other than you. How stable is the income? What are the alternatives to having a nanny? How much savings do you have? What types of savings? College Savings? Do you own a home? Are you planning to buy a home? What would you do in an emergency? What is the interest rate on the student loans? Could you pay the student loans plus all other expenses if you lost your job? What percentage of your take home is discretionary spending?
We used to have about that in HHI and we saved about the same as you, and I wish we had saved more. We are fine, but we have made decisions that ended up cutting income, and we had to go through some tighter (not tough, but tighter) times. In retrospect, I wish we had gotten rid of all the debt and save a bigger cushion (i.e., at least $250k in non-retirement) when we had the chance. Instead, we ended up realizing that we didn't have quite as good of an emergency fund as we wished after we had cut the income, thus squeezing much more to get to a comfortable place.
Anonymous wrote:I focus on two different types of savings:
1) retirement
2) emergency
We save for other stuff, but those have always been critical areas. I've heard 10% for retirement to meet the basics. 15% to live comfortably. I'd save another 10% until you build up your emergency fund to cover 6-8 months of unemployment. (I think that's the current recommendation, given the sluggish economy and unemployment rate).
After that, I personally would focus on putting as much toward your debt as you can without living poor. The faster you pay of loans with interest, the more you save in the long run.
Anonymous wrote:Working on a budget so DH and I can make some important decisions about childcare and what we can and cannot afford. We have high HHI (350Kish) but we also have a lot of debt (all student loan, low interest). What's a good rule of thumb (and something preferably not too complicated) for how much you should pay yourself first/save ideally a month?
I've heard 20% a month into savings is a good barometer and we're at that. Meaning, I've got a budget worked out where we pay down some student loan debt every month, plus have a nanny, plus put away about 24% of our take home income each month into savings (including retirement). Thoughts? Is this good? Bad? Basically trying to make sure we can afford a nanny without being financially irresponsible.