Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of these incomes are insane. Please get some perspective. We do just fine on $80,000/year.
Umm, what? How so? Are you in subsidized housing or something?
No, we just don't live in a mansion. The average HHI in DC is in the $85k range iirc. Lots of people do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of these incomes are insane. Please get some perspective. We do just fine on $80,000/year.
Umm, what? How so? Are you in subsidized housing or something?
Anonymous wrote:I’ll take the bait, used car commenter is killing me. I bought my car when it was used and a year old. It had been a rental and only had 7,000 miles on it but was <50% of the price if it had been new. It certainly hasn’t been in and out of the shop and if anything it’s had way less problems than my mom’s brand-new luxury car which has had a million little electrical issues and random recalls. Being snobby about a massively expensive item that depreciates the second you buy it makes you sound ignorant.
Anonymous wrote:I’ll take the bait, used car commenter is killing me. I bought my car when it was used and a year old. It had been a rental and only had 7,000 miles on it but was <50% of the price if it had been new. It certainly hasn’t been in and out of the shop and if anything it’s had way less problems than my mom’s brand-new luxury car which has had a million little electrical issues and random recalls. Being snobby about a massively expensive item that depreciates the second you buy it makes you sound ignorant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of these incomes are insane. Please get some perspective. We do just fine on $80,000/year.
And you are paying for private school? No one asked for advice on how to budget or for judgement or how we should or shouldn’t feel about our incomes. The poster asked how people were paying for private school, and people are answering that question.
And honestly, I think it would be really, really tough to live in this area on $80k as a HHI with a kid. I know a lot of people do it, but it would be hard as hell.
If this person bought their home a long time ago, inherited a parents home or rent, it might be doable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of these incomes are insane. Please get some perspective. We do just fine on $80,000/year.
Plenty of people get by on that income. Most of them are not paying $40k in private school tuition.The thread is about how people afford private school. If you are able to afford private school on that income, good for you.
It's called parochial school, buying an affordable house (hint: over half a million isn't affordable), and, idk, not spending ridiculously? Have you all not heard of Aldi? Paying cash for used cars? If I was making $400k a year, I genuinely do not know how I could spend it.
Anonymous wrote:All of these incomes are insane. Please get some perspective. We do just fine on $80,000/year.
Anonymous wrote:Have fewer kids--one or max two. Not only will you be more likely to afford private school, you can also be comfortable in a smaller home. Also being able to spend more time taking each kid to school and activities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of these incomes are insane. Please get some perspective. We do just fine on $80,000/year.
And you are paying for private school? No one asked for advice on how to budget or for judgement or how we should or shouldn’t feel about our incomes. The poster asked how people were paying for private school, and people are answering that question.
And honestly, I think it would be really, really tough to live in this area on $80k as a HHI with a kid. I know a lot of people do it, but it would be hard as hell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of these incomes are insane. Please get some perspective. We do just fine on $80,000/year.
Plenty of people get by on that income. Most of them are not paying $40k in private school tuition.The thread is about how people afford private school. If you are able to afford private school on that income, good for you.
It's called parochial school, buying an affordable house (hint: over half a million isn't affordable), and, idk, not spending ridiculously? Have you all not heard of Aldi? Paying cash for used cars? If I was making $400k a year, I genuinely do not know how I could spend it.
Where we err live that family homes cost less than 500k?
Plenty of places in DC? It's just outside the Bethesda/Potomac bubble.
Anonymous wrote:Parochial schools are far less expensive and many offer financial aid. Private k-12 is a higher priority for us than college savings. For college- we will encourage state schools.