Anonymous wrote:OP here. Not looking for a scolding but for advice. Ran up a lot of credit card debt on three maternity leaves that were largely unpaid - hard to pay daycare for two kids while on unpaid leave with a third. And we had to do that or else we would lose our spots. Plus the student loan debt. We have two Hondas 2012 and 2013. Minivan and SUV. Before that I was driving a 2001 Toyota that wouldn't fit three carsears so I had to sell it. Had it over 10 years. We cannot go down to one car because due to our work schedules DH and I alternate drop off and pickup from daycare and aftercare. We do not live in a huge home. In fact, we need a bigger house desperately. Our kids are doubled up in rooms and we are bursting at the seams. Same rowhouse we lived in when we got engaged! Mortgage is $3400/month. Student loans are $1500/month. Credit card bills. Car payments. Daycare and aftercare is $2450/month. We cannot get a nanny for an equivalent price (legally, anyway). I am a fed and the lack of pay increases hasn't helped. But at least job is stable. We do not take luxury vacations and rent expensive homes or take fancy trips. We go to the beach and stay with family. I hardly ever buy clothes and when I do it's at Target/TJ Max or even eBay. I buy kids clothes on eBay or at Target or old navy sale.
The thing is that we definitely aren't living the high life by any means. Our home is very modest and not suitable for the size of our family. Our vacations are budget vacations. Now I am dreading having to pay for summer camps for the older two kids. $450/week per kid for 10 weeks. Ugh.
The kids do a lot of activities. Music together. dance lessons. Soccer. Music lessons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are your CC minimum payments?
My gut now (without seeing your budget, so with only limited info you have provided on this thread) would be to go down to one month expenses in your efund. This is your "baby efund" in Dave Ramsey speak. It is NOT a fully funded efund.
Take the rest of it and pay off the CCs as much as possible. Then take the minimum payments you WERE paying (this is your snowball) and put those on the CCs (higher interest rate ones first) until they are paid off. You can predict when that will be done but calculating it out. Say you can have all your cc debt paid off by June. Great. Then take the total minimum payments that you used to be paying (your snowball has now gotten larger) and apply that to your car loan with the higher interest rate. Snowball that loan and when it is paid off, roll that to your other car loan. By now your snowball should be very large and you will have all consumer debt paid off and you can roll the snowball to building your savings to getting a FFEF. 3, 4, 5, 6 months of full expenses. Whatever the number is that you feel you need. THEN you take your snowball and start paying down those student loans.
It is going to take a long time to pay the student loans off, and so you should build in to your budget a car replacement fund so you don't have to go in to debt when you need to replace your cars in the future.
I disagree with the car issue. The op is living in a city where a car truly isn't a requirement. They need to move to an apartment building in Virginia that's near the metro. Use the metro to get to work. There's a post properties building in Alexandria that's near a grocery store and the metro. Put all three kids in one room. You guys have the other bedroom. You'd save:
Two car payments
Monthly parking for two cars
Around 500 cheaper than your mortgage
This is at least 2k a month if not more that could go to student loans.
Use the proceeds from the house to pay off the credit card debt.
Anonymous wrote:What are your CC minimum payments?
My gut now (without seeing your budget, so with only limited info you have provided on this thread) would be to go down to one month expenses in your efund. This is your "baby efund" in Dave Ramsey speak. It is NOT a fully funded efund.
Take the rest of it and pay off the CCs as much as possible. Then take the minimum payments you WERE paying (this is your snowball) and put those on the CCs (higher interest rate ones first) until they are paid off. You can predict when that will be done but calculating it out. Say you can have all your cc debt paid off by June. Great. Then take the total minimum payments that you used to be paying (your snowball has now gotten larger) and apply that to your car loan with the higher interest rate. Snowball that loan and when it is paid off, roll that to your other car loan. By now your snowball should be very large and you will have all consumer debt paid off and you can roll the snowball to building your savings to getting a FFEF. 3, 4, 5, 6 months of full expenses. Whatever the number is that you feel you need. THEN you take your snowball and start paying down those student loans.
It is going to take a long time to pay the student loans off, and so you should build in to your budget a car replacement fund so you don't have to go in to debt when you need to replace your cars in the future.
Anonymous wrote:What are your CC minimum payments?
My gut now (without seeing your budget, so with only limited info you have provided on this thread) would be to go down to one month expenses in your efund. This is your "baby efund" in Dave Ramsey speak. It is NOT a fully funded efund.
Take the rest of it and pay off the CCs as much as possible. Then take the minimum payments you WERE paying (this is your snowball) and put those on the CCs (higher interest rate ones first) until they are paid off. You can predict when that will be done but calculating it out. Say you can have all your cc debt paid off by June. Great. Then take the total minimum payments that you used to be paying (your snowball has now gotten larger) and apply that to your car loan with the higher interest rate. Snowball that loan and when it is paid off, roll that to your other car loan. By now your snowball should be very large and you will have all consumer debt paid off and you can roll the snowball to building your savings to getting a FFEF. 3, 4, 5, 6 months of full expenses. Whatever the number is that you feel you need. THEN you take your snowball and start paying down those student loans.
It is going to take a long time to pay the student loans off, and so you should build in to your budget a car replacement fund so you don't have to go in to debt when you need to replace your cars in the future.
Anonymous wrote:We got out of consumer debt that was just over 100k in 18 months. Our income is about 100k higher than yours, but we do have an AuPair so our childcare expenses are pretty high.
The key is we have a pretty low mortgage due to living in Loudoun county. A crutial piece of info missing is what's your housing expenses and equity? Because people telling you to pack your lunch are really good missing it. Packing lunch won't dig you out of this.
What we did was went through every single bill and figured out ways to lower it, we then tracked ALL spending each month and each month fought to lower it. We removed our kids from travel sports ( they survived). We not only paid off the debt, we now have a quickly growing cash savings. We are up to 40k in cash now.
Anonymous wrote:OK, the snowstorm is the perfect time to sit down with your DH to figure out a budget for 2016. The PP gave you a perfect template. Start filling in the numbers until you get a budget that matches your take home pay.
Assuming your DH's Hill job is stable, I recommend you take $35k out of your emergency fund to put a significant dent in you cc bills. This will leave you with 6 plus months of mortgage payments. When you create your budget add a line item for paying back your emergency fund.
Leave your 401k alone!
Camps: the Smithsonian is the best of the best and very expensive as a result. You have to find something else. How about hiring a summer college student for the summer? We did that one year and the cost was reasonable and the kids had a blast.
If you really can't make the numbers work your DH will have to do what the rest of Hill rats have done and become a lobbyist. The private sector pays significantly more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you took out $200k in loans for college/grad school, then lived on credit cards in grad school, then bought a $700k 3-bedroom house with very little down, then had three kids (putting nine months of expenses on credit cards in the process). Then took loans for two cars.
Have you ever paid cash for anything? Have you ever put anything in savings?
I don't think you know how to live within your means.
You forgot the two cars even though they live in DC in a rowhouse. They most likely drive to work. It's insanity.
Anonymous wrote:So you took out $200k in loans for college/grad school, then lived on credit cards in grad school, then bought a $700k 3-bedroom house with very little down, then had three kids (putting nine months of expenses on credit cards in the process). Then took loans for two cars.
Have you ever paid cash for anything? Have you ever put anything in savings?
I don't think you know how to live within your means.