Anonymous wrote:i saved $350k for my nonpayment in the spring. early 30s.
This was outside the home equity that I had.. Diligent saving, high income (which is how we could do it) and a small liquidity event at work that jumpstarted. no family gifting.
Anonymous wrote:For our first home, (pre marriage) my husband lived at home for the first year he worked and saved almost his entire take home pay while I was in grad school. We bought a town home the next year with his $50K down payment. We always took an approach to live on one salary and we put all of the money from my paycheck into a high-yield savings account. We saved some of his salary as well. We didn’t do expensive trips or spend lots of money. We paid off the loan at almost double the pace. We lived there for ten years, the home appreciated, and we used the equity from that home as the down payment for our single family home ($500K). We didn’t even need to touch our savings. At that point we had one young child and one on the way.
The keys for us were to live as if we had only one income, and make frugal choices. We now have a LOT of money in savings and investments. And, we can take more expensive vacations, afford sports and classes for our kids, etc. It was not hard for the two of us to live on the one income and as we expanded our family, our income rose, too. All we did was budget. We have lots of friends who are in similar job roles who spent lots of money on cars, clothes, Vegas trips and other things when we were young who I know haven’t saved nearly as well.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve never seen a thread with so much useless info where no one answered the question. The Safest place to keep the money is in an FDIC insured account. I would not keep it in stocks. Maybe cds depending on when you need it.
oops, he keeps in his Fidelity acct.Anonymous wrote:My DC lived at home for almost 3 years years and saved over $100k. His salary was $80-$90k and we did not charge him rent. His plan was to live at home a year, but Covid hit and it did not make sense for him to move out until this summer.Anonymous wrote:I repeatedly see people on here say they have $150K, $300K, and upwards available for down payments on homes. Sorry for the stupid question but where is this money kept? Are people talking about equity in their current home? Cashing in options? 401K loans? Or is it all just liquid cash sitting in a savings account?
My DC lived at home for almost 3 years years and saved over $100k. His salary was $80-$90k and we did not charge him rent. His plan was to live at home a year, but Covid hit and it did not make sense for him to move out until this summer.Anonymous wrote:I repeatedly see people on here say they have $150K, $300K, and upwards available for down payments on homes. Sorry for the stupid question but where is this money kept? Are people talking about equity in their current home? Cashing in options? 401K loans? Or is it all just liquid cash sitting in a savings account?
Anonymous wrote:Opened a home equity line against current home for down payment on the next one.
For our first home, we scrimped and saved. And put down 3% and paid PMI for a couple of years until we could refinance out of it.