Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's more than comfortable.
If you're busting your ass billing 2000+ hours per year, "comfortable" isn't exactly the word I'd use.
It's definitely a lot of income, but there's no freedom if you can't walk away from your job.
Comfort would be having the $350k in passive income from investments. That level of wealth (as opposed to income) is difficult to achieve. You need about 25 times your annual spending in investments to achieve it.
Anonymous wrote:It's more than comfortable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Not PP and I agree it's not struggling, but you forgot about student loans, utilities & house maintenance, car & life insurance, and medical care, among other things. All of this adds up to more than $1,000 a month. My student loan payment is $1000/month alone and I'm in the public service loan forgiveness program. And to keep that "middle class" lifestyle after retirement, most people would need to save more than the minimum $18k/year/person in 401k's.
I can definitely see some of those things being additional expenses, but not all of them, and certainly not at a deal-breaking level.
For car insurance you're looking at $200 a month extra at most. That's a rounding error in this kind of budget. And I would assume (or at least hope!) that by the time you are on your second child and have bought a million dollar house you have paid off your student loans. But hey, we are also talking about people who can't figure out how to make ends meet on $350K a year, so who knows, maybe they couldn't figure out that 2 or 3 more years in that 1BR without child expenses would have paid off their loans!
A quick quote from state farm says $2,000,000 in term life insurance is $253 a month for someone in good health. Assuming you are in good health and you're around 40 years old your medical bills shouldn't be too much, especially with the kind of insurance you can buy at $350K/yr.
You're right, there is more than meets the eye with regard to expenses, but the point remains that anyone with a modicum of common sense could easily run a middle class household on $350K a year, and it would not require much more financial savvy than that to figure out how to run it while affording a trip to Europe.
You think it takes 2 or 3 years in a one-bedroom to pay off student loans?
No shit...a lot of people in this area have taken on a ton of student loans to be able to make that 350k salary. Not 50-70k but 200k for the household. And spare me the crap about "well they shouldn't have done that, I didn't do that" because the reality is that most people making that much have a ton of student loans. The question was also whether or not a family with 350k hhi could afford a FIRST class trip to Europe, which will cost at least 15-20k. Does anyone really think this family can comfortably afford to lay out that much while paying for the additional expenses which another poster's dumb budget conveniently didn't account for?
I'm not sure what a first class trip has to do with anything. 350k is still a lot of money. You can prioritize it however you want.
Read the rest of the thread about the "first class to Europe" thing. 350k is a lot of money in Tennessee, not here.
It's a lot of money everywhere. Really.
It is, but the context was that this $350k family lives in $1M home, flashy cars, and taking first-class trips to Europe. That's really not the representative lifestyle of people making $350k/year in this area. Yes, $1M homes, but usually they're spending $ on childcare, private schools, and saving for retirement and investing (hopefully).
In my opinion that still makes them pretty well off -- but YMMV.
Yes, pretty well off = comfortable.
Comfortable is pretty subjective. If you think you are JUST comfortable with a million dollar home, fully funding retirement and college accounts AND investing - then so be it. Nothing I can say is going to change your mind. Pretty sad honestly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Not PP and I agree it's not struggling, but you forgot about student loans, utilities & house maintenance, car & life insurance, and medical care, among other things. All of this adds up to more than $1,000 a month. My student loan payment is $1000/month alone and I'm in the public service loan forgiveness program. And to keep that "middle class" lifestyle after retirement, most people would need to save more than the minimum $18k/year/person in 401k's.
I can definitely see some of those things being additional expenses, but not all of them, and certainly not at a deal-breaking level.
For car insurance you're looking at $200 a month extra at most. That's a rounding error in this kind of budget. And I would assume (or at least hope!) that by the time you are on your second child and have bought a million dollar house you have paid off your student loans. But hey, we are also talking about people who can't figure out how to make ends meet on $350K a year, so who knows, maybe they couldn't figure out that 2 or 3 more years in that 1BR without child expenses would have paid off their loans!
A quick quote from state farm says $2,000,000 in term life insurance is $253 a month for someone in good health. Assuming you are in good health and you're around 40 years old your medical bills shouldn't be too much, especially with the kind of insurance you can buy at $350K/yr.
