Anonymous wrote:We're at $160k. This income is fine if you don't have to pay for daycare for the kids. If you do, that's when it will feel tight- and understandably so at $2500-$3000 a month! Here's our budget:
Rent (we own in another state, but renter covers that mortgage): $2300
Private school for oldest: $650
Car insurance: $140
Cable/Internet/Smartphones: $350
Gas: $60
Power: $100
Preschool for youngest: $280
Water: $40
Groceries: $500
Eating out: $500
Think that's everything. We net $8100 a month (after health insurance, 401k, etc) and bills are around $5000 or so, which leaves 3k of wiggle room for savings, entertainment, things like that. I feel quite comfortable at this income level but fully recognize if the $160k were from two parents working and we had 2 kids in daycare my 3k surplus would be gone and it would feel TIGHT.
Anonymous wrote:13:06- before we didn't really have a budget. That meant we didn't save as much as I wished we had now, but we didn't really think about money and still put some aside.
The job change involved a move out of DC and wiped out most of our savings, so I don't know that our budget is entirely relevant to everyone as we try to rebuild an emergency fund. Plus, after 6 months i havent found a budget that truly works. However, I have to really watch spending now and track on Mint.com in order to save anything which continues to shock me as we lowered our mortgage and general COL when we moved.
Anonymous wrote:How did you get a 990$ mortgage, pp??
Anonymous wrote:It also depends how much you net after insurance, retirement, etc.
We net $8400/month at HHI= $150. Curious to hear about what others net monthly income is at this HHI?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. We're HHI $85,000 with our first on the way.
What would you consider that if $150K is broke?
It all just depends on your fixed expenses. At $85k, we would be broke. The student loans plus basic necessities (food, clothing, shelter, full time child care, diapers for 2, insurance) would never get covered by $85k. Student loans alone are $1,100 a month.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. We're HHI $85,000 with our first on the way.
What would you consider that if $150K is broke?
It all just depends on your fixed expenses. At $85k, we would be broke. The student loans plus basic necessities (food, clothing, shelter, full time child care, diapers for 2, insurance) would never get covered by $85k. Student loans alone are $1,100 a month.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. We're HHI $85,000 with our first on the way.
What would you consider that if $150K is broke?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's us -- we're broke. But we have two in daycare right now and keep telling ourselves when they are out in a year we won't be as stretched!
I remember it was like night and day when our kids got out of daycare. Suddenly we had all this breathing room for savings, lawn care, vacations.
I can't tell you how happy I am to hear that -- I feel like people love to tell me that I'll just use that money for other things (school supplies, etc.) But my god I can't see us spending THAT MUCH every month on them!![]()
Camp? aftercare? Is it still not as much as daycare?
I obviously can't speak to others but for us aftercare and camp won't come close to our daycare costs. Daycare over a grand more than our mortgage -- it's crazy.
This is true. Fairfax County SACC is just under $1,000 per month for two kids (before and after care) and one week (for Spring Break) of SACC camp for two kids is $445. Then add summer SACC camps at $467 per week for 8 weeks of summer. It totals out to roughly $15K.
Now of course not many people want to send their kids to summer SACC all summer. So then you can add in the cost of a "good" camp, for an additional $150-$250 per week in the summer (x 8 weeks) for another $1500 or so. Then add in camp costs for the weeks summer SACC is not open. But then you think "it would be cheaper to take a vacation" . . .
But then you have to find the camps that have openings, and that you can actually get to while also managing to get to work. And the "good" camps close at 3 pm, so then you have to figure out how to manage your work hours around the camp locations and drop-off/pick-up schedule.
And then you think to yourself, "It was so much easier when they were in daycare."
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That's still waaaaaay less than a nanny. We pay $40,000 a year with tax costs.
I'll take your $400 a week anyday and twice on Sunday
Why do you have a nanny then?
Because daycare is basically the same cost anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's us -- we're broke. But we have two in daycare right now and keep telling ourselves when they are out in a year we won't be as stretched!
I remember it was like night and day when our kids got out of daycare. Suddenly we had all this breathing room for savings, lawn care, vacations.
I can't tell you how happy I am to hear that -- I feel like people love to tell me that I'll just use that money for other things (school supplies, etc.) But my god I can't see us spending THAT MUCH every month on them!![]()
Camp? aftercare? Is it still not as much as daycare?
I obviously can't speak to others but for us aftercare and camp won't come close to our daycare costs. Daycare over a grand more than our mortgage -- it's crazy.
This is true. Fairfax County SACC is just under $1,000 per month for two kids (before and after care) and one week (for Spring Break) of SACC camp for two kids is $445. Then add summer SACC camps at $467 per week for 8 weeks of summer. It totals out to roughly $15K.
Now of course not many people want to send their kids to summer SACC all summer. So then you can add in the cost of a "good" camp, for an additional $150-$250 per week in the summer (x 8 weeks) for another $1500 or so. Then add in camp costs for the weeks summer SACC is not open. But then you think "it would be cheaper to take a vacation" . . .
But then you have to find the camps that have openings, and that you can actually get to while also managing to get to work. And the "good" camps close at 3 pm, so then you have to figure out how to manage your work hours around the camp locations and drop-off/pick-up schedule.
And then you think to yourself, "It was so much easier when they were in daycare."
![]()
That's still waaaaaay less than a nanny. We pay $40,000 a year with tax costs.
I'll take your $400 a week anyday and twice on Sunday