Anonymous wrote:What if the spender is also the main breadwinner in the family? Do you give them a budget of how much they can spend each month on extraneous items?
Our salary difference is extreme - DH makes $650,000 and I make $150,000. But DH is the spender of the two of us and I do our budget. I feel bad when I tell him to spend less because I know he works a lot and deserves to reap the benefits of his hard work. But I also have a budget and financial goals for us that we need to meet each year so think it’s silly to spend money on things like a new grill, workout equipment, sports events, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We make about the same— I make a little more, HHI is $500.
I am the budgeter, and have shown husband how we are on track to pay off our 30 year mortgage 15 years early if we keep our spending in check. That’s a very tangible goal.
We also sometimes talk about shorter term goals, spending splurges or vacation funds.
I do not police him, but I do the grocery shopping and meal planning even though he is the cook because he isn’t good at shopping on a budget. He has seen how much quicker our mortgage balance drops when we aren’t eating out as much, and that was the biggest budget lifestyle change for us.
Otherwise, if there’s a large purchase (car), I set the general guidelines and we make a decision together. For medium things (new tech, anything >$1000) we discuss together.
Why are you in such a rush to pay off your mortgage? What is the interest rate? That is often a foolish decision to take.
6%, which feels painful after our condo was 3%. I hate paying interest, it’s a tremendous savings to knock it off sooner and as someone who didn’t grow up with wealth, I think I’m more debt/risk averse than others.
We max our retirement account contributions and have solid emergency savings + kids tuitions taken care of first. The thought of not having that bill every month by the time our kids are in HS is hugely motivating to us.
DH gains access to a substantial trust at 55, and there are separate trusts for the kids. I’d rather take care of ourselves and use that $$$ for the kids or emergencies, but knowing it’s there does make me favor paying off debts more.
Anonymous wrote:If your DH makes $650,000 let him spend what he wants or he will find someone who will. You are obnoxious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We make about the same— I make a little more, HHI is $500.
I am the budgeter, and have shown husband how we are on track to pay off our 30 year mortgage 15 years early if we keep our spending in check. That’s a very tangible goal.
We also sometimes talk about shorter term goals, spending splurges or vacation funds.
I do not police him, but I do the grocery shopping and meal planning even though he is the cook because he isn’t good at shopping on a budget. He has seen how much quicker our mortgage balance drops when we aren’t eating out as much, and that was the biggest budget lifestyle change for us.
Otherwise, if there’s a large purchase (car), I set the general guidelines and we make a decision together. For medium things (new tech, anything >$1000) we discuss together.
Why are you in such a rush to pay off your mortgage? What is the interest rate? That is often a foolish decision to take.
Anonymous wrote:If your DH makes $650,000 let him spend what he wants or he will find someone who will. You are obnoxious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, we have a mid-seven figures HHI, all brought in by my DH and I am constantly giving him a hard time about watching our budget.
The thing is, DH and I sit down together at the beginning of the year and set savings goals for ourselves. We also set a general budget. It’s generous (we spend about $30k per month including our mortgage, not including income taxes or private school tuition) and then I expect us to stick to it.
We can afford to spend more than our budget, but what’s the point in making a budget if we aren’t going to follow it? I don’t mind if we overspend by $1-2K during a month, but there is no reason we should regularly be overspending that much each month.
This doesn’t sound like a monthly spending issue (maybe the sports events?) but rather large-ish purchases. However, the OP and her spouse could try to amortize the grill and gym equipment purchase over the next 8 years and the sporting events (if something like season tickets) over the course of a year.
Anonymous wrote:Op, we have a mid-seven figures HHI, all brought in by my DH and I am constantly giving him a hard time about watching our budget.
The thing is, DH and I sit down together at the beginning of the year and set savings goals for ourselves. We also set a general budget. It’s generous (we spend about $30k per month including our mortgage, not including income taxes or private school tuition) and then I expect us to stick to it.
We can afford to spend more than our budget, but what’s the point in making a budget if we aren’t going to follow it? I don’t mind if we overspend by $1-2K during a month, but there is no reason we should regularly be overspending that much each month.
Anonymous wrote:What if the spender is also the main breadwinner in the family? Do you give them a budget of how much they can spend each month on extraneous items?
Our salary difference is extreme - DH makes $650,000 and I make $150,000. But DH is the spender of the two of us and I do our budget. I feel bad when I tell him to spend less because I know he works a lot and deserves to reap the benefits of his hard work. But I also have a budget and financial goals for us that we need to meet each year so think it’s silly to spend money on things like a new grill, workout equipment, sports events, etc.
Anonymous wrote:That's $800k HHI, and >400k after taxes...
I'd focus on your goals instead of individual expenses. What are you saving for? Education? Retirement? House or car? Agree on the goals and the time horizon with your partner and if you're not meeting the goals talk about that. Don't bring up individual expenses unless they're very large (like >250).
At that much money a categorized budget is too abstract without agreed goals and targets, you're way beyond needing to care about eating out unless you're hitting up Michelin star places on the reg.
Once you agree on goals then set up automatic investments out of the cash accounts. The cash is fair game, your goals all become automatic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op - I am an admitted spend thrift. DH has to insist I buy new clothes when mine are wearing out or I don’t have something appropriate for a given event (like no hiking shoes, running shoes are complete bare sole, etc.)
I just think little things add up to big things and we already have big things to pay for. So why spend more money on things we really don’t think (in my mind).
Spendthrift means the opposite of what you think it means.
Op - ha you are right! Probably right word is cheap. I hate spending money.