sorcyress: Just a picture of my eye (Me-Eye)
Katarina Whimsy ([personal profile] sorcyress) wrote2011-03-22 09:27 am

In which I am crass and discuss money

It was brought to my attention that I do not especially know how to budget1.

That's mostly okay, in that I've been a dumb privileged white kid for the last bunch of years, and one of the infinite advantages of having parents willing to pay for college is that they pay for room and board too. Budgeting for me has exclusively thus far been "do I have enough money for that event I want to go to" and I can more or less afford that on babysitting.

But I'm going to join the real world somewhere in the next 3-6 months, and not only do I not have a great grasp on how much the world is going to cost, I don't think I have a particularly good grasp on what I'm going to be spending that money on. A friend mentioned that he was paying about a thousand a month, for everything except rent and utilities, and I certainly *think* I can keep my expenses under that number2, but I don't know if I'm managing to account for everything I'll need to spend money on.

So that's what I'm really asking for: What things am I going to be spending money on that I don't necessarily realize I'll spend money on?

Sitting down and thinking about it, I know there's:

*Rent and utilities
*Groceries/eating out (which is a huge "I have no idea" since I've been living off my meal plan for three and a half years --I imagine I should be able to keep myself fed grocery-wise for a hundred a week, I think that's about what I've spent on the (very few) times when I've had to fend for myself.)
*Dance, which is non-negotiable. If I can afford it in September, I should _absolutely_ get a season pass for SCD, which changes the shape of how much dance costs per month.

(as an aside, that's one of the things I'm finding complicated about trying to write a budget for myself, in that "monthly expenses" is easier than dividing "expenses per semester" by three, or trying to work out how much a year-pass would cost and when I would need that money and such.)

*Transit, which I imagine is hugely variable. If I only ever took the T places, it would be a straight 60/month, but I also have a bike to repair and a future zipcar membership, and taxis and stuff. But on the flip side, if the bike is in good shape, and the weather is nice, I can spend maybe like fifteen dollars on the T and spend the rest of my necessary transit time riding my bike.
*Laundry, which becomes more important as I have to wear more professional clothing, since I don't have enough of said clothing, and therefore have to do laundry more often.
*Also, buying more clothing of the professional sort. I mean, I rock the thrift-store chic so hard, so I'd like to hope I wouldn't be spending too terribly much on this, but it's still a thing.
*Meds
*Other hospitaly/medical things, knock on wood. I don't think this counts as a monthly budget thing, so much as a "I should try to set aside a couple hundred(thousand?) dollars as soon as possible to be my "oh shit oh shit I just broke my leg" fund3.

And...what else? The last time I did anything like this it was in my seventh grade home ec class, where I think I was "renting" an apartment for 50 dollars a month, so it's not like I was exactly being taught accurate numbers for the real world so much as "here's how to balance your monies!"

The real world is hard, whine whine. But dammit, if I'm going to be an adult4, I might as well do it right, and not have to rely on other adults (read: my parents) for taking care of me.

Just rely on them for advice.

~Sor
MOOP!

1: I have gotten as far as "If there is money in my account I can buy things, if there is not, I can't" and seem to do okay with that, but, uh, yeah.

2: More importantly, doing some googling and finding out how much I will make as a teacher implies that (assuming I get a job), I should be making at least 24k a year, which gives me enough for rent/utilities and "everything else". Assuming that my combined rent+utilities is in the thousand dollars or less range, which I think is an okay guess considering the places I've been looking at with Ria and Lauren and Mason.

3: Although, assuming I broke my leg, I could just transfer my dance fund to medical. Gods forbid.

4: I think I've decided that I don't want to be an adult because adults are ridiculously dramatic, often uncommunicative, and generally immature. I'd like to be mature instead. It seems much easier.


Postscript: And yes, I am writing actual numbers for these in another file, in a "trying to inflate everything so I wind up with too much money rather than too little" sort of way. But I figured that would be too gauche even for me to post.

And not in the file yet, because I don't know what the shape of my life will be like yet, is the concept of long-distance travel in order to spend time with faraway friends and SOs. Which could be eighty dollars a month for train tickets, or 500plus for a cross-country plane ride. Plane tickets are definitely my most expensive regular expense.

Also not in the file is the general thought of "here are things I want" and taking steps to buy those things. One of the reasons I want to have some discretionary income is so that I can start scouting sales for expensive things I want/need, so that when they show up for a decent price, I can get them without stressing that I've just wrecked my budget for the month. See also, the fact that I think I want 3 TB of external storage --one for joba, one for backup, and one for media.

a: If everything stayed the same, I don't think I would _ever_ fill a TB of stuff just of assignments and resources and grades and worksheets and lessons and everything teaching will require. But things keep taking up more and more space, and inevitably I'll be teaching Skype lessons with an uberboard or something, and each lesson will be a gig and a half or something.
cos: (Default)

[personal profile] cos 2011-03-22 01:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Saving, which you may neglect to do if you don't plan on it.

