Anonymous wrote:Why do people consider private school to be a luxury expense?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Divorced, HHI 170k, grown children,
Jewelry: I might splurge on $500 earrings once or twice every few years.
Handbags: One expensive bag, $1500-2000, every year-- usually in the fall
Cars: Cash purchase 2015 Acura TLX; going strong at 120k miles with no plans to buy another vehicle anytime soon.
Clothing/coats/shoes: I spend about 15k on clothing yearly.
Eating out: Not often (I don't count trips to Dunkin or Starbucks as eating out since the cost is nominal).
Vacations: 2k yearly
Hair salon: 2,400 yearly
10% of gross income on clothes and handbags?!
+2 Say what?? Not surprised, sadly.
Why shouldn't she? Not my thing, but it seems like she has the money with only $2k on vacations, presumably no car payment, etc. Lots of people here would be okay with her spending way more on travel, for instance. Plus she has no kids at home, which frees up quite a bit of money.
And it seems that she's taking care of her hair too. I bet this is a stylish, classy, and put together AA woman, you know the type, with perfectly tailored clothing and great hair.
What is AA? Alcoholics Anonymous?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:HHI ~$300K and pretty solid net worth. Only debt is mortgage. Buy cars with cash and keep them for years. Don't spend on clothes, jewelry, handbags, dining in nice restaurants, or housecleaning. Spend about 40k/year on travel and experiences.
We are similar. I didn't realize people spent so much on bags or jewelry that is become a line item on their budget!
Though we do spend on housecleaning. 2x a month for 100 per visit. Comes to 3k/year. Totally worth it from a marriage and having kid perspective. I'm okay if that means we spend 35K/year on travel instead of 38k/year...
Is your housecleaner from 2003 because that is a pretty crazy price.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:HHI ~$300K and pretty solid net worth. Only debt is mortgage. Buy cars with cash and keep them for years. Don't spend on clothes, jewelry, handbags, dining in nice restaurants, or housecleaning. Spend about 40k/year on travel and experiences.
We are similar. I didn't realize people spent so much on bags or jewelry that is become a line item on their budget!
Though we do spend on housecleaning. 2x a month for 100 per visit. Comes to 3k/year. Totally worth it from a marriage and having kid perspective. I'm okay if that means we spend 35K/year on travel instead of 38k/year...
Anonymous wrote:HHI ~$300K and pretty solid net worth. Only debt is mortgage. Buy cars with cash and keep them for years. Don't spend on clothes, jewelry, handbags, dining in nice restaurants, or housecleaning. Spend about 40k/year on travel and experiences.
Anonymous wrote:$290 hhi, net worth just under $2m, no kids. Biggest luxury items include annual charitable giving of about 10% of gross income, almost 20% of gross income for retirement savings (plus an investment condo we rent out), good insurance (health, disability, long term care, life, car, home, umbrella) and a home renovation that is going to be about half a year's hhi. We have one car and plan to replace it soon despite it still running fine (it's 9 years old and we want some different features) so that's a luxury. Other highly discretionary items: monthly house cleaning (would love to go to 2 a month but this works best for the cleaner we like), my wife gets her hair cut and dyed in an expensive salon, pet care (good food, medical care, sitter when we travel), shoes (not designer but good sneakers and hiking boots, which wear out). Travel isn't super luxurious but it adds up; same with local entertainment (restaurant meals, sports games, theater) even if we aren't getting the best seats or going to the fanciest places.
Mostly I think our biggest luxury is that we don't worry or argue about money. I try to get a good value at the grocery store, but if I see something I want I can get it. I can go to a running shoe store and pick what fits best and only use price as a tiebreaker. When there is a friend or family wedding or funeral, we just book a ticket and cat-sitter and go. And if we had something go wrong, we have enough savings and space in the budget to be ok for a while.