Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, we're counting on our kids being smart or athletic. The athletic part is probably a bust given their parents, so they'll just have to be smart!
When you have a higher HHI, your kids can be as smart as you want, you're still not going to get aid (other than loans). You're sort of in the HHI sweet spot for being able to get aid.
Oh, boo hoo, poor little rich kids.
Have you ever heard of merit scholarships?
Do the top twenty five schools for undergrad generally give merit scholarships?
Yes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. I am a teacher and have a sizable chunk of my salary put in a pension. I also have money taken out and put into a 401K.
Are you the teacher making $50K a year? How much do you live on after contributing to your pension and 401(k)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with the PP. I'm a single mom to one school aged child. I make around $50K per year and I feel well off. We have enough to eat, we live in a safe home, my son goes to a great public school, I have enough to pay all of my bills. Yet someone else would say someone earning $50K can't possibly live well in this area. We can and we do.
To me, living well is going on vacation, buying new clothes, having money to go out to dinner and shows, and contributing to charitable causes important to us.
You can still do all of those things on a smaller HHI when you're not paying 5-10k in childcare and SL costs or paying 3k for a mortgage (let's not get on private school). I've been to 3 countries so far in 2014 and the West Coast, have paid tuition costs for a child in a developing country for the 2013-14 school year, and eat out regularly. I don't make anywhere near 100k. If I lost my job, I could wait tables in the meantime and cover my bills. I totally get why taking home 10-15K feels necessary to some. We're upper middle class when we live abroad and there's definitely a different cost for everything once you're in that bubble. We "had" to do private, dance lessons were more than we'd pay in the US but they were essential, we needed a driver/nanny/housekeeper, we were too busy to shop for deals on produce so it was easier to shop in expat friendly locations, etc.
In truth, your average DCUMer moved to the DC area as an adult and bought into the belief that one can only live in Upper NW/Bethesda/McLean/Cap Hiil or its unsafe, that private schools are a must, etc. Some of us are just pointing out that some of you made lifestyle choices that make it necessary to take home such a high HHI. It's NOT simply living in DC, because the average family in DC is working with considerably less. Do you really think that DC restaurants are full of the wealthiest 1%? There are so many shows and events here that you can experience for free or very little.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, we're counting on our kids being smart or athletic. The athletic part is probably a bust given their parents, so they'll just have to be smart!
When you have a higher HHI, your kids can be as smart as you want, you're still not going to get aid (other than loans). You're sort of in the HHI sweet spot for being able to get aid.
Oh, boo hoo, poor little rich kids.
Have you ever heard of merit scholarships?
Do the top twenty five schools for undergrad generally give merit scholarships?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with the PP. I'm a single mom to one school aged child. I make around $50K per year and I feel well off. We have enough to eat, we live in a safe home, my son goes to a great public school, I have enough to pay all of my bills. Yet someone else would say someone earning $50K can't possibly live well in this area. We can and we do.
To me, living well is going on vacation, buying new clothes, having money to go out to dinner and shows, and contributing to charitable causes important to us.
Yeah, I do all that (not shows though, not sure what you mean by that, though I can certainly afford $20 at the 930 club a couple of times a month if I was still into that), and I do it on a little over $90k a year. Plus overseas vacations, activities for the kids etc. A sizeable amount of our $1k a month food budget is on eating out ($3-400). I am very comfortable on our current income. I simply CANNOT fathom what people are blithely spending $10k plus on. It is beyond my comprehension that people can be so wasteful and extravagant and judgmental. WE are very lucky. I know that we have much more income than MANY in DC and I appreciate it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, we're counting on our kids being smart or athletic. The athletic part is probably a bust given their parents, so they'll just have to be smart!
When you have a higher HHI, your kids can be as smart as you want, you're still not going to get aid (other than loans). You're sort of in the HHI sweet spot for being able to get aid.
Oh, boo hoo, poor little rich kids.
Have you ever heard of merit scholarships?
Do the top twenty five schools for undergrad generally give merit scholarships?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with the PP. I'm a single mom to one school aged child. I make around $50K per year and I feel well off. We have enough to eat, we live in a safe home, my son goes to a great public school, I have enough to pay all of my bills. Yet someone else would say someone earning $50K can't possibly live well in this area. We can and we do.
To me, living well is going on vacation, buying new clothes, having money to go out to dinner and shows, and contributing to charitable causes important to us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are a family of 4 with 2 kids under 5, and we spend on average about $11k a month.
WOW!!! Seriously? We spend about $4k and I think we're well off.
You aren't.
Yes, we are. We have everything we need and then some. You need a reality check if you can't understand that. Take a good hard look at the people you see every day and how they live. We have a nice house and a nice car and food in the fridge, heating and shelter, clothes on our backs, regular vacations, books and toys for the kids. Just because you are extravagant and don't understand the value of money doesn't make you "better" than someone who knows what it means.
Our HHI is about $90k and that is a LOT of money. It truly is. I am grateful for what we have and that we are not struggling.
We save more than 90K a year. Different scale of living.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with the PP. I'm a single mom to one school aged child. I make around $50K per year and I feel well off. We have enough to eat, we live in a safe home, my son goes to a great public school, I have enough to pay all of my bills. Yet someone else would say someone earning $50K can't possibly live well in this area. We can and we do.
Are you planning to live on social security in retirement?
Not the PP, but same demographics on just under 70K a year. I feel the same. I have a pension, save 15% towards retirement (plus match), and mortgage will be paid off the year my little one hits undergrad. I'll be 44. Can retire at 50. Live in DC and love our place. I probably eat out and travel more than the average person on DCUM. Childcare costs are $0, mortgage is super low, SL debt is nearly paid off and $60/month. My ex and I stagger our schedules to avoid before/aftercare fees.
Okay, I'm game. How much do you spend per month, or however you track it, on travel and eating out?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with the PP. I'm a single mom to one school aged child. I make around $50K per year and I feel well off. We have enough to eat, we live in a safe home, my son goes to a great public school, I have enough to pay all of my bills. Yet someone else would say someone earning $50K can't possibly live well in this area. We can and we do.
To me, living well is going on vacation, buying new clothes, having money to go out to dinner and shows, and contributing to charitable causes important to us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with the PP. I'm a single mom to one school aged child. I make around $50K per year and I feel well off. We have enough to eat, we live in a safe home, my son goes to a great public school, I have enough to pay all of my bills. Yet someone else would say someone earning $50K can't possibly live well in this area. We can and we do.
Are you planning to live on social security in retirement?
Not the PP, but same demographics on just under 70K a year. I feel the same. I have a pension, save 15% towards retirement (plus match), and mortgage will be paid off the year my little one hits undergrad. I'll be 44. Can retire at 50. Live in DC and love our place. I probably eat out and travel more than the average person on DCUM. Childcare costs are $0, mortgage is super low, SL debt is nearly paid off and $60/month. My ex and I stagger our schedules to avoid before/aftercare fees.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, we're counting on our kids being smart or athletic. The athletic part is probably a bust given their parents, so they'll just have to be smart!
When you have a higher HHI, your kids can be as smart as you want, you're still not going to get aid (other than loans). You're sort of in the HHI sweet spot for being able to get aid.
Oh, boo hoo, poor little rich kids.
Have you ever heard of merit scholarships?
Anonymous wrote:
6K
Family of 4 (kids in elementary school)
Bethesda
Half of that is house-related.
We do our best to be frugal.
The numbers on this thread are eye-opening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are a family of 4 with 2 kids under 5, and we spend on average about $11k a month.
do you mean mortgage, gas, food, tuition etc?