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When Your Savings Account Looks like it should?

Stepmom09's picture

Best feeling ever. The only things DH and I owe money on are our house and my student loans. I am super proud of us as well as our savings account looks fabulous Smile Smile Smile

Anyone else hitting financial goals? Or at least working on them?

NoWireCoatHangarsEVER's picture

Not me. Sigh. IT's always something. Now my home owner's insurance says I have to get a new hot water heater and of course they say I can't just buy a new one cause it won't fit in the closet. I have to get a home remodel or a $2000 instanteous hot water heater and gas permits and inspections and gas piping work.

and my 11 year old needs braces and I had to fork out $1000 for her class trip to Washington DC for safety patrol.

Bye bye savings.

But I have no debt. Just no savings. As soon as I get it, something happens. But if I want or need something, I have to save up for it. I have a mortgage too.

SteppedOut's picture

Your home owner's insurance company is telling you that? They just rando contacted you about it? How do they even know how old it is? I've never been contacted by my carrier to replace anything. Must be something they do in your state? They require you to have a gas one? You can't get electric? 

Ish. I don't think I'd like if my carrier could decide such things for me. 

Rags's picture

Your insurance company cannot tell you to replace anything in your home. In fact, they can't say shit unless YOU file a claim.  In which case their job is to return you to the financial condition you were in prior to loss due to a covered peril less your decuctible.

This does not pass the smell test at all.  I would be all over the insurance company for that crap and seeking a refund of any remaining premium from that company as you engage another.

They do not dictate how you can and should keep your home. The insurance company does not get to mandate whether or not your roof is replaced when it reaches a certain state of disrepair, nor do they get to decide when and how you should make repairs to any part of your home.Nov 7, 2022

As for braces... I am sorry your child needs them and ... for the bill.

Good luck.

sammigirl's picture

Good job. The key word is "goals" and sticking to them, which is easier said than accomplished. Two years prior to my retirement, my goals were to begin saving more and curb my spending habits.I was able to do both.

Our goals: we would not retire with any mortgage or major payments, would always pay our credit card each month, in full; would save at least 10% of our income and add extra anytime we could. We stayed true to our goals and ourselves; we are retired comfortable with a savings as well. It is difficult, because we don't take expensive vacations, go out to eat at expensive places, and we watch our pennies. We are on a fixed income and expenses go up every year; therefore, our spending habits play a very large part in being able to save.

Keep up the good work. You didn't say your age; but you are on the right track.

Flustered's picture

My DH and I decided when we got married that every penny we did not spend would go into savings. It was very fair since we had the same job and made the same  money . He had a house he wanted to stay in and I wanted renovations so I paid for all the renovations and we put equal money into the house. Every penny we did not spend wound up in savings unless we were spending it on something that needed spending on. When we thought we had too much we would invest it. I'm in my 70s and all of the savings and investments are healthy. We carry no debt /or rather now I carry no debt. 
 

We had one rule:  if you can't pay it off the month you buy it don't spend it. Save for it and Then buy it. It worked very well. (I cannot say that our two daughters his BG my BD Are as frugal/when they see something they want they buy it and then they pay it off Over time no matter how many times we explain to them you're paying interest)

Rags's picture

We have been to that point a couple of times in our marriage and careers.   Due to economic market adjustments we have twice had to do a major recovery and rebuild effort.

The first was after the semiconductor bubble burst in the early 00s.  That took years for us to recover from.  Even with a notable severence package a full year of losing ~65% of marital income adds a ton of debt. We did that on purpose to avoid selling investments.  We had paid for DW's MBA until 2wks before she gradauted when I lost my job to a RIF.  We maxed out school loans while she was still a student and used that low interest money as contingency money until I returned to full time work.  DW worked through that event.

We did not lose our home or vehicles but we did add multiple 5 figures of debt. 

SS was a huge help when he enlisted in the USAF. We were ready willing and able to fully fund his undergraduate education. He let us off the hook for probably $200K in cost when he enlisted and the USAF took on paying for his education. Thank you fellow tax payers.  

As a launch gift we gave him a brand new car.  Nothing high end. A Ford Focus.  He just sold it after 12yrs of reliable service and bought his own vehicle for the first time.

We developed parity and were debt free except for our home until we returned from 8yrs as Expats.  We bought DW a new car at that point, we had sold both of our cars before we moved overseas.  Since car loans are low interest we borrowed to buy her car rather than dumping a boadload of invested cash on her first car in 8yrs.  My job came with a company car..... Then..... Covid and an executive Re-org at my then employer.  We had to buy a second vehicle when my job was re-orged out of existance.  It took 2yrs, 26mos actually, for me to return to full time employment.  After 19mos of be bing back to work we are just about to zero debt, except for our home and now.... two cars...... again.  We will have both cars paid off by EOY 2023.  

This time, no more borrowing.... We drive our cars until the wheels fall off and if we end up back overseas, we will keep the cars in managed storage where they are serviced and driven periodically to ensure functionality upon our return to the US.  

We have never had to take money our of 401Ks, IRAs or investment accounts.  Our retirement investments are intact, other than the current economic disaster influences on those investments driven by our Gov't.  

That... is another story.

Congratulations on your great accomplishment.  Keep up the smart work.

SteppedOut's picture

You got one thing wrong, Rags.

Do not thank fellow tax payers for paying your son's college like it was charity. I firmly believe he EARNED every last cent of the cost. And then some. 

Rags's picture

He is doing great in his career serving our country and our Constitution. He is certainly earning his education benefits.

As for being wrong..... There is a first time for everything.

Wink

Pardon

Elea's picture

I feel VERY fortunate that DH and I both survived a divorce from HC ex's without going into debt. So a big F U to the ex's for trying to destroy us.  We're not rich but we have everything we need and are rebuilding for retirement. I am very grateful.