Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
However, frankly, I think our savings is excessive. The only reason it is so high right now is we were chucking at the house and that dropped off a few months ago. We need to make some decisions and meet with an advisor on how to proceed. I would like to spend maybe $20k a year on lifestyle increases (better/more frequent vacations, outsourcing some things, desired but not necessary home improvements), and maybe invest the other $50k.
There is no such thing as "excessive savings." Saving now (while you are still meeting your needs) = freedom and peace later. You can never be too free or too secure/peaceful.
Being happy with a less than luxurious lifestyle is the easiest way to being financially secure. Just like getting rid of clutter (where you live) is the cheapest way to a "bigger" house.
Disagree. When you are making a consistent, good income and you are denying yourself things you would enjoy, when you are already saving enough money to support you later, is excessive. There is such a thing as money hoarding, and it does ugly things to people. You need a balance of saving, spending, and giving.
Anonymous wrote:
Theoretically 20%, but we recently had significant expenses, so... I should do a budget check.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
However, frankly, I think our savings is excessive. The only reason it is so high right now is we were chucking at the house and that dropped off a few months ago. We need to make some decisions and meet with an advisor on how to proceed. I would like to spend maybe $20k a year on lifestyle increases (better/more frequent vacations, outsourcing some things, desired but not necessary home improvements), and maybe invest the other $50k.
There is no such thing as "excessive savings." Saving now (while you are still meeting your needs) = freedom and peace later. You can never be too free or too secure/peaceful.
Being happy with a less than luxurious lifestyle is the easiest way to being financially secure. Just like getting rid of clutter (where you live) is the cheapest way to a "bigger" house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:House is paid off. We live on about $60k per year. We save about $100k. Half of that is pre-tax (retirement accounts), the other half is after-tax.
We are similar to you. We live on $60K (after tax) and try to save $5K/mo. in addition to the 401k withdrawals which are about $25K... so roughly $75-80K/yr saved on a HHI of about $195K. House is paid off.
Similar here as well. We just recently paid our house off. Live on around $55k a year for spending/vacations/property taxes/annual insurance. Currently save about 40k a year in retirement and 70k a year in cash, total of 110k although I never think about retirement and regular savings combined.
However, frankly, I think our savings is excessive. The only reason it is so high right now is we were chucking at the house and that dropped off a few months ago. We need to make some decisions and meet with an advisor on how to proceed. I would like to spend maybe $20k a year on lifestyle increases (better/more frequent vacations, outsourcing some things, desired but not necessary home improvements), and maybe invest the other $50k.