Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Since many are wondering about our mortgage I will clarify. Our PITI is $4250 with 27 year left. I do not intend to pay the 3.9% loan sooner. My general rule is 1/4 of our income for each of the 4 category: taxes, house, saving and other (food, daycare cost, vacation, etc ..). Our house was brand new so I do not expect any of the big ticket item for at least another 5-7 years. I know most of you like to own your house free and clear but I like leverage. None of this in defense of buying the car by the way.
That is a huge mortgage for your income.
Our HHI is $250k and our mortgage is $4500. It's no big deal.
Anonymous wrote:My parents saved very little (good income, good life, generous with others but very little left). My in-laws save too much (in the last couple of years, they gave their kids 28K each due to estate planning but argue about taking a few hundred dollars flight because it is too expensive).
I am hoping to strike a balance. Enjoy our life now, save enough to enjoy retirement. My husband is more like his parents (he keeps adding oil to his 10 year old dented Civic, sticking two kids back there despite the two doors model and claims it is fine).
Our finance:
We are both mid thirties
240K HHI
200K equity in our 900K house
80K equity in our 230k condo rental
760K in our 401K/roth IRAs (we contribute 47K to these accounts each year)
20K in 529 for 1 and 3 year old (we contribute 10K to these accounts each year)
100K in saving/bonds/general-investing for Emg/whatever
cars are paid but oldish (10 and 9 year old).
My husband is wonderful and he is not into worldly goods/or cars. But he keep talking about how nice the Tesla "concept" is (he did not say he wants one because "the Civic is good for at least another 2 years!"). He commutes 45 min-1 hr each way. I think he will enjoy the Tesla and financial we can take it (80K!) but close.What say you DCUM, should I talk him into it? or am I veering toward spending too much?
Anonymous wrote:+1 to the other poster who suggested the Tesla 3. That's a good compromise. Half the cost of the S or the X and still all the cool Tesla stuff. Although the X would be better with the kiddos. I'd be fine buying one in your financial position. We've looked at them before, but they just don't work for what we want to do. Too limited with the charging network and just wouldn't work well for trips down to Hatteras, towing the boat, drives in the Shenandoah, etc. If your primary use case is commuting though then I think it's a great option if you go into it with the mindset that it likely isn't a "buy it and hold it" car. There are just too many doodads in that car for me to believe it's going to be able to be a reliable car for 10-15 years. I think it's more of a car for people who trade up every few years or lease.
Anonymous wrote:My parents saved very little (good income, good life, generous with others but very little left). My in-laws save too much (in the last couple of years, they gave their kids 28K each due to estate planning but argue about taking a few hundred dollars flight because it is too expensive).
I am hoping to strike a balance. Enjoy our life now, save enough to enjoy retirement. My husband is more like his parents (he keeps adding oil to his 10 year old dented Civic, sticking two kids back there despite the two doors model and claims it is fine).
Our finance:
We are both mid thirties
240K HHI
200K equity in our 900K house
80K equity in our 230k condo rental
760K in our 401K/roth IRAs (we contribute 47K to these accounts each year)
20K in 529 for 1 and 3 year old (we contribute 10K to these accounts each year)
100K in saving/bonds/general-investing for Emg/whatever
cars are paid but oldish (10 and 9 year old).
My husband is wonderful and he is not into worldly goods/or cars. But he keep talking about how nice the Tesla "concept" is (he did not say he wants one because "the Civic is good for at least another 2 years!"). He commutes 45 min-1 hr each way. I think he will enjoy the Tesla and financial we can take it (80K!) but close.What say you DCUM, should I talk him into it? or am I veering toward spending too much?
Anonymous wrote:Nope, as Suzie Orman would say, "DENIED!"
You need to bump your net worth before you start spending on depreciating assets and boy toys.
Aren't the Teslas all two door?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Since many are wondering about our mortgage I will clarify. Our PITI is $4250 with 27 year left. I do not intend to pay the 3.9% loan sooner. My general rule is 1/4 of our income for each of the 4 category: taxes, house, saving and other (food, daycare cost, vacation, etc ..). Our house was brand new so I do not expect any of the big ticket item for at least another 5-7 years. I know most of you like to own your house free and clear but I like leverage. None of this in defense of buying the car by the way.
That is a huge mortgage for your income.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Since many are wondering about our mortgage I will clarify. Our PITI is $4250 with 27 year left. I do not intend to pay the 3.9% loan sooner. My general rule is 1/4 of our income for each of the 4 category: taxes, house, saving and other (food, daycare cost, vacation, etc ..). Our house was brand new so I do not expect any of the big ticket item for at least another 5-7 years. I know most of you like to own your house free and clear but I like leverage. None of this in defense of buying the car by the way.
That is a huge mortgage for your income.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not the model 3? Starts at 35k.
Presumably because it would take 3 years for OP to obtain one.
OP can hold off a few more years. Save some money.