You're right, there is more than meets the eye with regard to expenses, but the point remains that anyone with a modicum of common sense could easily run a middle class household on $350K a year, and it would not require much more financial savvy than that to figure out how to run it while affording a trip to Europe.
You think it takes 2 or 3 years in a one-bedroom to pay off student loans?
No shit...a lot of people in this area have taken on a ton of student loans to be able to make that 350k salary. Not 50-70k but 200k for the household. And spare me the crap about "well they shouldn't have done that, I didn't do that" because the reality is that most people making that much have a ton of student loans. The question was also whether or not a family with 350k hhi could afford a FIRST class trip to Europe, which will cost at least 15-20k. Does anyone really think this family can comfortably afford to lay out that much while paying for the additional expenses which another poster's dumb budget conveniently didn't account for?
I'm not sure what a first class trip has to do with anything. 350k is still a lot of money. You can prioritize it however you want.
Read the rest of the thread about the "first class to Europe" thing. 350k is a lot of money in Tennessee, not here.
It's a lot of money everywhere. Really.
It is, but the context was that this $350k family lives in $1M home, flashy cars, and taking first-class trips to Europe. That's really not the representative lifestyle of people making $350k/year in this area. Yes, $1M homes, but usually they're spending $ on childcare, private schools, and saving for retirement and investing (hopefully).
In my opinion that still makes them pretty well off -- but YMMV.
Yes, pretty well off = comfortable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Not PP and I agree it's not struggling, but you forgot about student loans, utilities & house maintenance, car & life insurance, and medical care, among other things. All of this adds up to more than $1,000 a month. My student loan payment is $1000/month alone and I'm in the public service loan forgiveness program. And to keep that "middle class" lifestyle after retirement, most people would need to save more than the minimum $18k/year/person in 401k's.
I can definitely see some of those things being additional expenses, but not all of them, and certainly not at a deal-breaking level.
For car insurance you're looking at $200 a month extra at most. That's a rounding error in this kind of budget. And I would assume (or at least hope!) that by the time you are on your second child and have bought a million dollar house you have paid off your student loans. But hey, we are also talking about people who can't figure out how to make ends meet on $350K a year, so who knows, maybe they couldn't figure out that 2 or 3 more years in that 1BR without child expenses would have paid off their loans!
A quick quote from state farm says $2,000,000 in term life insurance is $253 a month for someone in good health. Assuming you are in good health and you're around 40 years old your medical bills shouldn't be too much, especially with the kind of insurance you can buy at $350K/yr.
You're right, there is more than meets the eye with regard to expenses, but the point remains that anyone with a modicum of common sense could easily run a middle class household on $350K a year, and it would not require much more financial savvy than that to figure out how to run it while affording a trip to Europe.
You think it takes 2 or 3 years in a one-bedroom to pay off student loans?
No shit...a lot of people in this area have taken on a ton of student loans to be able to make that 350k salary. Not 50-70k but 200k for the household. And spare me the crap about "well they shouldn't have done that, I didn't do that" because the reality is that most people making that much have a ton of student loans. The question was also whether or not a family with 350k hhi could afford a FIRST class trip to Europe, which will cost at least 15-20k. Does anyone really think this family can comfortably afford to lay out that much while paying for the additional expenses which another poster's dumb budget conveniently didn't account for?
I'm not sure what a first class trip has to do with anything. 350k is still a lot of money. You can prioritize it however you want.
Read the rest of the thread about the "first class to Europe" thing. 350k is a lot of money in Tennessee, not here.
It's a lot of money everywhere. Really.
It is, but the context was that this $350k family lives in $1M home, flashy cars, and taking first-class trips to Europe. That's really not the representative lifestyle of people making $350k/year in this area. Yes, $1M homes, but usually they're spending $ on childcare, private schools, and saving for retirement and investing (hopefully).
In my opinion that still makes them pretty well off -- but YMMV.
Yes, pretty well off = comfortable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Not PP and I agree it's not struggling, but you forgot about student loans, utilities & house maintenance, car & life insurance, and medical care, among other things. All of this adds up to more than $1,000 a month. My student loan payment is $1000/month alone and I'm in the public service loan forgiveness program. And to keep that "middle class" lifestyle after retirement, most people would need to save more than the minimum $18k/year/person in 401k's.
I can definitely see some of those things being additional expenses, but not all of them, and certainly not at a deal-breaking level.
For car insurance you're looking at $200 a month extra at most. That's a rounding error in this kind of budget. And I would assume (or at least hope!) that by the time you are on your second child and have bought a million dollar house you have paid off your student loans. But hey, we are also talking about people who can't figure out how to make ends meet on $350K a year, so who knows, maybe they couldn't figure out that 2 or 3 more years in that 1BR without child expenses would have paid off their loans!
A quick quote from state farm says $2,000,000 in term life insurance is $253 a month for someone in good health. Assuming you are in good health and you're around 40 years old your medical bills shouldn't be too much, especially with the kind of insurance you can buy at $350K/yr.
You're right, there is more than meets the eye with regard to expenses, but the point remains that anyone with a modicum of common sense could easily run a middle class household on $350K a year, and it would not require much more financial savvy than that to figure out how to run it while affording a trip to Europe.
You think it takes 2 or 3 years in a one-bedroom to pay off student loans?
No shit...a lot of people in this area have taken on a ton of student loans to be able to make that 350k salary. Not 50-70k but 200k for the household. And spare me the crap about "well they shouldn't have done that, I didn't do that" because the reality is that most people making that much have a ton of student loans. The question was also whether or not a family with 350k hhi could afford a FIRST class trip to Europe, which will cost at least 15-20k. Does anyone really think this family can comfortably afford to lay out that much while paying for the additional expenses which another poster's dumb budget conveniently didn't account for?
I'm not sure what a first class trip has to do with anything. 350k is still a lot of money. You can prioritize it however you want.
Read the rest of the thread about the "first class to Europe" thing. 350k is a lot of money in Tennessee, not here.
It's a lot of money everywhere. Really.
It is, but the context was that this $350k family lives in $1M home, flashy cars, and taking first-class trips to Europe. That's really not the representative lifestyle of people making $350k/year in this area. Yes, $1M homes, but usually they're spending $ on childcare, private schools, and saving for retirement and investing (hopefully).
In my opinion that still makes them pretty well off -- but YMMV.
Anonymous wrote:I'm the $365K poster.
We're early 40's and have only had this income level for the past 3 years. Prior to that we were at $250K.
If I'm being totally
-our house is worth 1.3K, purchased for 975K with no prior equity (just a downpayment).
-we also just bought a beach house for $350K.
-we have 3 kids in public school
-we just returned from 2 weeks in Asia and kids have been to Europe twice the last 2 years.
-We max out 2 401ks and save aggressively for college.
-2 of our kids play travel sports at ~$2-3K a year EACH.
-2 of our kids take piano lessons at $1600 a year EACH.
-we still save ~50K a year.
All this on 2 years at $365k income. Prior to that we had a $250K income for 10 years. Prior to that we made about $130K since age 25
NO inherited money. ~$100k in student loans that we paid off by living very, very frugally the first year out of grad school at age 30. We were making $250K and paid off $100K that year.
Anyway, i consider ourselves upper middle class. No one will convince me that we're not. We have more money than we need. We own a second home. We vacation internationally yearly. And yes, we could afford to fly first class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Not PP and I agree it's not struggling, but you forgot about student loans, utilities & house maintenance, car & life insurance, and medical care, among other things. All of this adds up to more than $1,000 a month. My student loan payment is $1000/month alone and I'm in the public service loan forgiveness program. And to keep that "middle class" lifestyle after retirement, most people would need to save more than the minimum $18k/year/person in 401k's.
I can definitely see some of those things being additional expenses, but not all of them, and certainly not at a deal-breaking level.
For car insurance you're looking at $200 a month extra at most. That's a rounding error in this kind of budget. And I would assume (or at least hope!) that by the time you are on your second child and have bought a million dollar house you have paid off your student loans. But hey, we are also talking about people who can't figure out how to make ends meet on $350K a year, so who knows, maybe they couldn't figure out that 2 or 3 more years in that 1BR without child expenses would have paid off their loans!
