Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you think your 100k house in the DE suburbs is going to be big enough for the family of 6 you're planning? How much do you save each month for college?
Yup. It's got 3 bedrooms and the kids will share bedrooms the way kids do all over the world, including in the US.
We don't budget separately for college; we simply save most of our money and we'll divide things up when the kids reach college age.
Do you have/anticipate having enough to fully fund four college tuitions and your retirements?
Anonymous wrote:What does homeschool look like with two working parents? Especially homeschooling four kids?
Anonymous wrote:What does homeschool look like with two working parents? Especially homeschooling four kids?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you think your 100k house in the DE suburbs is going to be big enough for the family of 6 you're planning? How much do you save each month for college?
Yup. It's got 3 bedrooms and the kids will share bedrooms the way kids do all over the world, including in the US.
We don't budget separately for college; we simply save most of our money and we'll divide things up when the kids reach college age.
Anonymous wrote:Do you live in a decent school district? (What is the great schools ranking for your elementary school). I have friends in Delaware, but they paid quite a bit more for their house than 100K to live near decent schools.
Anonymous wrote:A house in a DC suburb will cost you at a minimum 300k that is pretty far from the city. 100k would be nice.
Anonymous wrote:A house in a DC suburb will cost you at a minimum 300k that is pretty far from the city. 100k would be nice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:why are you posting on DCUM if you're in Delaware? I totally get that people can live easily on 100K/year in certain parts of the country, but in the metro DC area, you're not going to find a house, or even an apartment for 100K in a safe area with reasonable schools.
Suit yourself. Running a COLA calculator gives us an HHI of ~154k if we lived in DC metro. Also, most people who work in DC don't actually live there (like 75% or so).
http://money.cnn.com/calculator/pf/cost-of-living/index.html
And you don't think there's a big difference between 100,000 and 154,000 (an over 50% effective salary increase?) no wonder your perspective is skewed! Also the COLA in the DC inner suburbs (i.e. Within a one hour commute) is pretty much on par with DC proper.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok--ignoring the fact that you are in Deleware suburbs--is $300-400 on food and a $100K home really "living like Kings"?
I suppose it depends on what you consider to be a good life. We have unlimited access to healthy food, we love our home, and have all of our needs met and then some.
good for you OP-I'm impressed at the amount you are donating to charity
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:why are you posting on DCUM if you're in Delaware? I totally get that people can live easily on 100K/year in certain parts of the country, but in the metro DC area, you're not going to find a house, or even an apartment for 100K in a safe area with reasonable schools.
Suit yourself. Running a COLA calculator gives us an HHI of ~154k if we lived in DC metro. Also, most people who work in DC don't actually live there (like 75% or so).
http://money.cnn.com/calculator/pf/cost-of-living/index.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:where do you live? how did you pay off your house in early 30s?
Without entering into too many details, we're in Delaware. We paid off the house in our mid 20s within 4 years of purchase by making sure it didn't cost more than 2x our income; at the time, we made 50k, so we bought a 100k house on a 15-year mortgage. Made extra payments from the start, salaries went up, killed it off.
Are you living in a bad neighborhood in Wilmington?
But no, the neighborhood is good. Very quiet, day and night. I think a few years ago there was allegedly a teenager going about taking things from unlocked cars, but that's about it.