Anonymous wrote:PP, you mean adding the value of the house and subtracting the debt. This equals the equity.
Anonymous wrote:Again???! Why is there always a question like this every week?? I don't understand the obsession with comparing your money/ financial situation to anonymous posters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Early 50s, net worth of around $7.5 million. Typical for the DC area tail-end baby boomer professional class, I think.
Um, no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:yeah, we are currently in negative territory since we owe $420K+ on our home. If we didn't have to subtract that debt, it wouldn't be so ugly.
We're 36 with 1 child - HHI of ~$135K.
Is your mortgage worth more than your home?
we've gained a little on it since we bought it 2 years ago. We just still owe a lot on it, plus we took out a HELOC to pay for some home repairs and a few other things (like fertility treatments since my first child apparently screwed up my body to the point where I can't get pregnant without the use of technology).
Our retirement accounts+other savings+529 savings aren't bad for our HHI, but even if you add in what we still have in equity, subtracting the debt (mortgage+HELOC+1 car loan) from that gives us negative net worth.
We would have been in the positive by a couple thousand had we stayed in our little TH forever, but we made the decision to have a house with a yard. I think there are a lot more families out there like ours, they just aren't answering this question.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:31, somewhere between 150k and 200k. I came out of law school with about -180k so happy to just be positive. Mint.com counts a car as an asset-but I'm not really sure whether I'd count it as part of my net worth.
Geez, my law school debt was around $25K. Of course, I graduated 20 years agoYou poor thing.
Anonymous wrote:Early 50s, net worth of around $7.5 million. Typical for the DC area tail-end baby boomer professional class, I think.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:yeah, we are currently in negative territory since we owe $420K+ on our home. If we didn't have to subtract that debt, it wouldn't be so ugly.
We're 36 with 1 child - HHI of ~$135K.
Is your mortgage worth more than your home?
Anonymous wrote:Net worth alone is meaningless. How much of this is yours and how much was inherited/trust fund.
Anonymous wrote:31, somewhere between 150k and 200k. I came out of law school with about -180k so happy to just be positive. Mint.com counts a car as an asset-but I'm not really sure whether I'd count it as part of my net worth.
You poor thing.Anonymous wrote:No, I know DCUM has a fairly wealthy readership and that the wealthy people are more likely to post. Most of these numbers seem reasonable to me. I'm just skeptical of people in their early 30s claiming their net worth is in the millions. A 33 year old with a $2 million net worth has a net worth 240 times the average for her age. Even an extremely high income won't get you there if you have any debt. I feel like some people are either lying or forgetting to subtract their debt from their assets.