Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are late 30's, aggressive savers, live beneath our means, etc. and as such have a healthy amount of money.
I'll give a real life example, but my question is more broad: If you are making a household purchase and you can afford "anything" (and I obviously don't mean truly ANYTHING) how do you decide a reasonable budget?
Example: I clean my own house. I would like some kind of stick vacuum to do quick cleans of the bathroom floors when I'm not wanting to get out my big vacuum with attachments, etc. In the stick vac world, there is a $400 Dyson, a $160 shark, and lots of other options under $100. I can easily afford any of these options, however I don't want to spend $400 on a Dyson when a $50 Bissel will do. But I'll also be annoyed if I buy a less expensive one, and I end up replacing it because it sucks.
How do you make this everyday decisions when you are frugal minded, but not actually on a strict budget?
Look for things that free you up time wise. If you actually had enough money you would hire a maid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are late 30's, aggressive savers, live beneath our means, etc. and as such have a healthy amount of money.
I'll give a real life example, but my question is more broad: If you are making a household purchase and you can afford "anything" (and I obviously don't mean truly ANYTHING) how do you decide a reasonable budget?
Example: I clean my own house. I would like some kind of stick vacuum to do quick cleans of the bathroom floors when I'm not wanting to get out my big vacuum with attachments, etc. In the stick vac world, there is a $400 Dyson, a $160 shark, and lots of other options under $100. I can easily afford any of these options, however I don't want to spend $400 on a Dyson when a $50 Bissel will do. But I'll also be annoyed if I buy a less expensive one, and I end up replacing it because it sucks.
How do you make this everyday decisions when you are frugal minded, but not actually on a strict budget?
Look for things that free you up time wise. If you actually had enough money you would hire a maid.
Anonymous wrote:^^accidentally hit submit. I'm having the same problem with washers - every washer has its detractors.
I wish everything was like a Bosch diswasher - almost universally adored and lives up to the hype. We've never regretted that purchase!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here an example: when we travel internationally as a family we go business class. We try to use points but that doesn’t always work. But I’d never ever pay full fare for 1st class (sometimes it’s triple the cost of business and the difference I not worth it in our view). We also stay in nice hotels, get car service, etc. But we still live in a normal house (good neighborhood, good schools but not what you expect if you knew how much $ we have).
And? We live in similar setting with similar travel scenario. I would still buy Dyson.
Anonymous wrote:We are late 30's, aggressive savers, live beneath our means, etc. and as such have a healthy amount of money.
I'll give a real life example, but my question is more broad: If you are making a household purchase and you can afford "anything" (and I obviously don't mean truly ANYTHING) how do you decide a reasonable budget?
Example: I clean my own house. I would like some kind of stick vacuum to do quick cleans of the bathroom floors when I'm not wanting to get out my big vacuum with attachments, etc. In the stick vac world, there is a $400 Dyson, a $160 shark, and lots of other options under $100. I can easily afford any of these options, however I don't want to spend $400 on a Dyson when a $50 Bissel will do. But I'll also be annoyed if I buy a less expensive one, and I end up replacing it because it sucks.
How do you make this everyday decisions when you are frugal minded, but not actually on a strict budget?
Anonymous wrote:I never buy the top model. I check consumer reports and buy the "best value".