Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are at a similar HHI and net approximately $20k/month with 2 extra pay periods. After $7k mortgage, you have $13k/mo remaining. Is that not enough? Even if you allocate $6k for childcare, that’s still 7k/mo for basic living expenses.
Congrats, you have the mindset of someone who will be tied to their job until age 65+.
Not sure why you’re coming at me. This isn’t my budget. We net $20k per month and spend $10k so you can take your preaching elsewhere. I’m simply asking why HER budget isn’t working despite numbers suggesting that it should.
You basically told OP, "You take home $20K and your expenses are $20K - what's the problem?" Most people earning $400K wouldn't think it's OK not to save any money beyond their 401k.
OP is young and at one of the most expensive phases (new house, young kids, newborn and need for nanny, etc) of life. The concern she expressed is making ends meet, not early retirement or how much she ought to be saving. She expressed anticipation of higher income in the future. Most people are not maximizing savings or saving much at all while having a newborn.
Well we had a 200k HHI when we had a newborn and somehow we managed. To say that you can’t survive on 400k while also buying a ridiculously expensive house is nuts.
You guys are clearly idiots because we managed with a newborn on 80 HHI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are at a similar HHI and net approximately $20k/month with 2 extra pay periods. After $7k mortgage, you have $13k/mo remaining. Is that not enough? Even if you allocate $6k for childcare, that’s still 7k/mo for basic living expenses.
Congrats, you have the mindset of someone who will be tied to their job until age 65+.
Not sure why you’re coming at me. This isn’t my budget. We net $20k per month and spend $10k so you can take your preaching elsewhere. I’m simply asking why HER budget isn’t working despite numbers suggesting that it should.
You basically told OP, "You take home $20K and your expenses are $20K - what's the problem?" Most people earning $400K wouldn't think it's OK not to save any money beyond their 401k.
OP is young and at one of the most expensive phases (new house, young kids, newborn and need for nanny, etc) of life. The concern she expressed is making ends meet, not early retirement or how much she ought to be saving. She expressed anticipation of higher income in the future. Most people are not maximizing savings or saving much at all while having a newborn.
Well we had a 200k HHI when we had a newborn and somehow we managed. To say that you can’t survive on 400k while also buying a ridiculously expensive house is nuts.
You guys are clearly idiots because we managed with a newborn on 80 HHI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are at a similar HHI and net approximately $20k/month with 2 extra pay periods. After $7k mortgage, you have $13k/mo remaining. Is that not enough? Even if you allocate $6k for childcare, that’s still 7k/mo for basic living expenses.
Congrats, you have the mindset of someone who will be tied to their job until age 65+.
Not sure why you’re coming at me. This isn’t my budget. We net $20k per month and spend $10k so you can take your preaching elsewhere. I’m simply asking why HER budget isn’t working despite numbers suggesting that it should.
You basically told OP, "You take home $20K and your expenses are $20K - what's the problem?" Most people earning $400K wouldn't think it's OK not to save any money beyond their 401k.
OP is young and at one of the most expensive phases (new house, young kids, newborn and need for nanny, etc) of life. The concern she expressed is making ends meet, not early retirement or how much she ought to be saving. She expressed anticipation of higher income in the future. Most people are not maximizing savings or saving much at all while having a newborn.
Well we had a 200k HHI when we had a newborn and somehow we managed. To say that you can’t survive on 400k while also buying a ridiculously expensive house is nuts.
Anonymous wrote:OP here -
I agree we need to cut down the two shopping expenditures. I’m not the only one with a credit card so it’s not as simple.
The reason I have 1k for furniture is that our house is slowly being furnished. We didn’t move in with much so we are now buying outdoor furniture (porch, patio, deck) and indoor furniture. There’s seven bedrooms, an office, basement theater, etc that look bare without being somewhat furnished. We’re trying to find good deals rather than splurge all at once. We also inherited a large outdoor jacuzzi that needs to be maintained.
The grandparents rather pay for help and pitch in here and there rather than quit their jobs and become full time babysitters. They also refuse to retire.
Anonymous wrote:OP here -
I agree we need to cut down the two shopping expenditures. I’m not the only one with a credit card so it’s not as simple.
