Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Put your home on Airbnb and rent out rooms. Sell your jewelry, car, any other assets. Seek out a private hard money loan (interest and terms will not be favorable). Amazon hires anyone with a pulse. You’ll make 1200 a week.
Not OP, but when I look at the Amazon jobs site, the nearest place that is hiring is over 60 miles away. I live in a far out exurb (close to Jiffy Lube Live concert venue) and there are at least two warehouses very close to me, but apparently they aren't hiring.
OP said she doesn't live in the DC area so who knows if her local warehouse is hiring.
pp who lives near jiffy lube live here
And $1200/week working for Amazon? No. OP lives in a low cost of living area--the Amazon jobs near her are probably paying around $17/hr. She'd have to work 40 hours per week plus 20 over time (at time and a half) which Amazon is not going to allow, to get to $1200/week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My choice would be to get a part -time job and apply for jobs with the rest of the time. Keep the house and childcare.
If fast food/target feels below her, there are lots of hourly jobs filled with college grads, like bookstores and coffee shops. Tutoring is also a fantastic suggestion and I know tons of people who did this in between jobs, in order to pay their mortgages.
Also, depending on her profession, can she consult somehow?
Getting a loan right now is an extremely risky move that will make them even more house poor, and will negate the "screaming deal" thing.
Years ago, we got th advice to always buy a house that we can afford on one income. Makes life way, way less stressful.
That’s because years ago it was possible. For most worker bees you need two incomes for decent house/schools/commute or one BIG income.
No, you don't, you have to choose your housing wisely. We got a sh@t shack that is 1000square feet as we wanted to make sure with job loss or another emergency we could afford the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Put your home on Airbnb and rent out rooms. Sell your jewelry, car, any other assets. Seek out a private hard money loan (interest and terms will not be favorable). Amazon hires anyone with a pulse. You’ll make 1200 a week.
Not OP, but when I look at the Amazon jobs site, the nearest place that is hiring is over 60 miles away. I live in a far out exurb (close to Jiffy Lube Live concert venue) and there are at least two warehouses very close to me, but apparently they aren't hiring.
OP said she doesn't live in the DC area so who knows if her local warehouse is hiring.
Anonymous wrote:Put your home on Airbnb and rent out rooms. Sell your jewelry, car, any other assets. Seek out a private hard money loan (interest and terms will not be favorable). Amazon hires anyone with a pulse. You’ll make 1200 a week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My choice would be to get a part -time job and apply for jobs with the rest of the time. Keep the house and childcare.
If fast food/target feels below her, there are lots of hourly jobs filled with college grads, like bookstores and coffee shops. Tutoring is also a fantastic suggestion and I know tons of people who did this in between jobs, in order to pay their mortgages.
Also, depending on her profession, can she consult somehow?
Getting a loan right now is an extremely risky move that will make them even more house poor, and will negate the "screaming deal" thing.
Years ago, we got th advice to always buy a house that we can afford on one income. Makes life way, way less stressful.
That’s because years ago it was possible. For most worker bees you need two incomes for decent house/schools/commute or one BIG income.
No, you don't, you have to choose your housing wisely. We got a sh@t shack that is 1000square feet as we wanted to make sure with job loss or another emergency we could afford the house.
Anonymous wrote:OP, here are your options:
1) HELOC. That will take 30 days or so to close on. That will give you a comfortable financial cushion since you have so much equity. You will likely miss your mortgage payment for November if you take this route. Your rate will probably be 8-10%. The nice thing about this option is that your payment will likely be interest only so the payment amount will be lower than principal and interest. Also, you can use your proceeds from your home equity line to pay your monthly bill, which reduces your need for actual cash.
2) Credit cards. This is the easiest option and immediate. You should call every one of your credit cards and ask them to increase your limit. Then, just pay the minimum. You can use your husband's salary to pay your mortgage and put whatever else on your credit cards. Your rate will probably be 25%+.
3) Personal loan through the bank. Should be able to close in days (inside of a week or less). Interest rate should be 5-10%.
You can combine these options together. For instance, you can start out with the credit card option and then when your HELOC closes, you can pay off your credit cards. You can do a combo of #2 and #3 together if you don't want to tap home equity.
Sorry to hear about your job loss and hope the above options help you get started in your thinking on how to address your cash crunch.
Anonymous wrote:To all the people suggesting side gigs — how much are you thinking OP will clear with these gigs? Not a lot. She needs $20k. Earning $1k per month isn’t going to make much of a dent in that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ not OP, but that is such a helpful post. Thanks for writing that up, appreciate it. This is why I read DCUM!
I wrote that. Thank you! I have benefitted in the past from DCUM and wanted to pay back, so to speak.