Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Losing the gym is easy. It's a luxury.
The cell phone plan is way too high. We have four phones on ours and pay only $100. That's $200 right there.
The car with free gas is worth it I guess, but only because you'd have to pay out to get a replacement. One of my family's worst line items is gas because our Acura MDX is the suck on gas mileage -- but we barely spend $200 per month. The second car payment has to go. It was a big mistake to take on debt for it. Sell it and buy a used Honda or Toyota with >70K miles. You will probably be able to find one for less than $5K, it will be reliable, the maintenance is cheap, and you can reduce your insurance coverage because you don't need comprehensive on the POS you're going to be driving.
Are both of you working or just one? Because if only one spouse is working and he uses the company car and also pays $120 for parking, then it's not worth it. He can get up earlier and take public transportation and save you $320/month. Add that to the $250 once you get rid of the car loan and $200 from your cell phone and gym membership and you've got nearly $800 extra per month.
Please everyone tell me about your phone plans! What company?
Anonymous wrote:As for taxes, we cannot lower our withholding.
Anonymous wrote:Losing the gym is easy. It's a luxury.
The cell phone plan is way too high. We have four phones on ours and pay only $100. That's $200 right there.
The car with free gas is worth it I guess, but only because you'd have to pay out to get a replacement. One of my family's worst line items is gas because our Acura MDX is the suck on gas mileage -- but we barely spend $200 per month. The second car payment has to go. It was a big mistake to take on debt for it. Sell it and buy a used Honda or Toyota with >70K miles. You will probably be able to find one for less than $5K, it will be reliable, the maintenance is cheap, and you can reduce your insurance coverage because you don't need comprehensive on the POS you're going to be driving.
Are both of you working or just one? Because if only one spouse is working and he uses the company car and also pays $120 for parking, then it's not worth it. He can get up earlier and take public transportation and save you $320/month. Add that to the $250 once you get rid of the car loan and $200 from your cell phone and gym membership and you've got nearly $800 extra per month.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are just guessing at your bills. Register with mint.com or YNAB (google it) and tie your accounts to it. It will log every transaction which can then be categorized (it does most of that automatically -- Safeway = groceries, etc.). After a month you will see places where you can lower expenses. Then tackle everything like insurance, cell phone plans, extra monthly draws that you have on your account that you really weren't thinking about (fee for on-line banking for example, subscription to Angies list, or Tivo, stuff like that). Lower your standing bills, and then reduce your discretionary expenses by buying cheaper or postponing gratification.
See if you can lower your student loan payments if they are Federal loans through the program that ties the payments to your income. GL!
Another vote for mint.com - when we went to one income, it was the only way to really track our expenses, and also get both of us on the same page (literally) to see exactly where every penny went. It's worth spending your weekend getting this set up and start to really see where expenses go. It also has a bill reminder feature so you can set up your repeating monthly expenses; it's a great way to look ahead and see what has to get paid out of the next paycheck, so you can more closely monitor cashflow.
Also, as another PP suggested, check your tax withholdings. Did you owe any taxes for 2012? Did you get a refund? If the latter, then you definitely need to adjust withholdings. Use the IRS W-4 calculator to try and get a read on your 2013 tax liability. Now's a good time to do this as you're partly through the year and have time to see a real difference from withholdings, both federal and state.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No groceries?![]()
Yeah, the fact that groceries didn't come up in the original post or the two follow ups tells me the big sinkhole is food: eaten out.
Anonymous wrote:You are just guessing at your bills. Register with mint.com or YNAB (google it) and tie your accounts to it. It will log every transaction which can then be categorized (it does most of that automatically -- Safeway = groceries, etc.). After a month you will see places where you can lower expenses. Then tackle everything like insurance, cell phone plans, extra monthly draws that you have on your account that you really weren't thinking about (fee for on-line banking for example, subscription to Angies list, or Tivo, stuff like that). Lower your standing bills, and then reduce your discretionary expenses by buying cheaper or postponing gratification.
See if you can lower your student loan payments if they are Federal loans through the program that ties the payments to your income. GL!
Anonymous wrote:Here's what I did last year:
Pay off the cars, it'll free up a large amount of cash. Your problem seems to be cash flow more than income per se.
Hulu - no cable
Does your office offer a work cell phone? Ditch the personal one
Lose the gym. Go for a jog.
Thermostat programmable .. worthy investment
reuse tampons (just kidding)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have $155K HHI and we are broke. I need advice - maybe I can cut spending somehow? Here are some of our bills:
$2500 - mortgage
$1600 - childcare
$450 - 2 cars
$45 - internet (no cable here)
$200 - 2 cell phones (no land line)
I should have added:
$725 - student loans
and
$350 - elec, gas, water/sewer, trash collection
$100 - life insurance
$80 - car insurance
$200 - credit cards ($5K)
$80 - diapers, wipes, paper goods
$120 - work parking
This is very bad. I would pay this down before you do anything else. If you save 150 on your cellphones you should put the extra into paying down your credit card. What rate are you paying on it? Any chance you could get a HELOC to pay it down? Interest rates are extremely low, e.g. 2.5 with penfed for 5 yrs.
Can you refinance your student loans? What rate are you paying on them?
What life insurance do you have? You should just have one 10-year and one-20 year term for an appropriate amount (e.g. 500k each).
personally I would lose the gym and take up cycling or some other form of exercise like body weights that you can do at home, at least till you have dealt with the credit card debt.
1600 seems a little high for childcare - have you looked into cheaper options?
I get your foot problems, but why do you need two cars?
Anonymous wrote:No groceries?![]()