Anonymous wrote:No more than 10% of your HHI. The more you make, the lower the percentage should go (unless you're a car person and fancy expensive cars bring you joy, but still don't exceed 10%).
Anonymous wrote:Let's ask the question from a different angle - if a family (friend of mine, LOL) has three cars - 04 Odyssey, 05 Pathfinder, and 09 Accord, how much would you say HHI should be?? Just for fun folks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:HHI is $375K. We have two kids with daycare costs and save aggressively for kids college and our retirement - so we don't pay over $50K per car (2 total), and tend to keep them for 8-10 yrs. We currently drive an Audi Q5 and A4
Lies! No way an Audi will last more than 5 years.
Anonymous wrote:HHI is $375K. We have two kids with daycare costs and save aggressively for kids college and our retirement - so we don't pay over $50K per car (2 total), and tend to keep them for 8-10 yrs. We currently drive an Audi Q5 and A4
Anonymous wrote:Dave Ramsey: Total ownership of vehicles (Anything with an engine to include boats or ATVS) should be no more then 50% of Annual pay. Pretty good benchmark I think.
https://www.daveramsey.com/askdave/automobiles/how-much-car-is-too-much
Anonymous wrote:We are all familiar with the 28-36 rule for housing.
The 28-36 rule states that your maximum household expenses shouldn't exceed 28 percent of your gross monthly income Likewise, total debt, which includes everything from student loans to credit cards, should fall below 36 percent of your income.
Another rule of thumb is that your house should not cost more than 3x your annual gross salary.
Is there such a guideline or rule of thumb for cars? If you like cars, what is a reasonable car price based on your income.
If you don't like cars, please don't respond. We already know you wouldn't buy a car, or you would buy the cheapest box that has 4 wheels and can go from A to B.
Anonymous wrote:We are all familiar with the 28-36 rule for housing.
The 28-36 rule states that your maximum household expenses shouldn't exceed 28 percent of your gross monthly income Likewise, total debt, which includes everything from student loans to credit cards, should fall below 36 percent of your income.
Another rule of thumb is that your house should not cost more than 3x your annual gross salary.
Is there such a guideline or rule of thumb for cars? If you like cars, what is a reasonable car price based on your income.
If you don't like cars, please don't respond. We already know you wouldn't buy a car, or you would buy the cheapest box that has 4 wheels and can go from A to B.