Anonymous wrote:Little stuff doesn't matter much in the grand scheme of things so we don't watch little things very closely (coffee, Amazon, etc.). In order of impact on our bottom line here are our frugality tips:
- 15 year mortgage only slightly more than 1x HHI
- 2 Hondas paid for in cash (one 11 years old and one 3 years old)
- clean our own house
- do our own yardwork
- DH does most home repairs/maintenance himself and most car repairs (when it makes sense for him to do so from a complexity/time/cost perspective)
1/3 of what we make goes to expenses, 1/3 to the tax man and 1/3 goes into 2 maxed 401ks, backdoor Roths and the balance in taxable.
Anonymous wrote:Clean our own house.
Do our cosmetic upgrades - ikea cabinets, backsplash.
DH does most of the repairs and maintenance in the house.
DH cuts his own hair.
Take our lunch to work.
Iron our own shirts.
Use dryel for dryclean-only sweaters and blouses.
Save actual dry-cleaning for suits and slacks.
Wear things multiple times before dry-cleaning and spot-clean when that's enough.
Travel mostly on airline and hotel points.
Brew coffee at home.
Use one teabag throughout the day.
Download movies for free.
No dogs.
No kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What travel rewards cc is everyone using?
I would also love to know which cc's give the best rewards. TIA!
I use Capital one and get 2% back on all purchases.
I use Chase Sapphire Reserve (and before that, the Sapphire Preferred but the benefits are a bit redundant so I closed it)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What travel rewards cc is everyone using?
I would also love to know which cc's give the best rewards. TIA!
I use Capital one and get 2% back on all purchases.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What travel rewards cc is everyone using?
I would also love to know which cc's give the best rewards. TIA!
Anonymous wrote:What travel rewards cc is everyone using?
I would also love to know which cc's give the best rewards. TIA!
Anonymous wrote:I drive a 16 year old car and eat leftovers.
Anonymous wrote:1.) No daycare bill. We work opposite schedule.
2.) Old cars which seem to run forever.
3.) Cheap insurances since cars are old.
4.) Low property tax bill since we live in condo.
5.) Hardly ever sick. Great eyesight and fix teeth abroad if needed.
6.) Public schools.
7.) No spa/ no manicure/ 1 haircut a year(grows slowly) and even that abroad if we go.
8.) Wear uniform to work and they have free food.
9.) Live close to work and school.
10.) Older kid's expenses paid 50% by ex.
11.) 1 mortgage paid by renter.
12.) Free parking since we work in the same zone and free at DH work.
We earn some cash back, but it's small. Don't cut coupons since I know rock bottom prices and buy usually then. No new clothes since closet is full of clothes and we hardly ever got to an event that requires nice clothes.
We spend money on traveling and books ($1a piece in thrift) and 529s.
One of the mortgages will be paid soon. Then we will upgrade and have 3 people pay for the house.
I think the best thing is that we don't know any Joneses. Nobody to impress.
Anonymous wrote:I stick with classic styles, stay out of stores and don't look at Internet shopping sites. Cook at home, where I use great ingredients and fine wines. Most restaurant food is garbage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I invest exclusively in Vanguard index funds rather than pay a fund manager or financial advisor 2%. That saves about $30,000 per year.
We send our kids to public school, which saves about $80,000 per year.
DW sometimes uses a single tea bag for two cups of tea. That saves about $1.50 per year.
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