Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It costs me $5,100 per month to run the house. That includes mortgage (PITI), food, utilities, car insurance, house cleaners, and lawn service. This also includes $500 into my car fund for when I'll need to buy something. That leaves me with $1,900 for play money.
You mention after taxes---just taxes or all the other stuff that comes out of your paycheck like 401K contributions and insurance premiums. If the $7,000 is after taxes but not including other contributions, then it gets tougher. I'm 50 so I put away 2500 into my 401K so I would have 4,500 and then another $300 for insurance so now I have $4,200. I could take away the car savings and run the house on $4,600. But I'm still short $400 so I would have to scale back my retirement contributions.
Are you really that tone death?
You'd live in a house that costs far less. You don't have lawn service or house cleaners or a car fund.
Anonymous wrote:It costs me $5,100 per month to run the house. That includes mortgage (PITI), food, utilities, car insurance, house cleaners, and lawn service. This also includes $500 into my car fund for when I'll need to buy something. That leaves me with $1,900 for play money.
You mention after taxes---just taxes or all the other stuff that comes out of your paycheck like 401K contributions and insurance premiums. If the $7,000 is after taxes but not including other contributions, then it gets tougher. I'm 50 so I put away 2500 into my 401K so I would have 4,500 and then another $300 for insurance so now I have $4,200. I could take away the car savings and run the house on $4,600. But I'm still short $400 so I would have to scale back my retirement contributions.
how many kids do you have?Anonymous wrote:I earn just over $4k a month after taxes and maxed out retirement and I’m surviving just fine. But I don’t live in a million dollar home and my car is several years old (but paid off). I would be rich taking home $7k per month.
Anonymous wrote:Why are you asking OP?
I do but live modestly by DCUM standards.
Anonymous wrote:It costs me $5,100 per month to run the house. That includes mortgage (PITI), food, utilities, car insurance, house cleaners, and lawn service. This also includes $500 into my car fund for when I'll need to buy something. That leaves me with $1,900 for play money.
You mention after taxes---just taxes or all the other stuff that comes out of your paycheck like 401K contributions and insurance premiums. If the $7,000 is after taxes but not including other contributions, then it gets tougher. I'm 50 so I put away 2500 into my 401K so I would have 4,500 and then another $300 for insurance so now I have $4,200. I could take away the car savings and run the house on $4,600. But I'm still short $400 so I would have to scale back my retirement contributions.