Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of these net worths don't make sense. Use this calculator to correctly determine net worth (you gotta include all your debt):
http://cgi.money.cnn.com/tools/networth/networth.html
According to this calculator we are at +$180K; mid to late 30's. That's about to go up after we sell our house. Sweet!
Your net worth should not increase when you sell your house.
Why? I'm making a fair amount of equity and moving to a much lower COL area. The math works out in my favor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of these net worths don't make sense. Use this calculator to correctly determine net worth (you gotta include all your debt):
http://cgi.money.cnn.com/tools/networth/networth.html
According to this calculator we are at +$180K; mid to late 30's. That's about to go up after we sell our house. Sweet!
Your net worth should not increase when you sell your house.
Why? I'm making a fair amount of equity and moving to a much lower COL area. The math works out in my favor.
You don't know what net worth means.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I figured out once that we'd need to earn 250k gross to reach our "dream" savings rate without changing current (relatively frugal) lifestyle. This would include maxing out 401K, maxing out Roths, 20k to max out I Bonds, and 20k into regular savings for big expenses (ie, car, home repair, braces).
How could you max out both 401Ks and Roths?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of these net worths don't make sense. Use this calculator to correctly determine net worth (you gotta include all your debt):
http://cgi.money.cnn.com/tools/networth/networth.html
According to this calculator we are at +$180K; mid to late 30's. That's about to go up after we sell our house. Sweet!
Your net worth should not increase when you sell your house.
Why? I'm making a fair amount of equity and moving to a much lower COL area. The math works out in my favor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of these net worths don't make sense. Use this calculator to correctly determine net worth (you gotta include all your debt):
http://cgi.money.cnn.com/tools/networth/networth.html
According to this calculator we are at +$180K; mid to late 30's. That's about to go up after we sell our house. Sweet!
Your net worth should not increase when you sell your house.
Anonymous wrote:I figured out once that we'd need to earn 250k gross to reach our "dream" savings rate without changing current (relatively frugal) lifestyle. This would include maxing out 401K, maxing out Roths, 20k to max out I Bonds, and 20k into regular savings for big expenses (ie, car, home repair, braces).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just realized I finally don't have a negative net worth! And I am happy about it. My home equity and 401K netted against my students loans (90K) and credit cards (5K) equals zero. I know many of you would laugh at this as pathetic, but it truly is an accomplishment for anyone to crawl out of a negative net worth.
I hate to burst your bubble, OP, but it doesn't appear that you included mortgage debt in your calculations. You likely are still in the red.
OP here - my home has equity in it, so the value exceeds the mortgage which I know is somewhat rare these days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just realized I finally don't have a negative net worth! And I am happy about it. My home equity and 401K netted against my students loans (90K) and credit cards (5K) equals zero. I know many of you would laugh at this as pathetic, but it truly is an accomplishment for anyone to crawl out of a negative net worth.
I hate to burst your bubble, OP, but it doesn't appear that you included mortgage debt in your calculations. You likely are still in the red.
Anonymous wrote:$520k. 8 years ago I was at -50k.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of these net worths don't make sense. Use this calculator to correctly determine net worth (you gotta include all your debt):
http://cgi.money.cnn.com/tools/networth/networth.html
According to this calculator we are at +$180K; mid to late 30's. That's about to go up after we sell our house. Sweet!
Anonymous wrote:I will be at zero within the next few months! Never thought I would be so excited about this. I am a 30 something single mom and once I hit zero, I will start saving for a down payment for a condo.