Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here; thanks to all who shared. Here is ours:
4,000 - Mortgage/utilities/phones
1200 (groceries & dining out)
2,000 - Pre-K, before/after school, 529s
1000- Auto loan, gas, insurance
400 - Home costs (cleaning, landscaping, etc)
250 - Personal Care (hair cuts, dry cleaning)
1000 - Misc Shopping (clothes, shoes, kids activities, weekend events, amazon, etc)
So little left for savings, vacations, Xmas presents, home repairs, etc. I thought it was just me, but I see several of you in the same boat. I decided to cut blue apron, not much else to cut.
Um, plenty to cut beyond Blue Apron...you just don't want to.
I’m interested. What do you see, thx! And please don’t tell me to sell my car. We are making our 401k contributions, but am looking for more savings.
Anonymous wrote:i think you could pretty easily come up with $500/month to save, OP. Cut $100 from each of groceries, eating out, misc. home costs, personal care and shopping. Throw the money into a "short term savings" fund for those extra home repairs, travel costs, etc. Also, no more car loans.
My take home is around $13K, after maxing 401k and health insurance costs. Budget:
$3800 PITI
$3000 savings (split between a brokerage account and paying down mortgage early)
$500 utilities and cellphones
$500 dog walker and cleaning lady
$200 transportation (metro, gas & insurance for car)
$700 groceries/dining
Remainder mostly covers misc. expenses that go on the credit card, including kid's sports and camps (about $8K/year), clothes and other shopping, and travel. Putting about $10K/year in the 529 out of tax return and bonus monies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here; thanks to all who shared. Here is ours:
4,000 - Mortgage/utilities/phones
1200 (groceries & dining out)
2,000 - Pre-K, before/after school, 529s
1000- Auto loan, gas, insurance
400 - Home costs (cleaning, landscaping, etc)
250 - Personal Care (hair cuts, dry cleaning)
1000 - Misc Shopping (clothes, shoes, kids activities, weekend events, amazon, etc)
So little left for savings, vacations, Xmas presents, home repairs, etc. I thought it was just me, but I see several of you in the same boat. I decided to cut blue apron, not much else to cut.
Um, plenty to cut beyond Blue Apron...you just don't want to.[/q
I’m interested. What do you see, thx! And please don’t tell me to sell my car. We are making our 401k contributions, but am looking for more savings.
DP here and spending $250 per month on hair cuts and dry cleaning is really high.
Also $1000 a month on shopping? I can't imagine spending that much on shopping per month that doesn't include groceries/dining out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here; thanks to all who shared. Here is ours:
4,000 - Mortgage/utilities/phones
1200 (groceries & dining out)
2,000 - Pre-K, before/after school, 529s
1000- Auto loan, gas, insurance
400 - Home costs (cleaning, landscaping, etc)
250 - Personal Care (hair cuts, dry cleaning)
1000 - Misc Shopping (clothes, shoes, kids activities, weekend events, amazon, etc)
So little left for savings, vacations, Xmas presents, home repairs, etc. I thought it was just me, but I see several of you in the same boat. I decided to cut blue apron, not much else to cut.
Um, plenty to cut beyond Blue Apron...you just don't want to.[/q
I’m interested. What do you see, thx! And please don’t tell me to sell my car. We are making our 401k contributions, but am looking for more savings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We net 12k after retirement savings, HSA, insurance, etc.
3,300- mortgage
3,000- daycare
1,000ish- routine bills (cable, phone, gym membership, the works)
1,500- groceries and takeout
300- house cleaners every 2 weeks
500- savings
Clothes, date nights, home maintenance, etc. is covered with the rest.
College savings is from miscellaneous bonuses and gifts from the grandparents.
No cc, auto loan, or other debt except $1,500 in student loan payment (minimum is $500, but we’ve been aggressive at paying it down and will be done in a few months). Our second kid just started daycare so our daycare bill hasn’t been as high until now, which is how we threw so much at the student loan).
We’re both expecting to 10k or so raises in the next year or two, which will also help boost our liquid savings.
Op here. Don’t you find it depressing that you can’t save more?
Anonymous wrote:OP here; thanks to all who shared. Here is ours:
4,000 - Mortgage/utilities/phones
1200 (groceries & dining out)
2,000 - Pre-K, before/after school, 529s
1000- Auto loan, gas, insurance
400 - Home costs (cleaning, landscaping, etc)
250 - Personal Care (hair cuts, dry cleaning)
1000 - Misc Shopping (clothes, shoes, kids activities, weekend events, amazon, etc)
So little left for savings, vacations, Xmas presents, home repairs, etc. I thought it was just me, but I see several of you in the same boat. I decided to cut blue apron, not much else to cut.
Anonymous wrote:We net 12k after retirement savings, HSA, insurance, etc.
3,300- mortgage
3,000- daycare
1,000ish- routine bills (cable, phone, gym membership, the works)
1,500- groceries and takeout
300- house cleaners every 2 weeks
500- savings
Clothes, date nights, home maintenance, etc. is covered with the rest.
College savings is from miscellaneous bonuses and gifts from the grandparents.
No cc, auto loan, or other debt except $1,500 in student loan payment (minimum is $500, but we’ve been aggressive at paying it down and will be done in a few months). Our second kid just started daycare so our daycare bill hasn’t been as high until now, which is how we threw so much at the student loan).
We’re both expecting to 10k or so raises in the next year or two, which will also help boost our liquid savings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're around there. We net about $13k after taxes, insurance, and 401k
Last year we averaged this budget:
-- $6k taxes
-- $2700 PITI
-- $3k 401k savings (plus match)
-- $2k brokerage savings
-- $1600 daycare (1 toddler)
-- $1200 entertainment and miscellaneous
-- $1200 utilities, home maintenance, cable, phone
-- $1100 travel
-- $900 restaurants
-- $800 groceries
-- $500 student loans
-- $500 529 savings
-- $500 clothing and merchandise
-- $500 insurance and medical!
We pay $2700 per month in healthcare insurance (self-employed) I don't how on earth do you get away with paying so little!!!
As someone else mentioned, I think you probably pay more because you're self-employed. But, honestly, I have no idea what is "normal." We pay about $250/mo. on medical insurance for a family of 3 -- it is a CareFirst BlueChoice plan through my wife's employer. The other $250/mo. includes other insurance (dental, vision, and life) as well as our co-pays etc. averaged out through the year.