A quick quote from state farm says $2,000,000 in term life insurance is $253 a month for someone in good health. Assuming you are in good health and you're around 40 years old your medical bills shouldn't be too much, especially with the kind of insurance you can buy at $350K/yr.
You're right, there is more than meets the eye with regard to expenses, but the point remains that anyone with a modicum of common sense could easily run a middle class household on $350K a year, and it would not require much more financial savvy than that to figure out how to run it while affording a trip to Europe.
You think it takes 2 or 3 years in a one-bedroom to pay off student loans?
No shit...a lot of people in this area have taken on a ton of student loans to be able to make that 350k salary. Not 50-70k but 200k for the household. And spare me the crap about "well they shouldn't have done that, I didn't do that" because the reality is that most people making that much have a ton of student loans. The question was also whether or not a family with 350k hhi could afford a FIRST class trip to Europe, which will cost at least 15-20k. Does anyone really think this family can comfortably afford to lay out that much while paying for the additional expenses which another poster's dumb budget conveniently didn't account for?
I'm not sure what a first class trip has to do with anything. 350k is still a lot of money. You can prioritize it however you want.
Read the rest of the thread about the "first class to Europe" thing. 350k is a lot of money in Tennessee, not here.
It's a lot of money everywhere. Really.
It is, but the context was that this $350k family lives in $1M home, flashy cars, and taking first-class trips to Europe. That's really not the representative lifestyle of people making $350k/year in this area. Yes, $1M homes, but usually they're spending $ on childcare, private schools, and saving for retirement and investing (hopefully).
Anonymous wrote:
You think that's how it works? It could take years for a couple to reach that income. It's not like someone starts making $350k out the bat (some do, but most of us don't).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Not PP and I agree it's not struggling, but you forgot about student loans, utilities & house maintenance, car & life insurance, and medical care, among other things. All of this adds up to more than $1,000 a month. My student loan payment is $1000/month alone and I'm in the public service loan forgiveness program. And to keep that "middle class" lifestyle after retirement, most people would need to save more than the minimum $18k/year/person in 401k's.
I can definitely see some of those things being additional expenses, but not all of them, and certainly not at a deal-breaking level.
For car insurance you're looking at $200 a month extra at most. That's a rounding error in this kind of budget. And I would assume (or at least hope!) that by the time you are on your second child and have bought a million dollar house you have paid off your student loans. But hey, we are also talking about people who can't figure out how to make ends meet on $350K a year, so who knows, maybe they couldn't figure out that 2 or 3 more years in that 1BR without child expenses would have paid off their loans!
A quick quote from state farm says $2,000,000 in term life insurance is $253 a month for someone in good health. Assuming you are in good health and you're around 40 years old your medical bills shouldn't be too much, especially with the kind of insurance you can buy at $350K/yr.
You're right, there is more than meets the eye with regard to expenses, but the point remains that anyone with a modicum of common sense could easily run a middle class household on $350K a year, and it would not require much more financial savvy than that to figure out how to run it while affording a trip to Europe.
You think it takes 2 or 3 years in a one-bedroom to pay off student loans?
No shit...a lot of people in this area have taken on a ton of student loans to be able to make that 350k salary. Not 50-70k but 200k for the household. And spare me the crap about "well they shouldn't have done that, I didn't do that" because the reality is that most people making that much have a ton of student loans. The question was also whether or not a family with 350k hhi could afford a FIRST class trip to Europe, which will cost at least 15-20k. Does anyone really think this family can comfortably afford to lay out that much while paying for the additional expenses which another poster's dumb budget conveniently didn't account for?
I'm not sure what a first class trip has to do with anything. 350k is still a lot of money. You can prioritize it however you want.
Read the rest of the thread about the "first class to Europe" thing. 350k is a lot of money in Tennessee, not here.
It's a lot of money everywhere. Really.
Anonymous wrote:No shit...a lot of people in this area have taken on a ton of student loans to be able to make that 350k salary.