The reason I have 1k for furniture is that our house is slowly being furnished. We didn’t move in with much so we are now buying outdoor furniture (porch, patio, deck) and indoor furniture. There’s seven bedrooms, an office, basement theater, etc that look bare without being somewhat furnished. We’re trying to find good deals rather than splurge all at once. We also inherited a large outdoor jacuzzi that needs to be maintained.
The grandparents rather pay for help and pitch in here and there rather than quit their jobs and become full time babysitters. They also refuse to retire.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here -
Yes, 7k includes everything.
We live in McLean high pyramid, but we’re a ways away from kindergarten so that won’t be a factor for a few years.
The intent wasn’t a humble brag.
Key monthly expenditures:
2k preschool
.5k utilities
1k Amazon/Costco shopping
1k clothes/food/gas
1k lawn care/home maintenance
1k miscellaneous stuff
1k furniture/rugs/decor
7.5k total + TBD new baby costs
That $2k total should be halved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are at a similar HHI and net approximately $20k/month with 2 extra pay periods. After $7k mortgage, you have $13k/mo remaining. Is that not enough? Even if you allocate $6k for childcare, that’s still 7k/mo for basic living expenses.
Congrats, you have the mindset of someone who will be tied to their job until age 65+.
Not sure why you’re coming at me. This isn’t my budget. We net $20k per month and spend $10k so you can take your preaching elsewhere. I’m simply asking why HER budget isn’t working despite numbers suggesting that it should.
You basically told OP, "You take home $20K and your expenses are $20K - what's the problem?" Most people earning $400K wouldn't think it's OK not to save any money beyond their 401k.
OP is young and at one of the most expensive phases (new house, young kids, newborn and need for nanny, etc) of life. The concern she expressed is making ends meet, not early retirement or how much she ought to be saving. She expressed anticipation of higher income in the future. Most people are not maximizing savings or saving much at all while having a newborn.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are at a similar HHI and net approximately $20k/month with 2 extra pay periods. After $7k mortgage, you have $13k/mo remaining. Is that not enough? Even if you allocate $6k for childcare, that’s still 7k/mo for basic living expenses.
Congrats, you have the mindset of someone who will be tied to their job until age 65+.
Not sure why you’re coming at me. This isn’t my budget. We net $20k per month and spend $10k so you can take your preaching elsewhere. I’m simply asking why HER budget isn’t working despite numbers suggesting that it should.
You basically told OP, "You take home $20K and your expenses are $20K - what's the problem?" Most people earning $400K wouldn't think it's OK not to save any money beyond their 401k.
OP is young and at one of the most expensive phases (new house, young kids, newborn and need for nanny, etc) of life. The concern she expressed is making ends meet, not early retirement or how much she ought to be saving. She expressed anticipation of higher income in the future. Most people are not maximizing savings or saving much at all while having a newborn.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are at a similar HHI and net approximately $20k/month with 2 extra pay periods. After $7k mortgage, you have $13k/mo remaining. Is that not enough? Even if you allocate $6k for childcare, that’s still 7k/mo for basic living expenses.
Congrats, you have the mindset of someone who will be tied to their job until age 65+.
Not sure why you’re coming at me. This isn’t my budget. We net $20k per month and spend $10k so you can take your preaching elsewhere. I’m simply asking why HER budget isn’t working despite numbers suggesting that it should.
You basically told OP, "You take home $20K and your expenses are $20K - what's the problem?" Most people earning $400K wouldn't think it's OK not to save any money beyond their 401k.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are at a similar HHI and net approximately $20k/month with 2 extra pay periods. After $7k mortgage, you have $13k/mo remaining. Is that not enough? Even if you allocate $6k for childcare, that’s still 7k/mo for basic living expenses.
Congrats, you have the mindset of someone who will be tied to their job until age 65+.
Not sure why you’re coming at me. This isn’t my budget. We net $20k per month and spend $10k so you can take your preaching elsewhere. I’m simply asking why HER budget isn’t working despite numbers suggesting that it should.
Anonymous wrote:OP here -
Yes, 7k includes everything.
We live in McLean high pyramid, but we’re a ways away from kindergarten so that won’t be a factor for a few years.
The intent wasn’t a humble brag.
Key monthly expenditures:
2k preschool
.5k utilities
1k Amazon/Costco shopping
1k clothes/food/gas
1k lawn care/home maintenance
1k miscellaneous stuff
1k furniture/rugs/decor
7.5k total + TBD new baby costs