nannies, have you ever thought of switching to preschool teacher job to get 401K RSS feed

Anonymous
How old are you op ? Do you have family you can live with ? Maybe when you retire move to a lower cost of living area ?
Anonymous
I highly doubt that most preschools are doing a matching 401k.
Anonymous
Op here, no, I would not want to live with the family. Moving to a low cost of living area is problematic, and the pay rates for nannies - that is, if anyone is going to hire an older nanny - is much lower. I guess I will have to apply for public aid which is very humiliating.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP here, I do work on the books making about $1300 a week, about $1025 after taxes, and was able to save roughly 5K a year for the last 5-6 yrs but that is so little. I am an immigrant who came (legally) in my mid 40s, so I did not have a chance to work for 20-30 yrs but will qualify for social security albeit very low. This is really worrying me since I anticipate big expenses such as dental which can be thousands. Wish Medicare would cover dental work.

That money invested would be about $55k right now, and all tax free if you had done it inside of Roth.
It's not how much you make, it's what you do with the money you make.
I have never made as much you, but I made investing and personal finance my priority.
I'm in mid 40s immigrant who worked for minimum wage most of my life because of my status. I learned about investing from books; I don't have to work anymore. Investing and making money with money is my job.
I would not let my money sit inside of 401k, match or not match. 401k is a savings vehicle with high fees and very lousy investment choices. You need to invest because you behind and not just save.
Anonymous
Investing is a gamble, I am not a gambling type. As to the amount of money I make (OP here btw), it is not a lot in DMV, as my rent runs to 2K a month
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Investing is a gamble, I am not a gambling type. As to the amount of money I make (OP here btw), it is not a lot in DMV, as my rent runs to 2K a month


You might want to head over to the DCUM money & finance thread and ask for ideas. You are smart to think about this stuff now and prepare. Not all investing is a gamble. You may have heard of things like inflation protected securities or guaranteed returns. One idea - would it be possible to get a roommate and put the rent savings in a Roth? You could pick really conservative funds that are nothing like gambling.
KaylieMoses

Member Offline
The amount you can save using employer contributions depends on the specific terms of the plan and the employer's percentage match for your contributions. Typically, the employer will offer a match within a certain percentage range of your salary, such as 3% or 5%. This means that if you make your own contributions of, say, 5% of your salary, your employer may be willing to contribute the same percentage on their side.
post reply Forum Index » General Discussion
Message Quick Reply
Go to: