Anonymous wrote:I think the DMV has an overabundance of HHI earners, but not that many people with f**k you money.
All the folks that barely spend who make $800k...I bet if they worked for a hedge fund and made $50MM in a year...they would probably buy a bunch of useless crap.
I would assume Carlyle VPs, MDs and Partners and wives probably spend $$$s on extravagances, but they also don't worry much about covering their daily expenses if they quit tomorrow
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of us patting ourselves on the back for driving old cars don’t get it, it’s still luxurious because a) we could afford to maintain them and b) if and when they become unreliable, we’ll replace them
So? It frees up money to spend on other "luxuries" in life. I drove my Luxury big SUV for 12+ years, sold it for ~30% of what I paid for it. Yes, I got rid of it when it started having electrical issues that were going to start costing $$$. But I have an extra $25-40K in my pocket because I didn't get a new car after 4-5 years, not to mention my insurance was cheaper the last 4-5 years because it was an older car. Do that with each vehicle (10+ years instead of 4-5 years) and you have a lot of money to spend on other luxuries.
But why would anyone get a new car after 4-5 years if it's still running well?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This will sound crazy but our income in 2022 was over $2 million and I spent just about nothing on clothes, jewelry or other luxury goods like fancy cars. I love my Forester! We do travel very well and we have two nice homes so our overhead is high. We give away a lot every year so we are not sitting on mattresses stuffed with cash.
Same. I drive a minivan and buy my clothes at target. We do spend a lot on travel, food and housecleaning/yard/child activities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of us patting ourselves on the back for driving old cars don’t get it, it’s still luxurious because a) we could afford to maintain them and b) if and when they become unreliable, we’ll replace them
So? It frees up money to spend on other "luxuries" in life. I drove my Luxury big SUV for 12+ years, sold it for ~30% of what I paid for it. Yes, I got rid of it when it started having electrical issues that were going to start costing $$$. But I have an extra $25-40K in my pocket because I didn't get a new car after 4-5 years, not to mention my insurance was cheaper the last 4-5 years because it was an older car. Do that with each vehicle (10+ years instead of 4-5 years) and you have a lot of money to spend on other luxuries.
Anonymous wrote:This will sound crazy but our income in 2022 was over $2 million and I spent just about nothing on clothes, jewelry or other luxury goods like fancy cars. I love my Forester! We do travel very well and we have two nice homes so our overhead is high. We give away a lot every year so we are not sitting on mattresses stuffed with cash.
Anonymous wrote:All of us patting ourselves on the back for driving old cars don’t get it, it’s still luxurious because a) we could afford to maintain them and b) if and when they become unreliable, we’ll replace them
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the answer is none, I don’t under why people are bothering with this thread. Obviously a lot of people in DC make other choices, but the luxury shops are still open.
I think because housing is very expensive here and most people are self-made, so there's not a lot of income left to decorate, entertain, or take care of one's self. Most of the PPs are working on accumulating wealth for their kids, so they come from nothing. It's also a lot of travel expense, which means they didn't have the money growing up to travel with their families, so they make up for it now.
Anonymous wrote:If the answer is none, I don’t under why people are bothering with this thread. Obviously a lot of people in DC make other choices, but the luxury shops are still open.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:HHI 440k. None of that crap.
Only luxury is Whole Foods
It's terrifying that health food is considered a luxury, hence why Americans are so huge.
It’s terrifying that you don’t know how to buy healthy food at Harris Teeter and Giant. There is little about WF that’s special except the prices unless you need a special ingredient for a recipe.
Anonymous wrote:Someone in my family makes 3 million a year: they don’t buy this stuff. They drive a Prius and a Subaru both 8 years old. Their house is not that great. The one luxury purchase I saw were authentic Persian rugs. I stepped on one that was 15k. They have several.
Anonymous wrote:Someone in my family makes 3 million a year: they don’t buy this stuff. They drive a Prius and a Subaru both 8 years old. Their house is not that great. The one luxury purchase I saw were authentic Persian rugs. I stepped on one that was 15k. They have several.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many people don't seem to splurge much and are high income but not as high net worth as I'd expect based on the answers. What do people spend their money on if they are not splurging in these categories (but aren't saving massive amounts to add to NW either)?
Mortgage
Health insurance
Kids activities
College savings
Utilities are up, groceries are up, gas is high where I live.
We do try to take a vacation once a year