1. Short term savings, where you accumulate money over the course 6 months or 2 years or something like that, for a specific purpose like a camera or your next computer or a trip somewhere.

2. Long term savings, to an IRA, for the distant future (or maybe a house). A little bit goes a long way when you start early.

[identity profile] whimmydiddle.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 01:53 pm (UTC)(link)
There will be a big initial cost for basic furnishings & supplies fie wherever you live--furniture, linens towels, kitchen equipment, toilet paper.
Toiletries.
Cleaning supplies.
Planning on a pet? Food, vet, bedding, treats, toys, grooming supplies.
Get health insurance. You can continue in your parents' plan fir a few more years thanks to Obamacare.
Bicycle maintenance.
Utilities, cable, phone.
Seasonal stuff--snow shovel.
Eyeglasses

All of that is just off the top of my head having not read you post thoroughly-- I'm at work on my iPhone.

[identity profile] whimmydiddle.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 02:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Absolutely. If you start now, even a tiny bit, and never touch it, you have many years ahead of you where compounded interest will effortlessly give you a much more secure retirement. You will be in my position before you know it, and wishing you'd saved more. Put it in a piddly little savings account at first, then when you get enough, use it to open a higher yielding vehicle like maybe an S&P index fund. Don't be scared off by the apparent complexity of financial stuff, just find a halfway decent place, put it there, and add to it regularly. If if the place you pick is not "the best" choice possible, you will still be way ahead of the game. This is something Farr too little understood or appreciated by the young. Do yourself a favor.

[identity profile] myarbor.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 02:11 pm (UTC)(link)
That was all in a foreign language, right? Still is for me, at 48. Still, just trust her and do what she says. She's right.

tangentially

[identity profile] woozle.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 02:15 pm (UTC)(link)
I think people should talk about money more. With real numbers. It seems to me that the social rule against talking about money mainly benefits people who have... a very high X, where Income = X*(value delivered).

There are probably peopleA out there who couldn't deal with anyoneB having even slightly more than theyA do, even if those other peopleB work harder and/or have more obligations to meet, but I think those peopleA are actually not all that common and you probably wouldn't want to be having a conversation with themA anyway.

As for the actual topic of your post: a lot hinges on how much you actually have to spend on rent. I've been told that you shouldn't spend more than about 30% of your budget on rent. The obvious corollary is that whatever your rent is, you should expect to need about 3 times that much income overall in order to meet your other expenses. I'm not sure how reliably true this is.

Oh, and for the historical record: wow, what year was that curriculum written? I first started renting in 1985, and the least I ever paid was $200/month for a seedy semi-legal apartment with a shared bathroom (complete with hoarder to keep it free of toiletries at all times).
jazzfish: "Do you know the women's movement has no sense of humor?" "No, but hum a few bars and I'll fake it!" (the radical notion that women are people)

[personal profile] jazzfish 2011-03-22 02:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Your fn1 is the important part, really.

Put money into savings if at all possible. This is partly for "the miracle of compound interest," and more to get yourself into the habit of having the savings account be the one where money goes /into/ and not /out of/. Even $25-50 a month helps. And as noted, if you don't plan for it, you're likely to not do it.

If you can automate that, so much the better. Work lets me split my direct deposit among several accounts, so my checking account never even sees the money for savings. If that's not an option then maybe set up automatic recurring transfers with your bank from checking to savings.

(Ideally you want to have 3-6 months worth of expenses in a savings account where you can get at it quickly if necessary.)

Okay, savings rant over. Looks to me like you've covered most everything else. Don't forget to account for insurance and glasses in the 'other medical' category, and cell phone under 'utilities.'

Budgets suck. Saying "I will spend this much" is a good way for me to feel guilty when I spend more than that. What worked for me was tracking expenses and saying "okay, I usually spend about this much on this thing, which means I have this much left over for that other thing." Because I'm a geek and in front of a computer all day I built a spreadsheet, and I've entered every single thing I spent money on into it for the last five years, categorized and all that. (This has the added effect of keeping me from buying snacks from the machine because I don't want to have to enter "0.80: chips at work.")

It looks like my 'household expenses' (mostly groceries but also cleaning supplies and trips to the thrift store for clothing etc) came in at under $200/month while I was living by myself in (not-cheap) northern Virginia. As always, YMMV.

Lots of irregular expenses can be guesstimated: 'about how many times will i use the T in a week: two? three? how much does that cost? multiply by four' kind of thing.

Looking at your math... is your fn2 taking into account that you'll be paying 20-25% of that 24k/year in taxes?

As [livejournal.com profile] whimmydiddle says, setting up an apartment has a large initial expense. That's a place where (generalising broadly) it's probably okay to ask for parental/etc help.

Also, yay you for a) thinking and b) seeking advice about money.

[identity profile] paradoox.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 02:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Sorry I haven't read all the posts, but in terms of savings conventional wisdom says you should first create a 3-6 month emergency fund (to cover 3-6 months of living expenses if you are laid off or sick or have a large uncovered medical bill). It should be relatively liquid. I'd recommend something like Ing or CapitalOne. Maybe one of the TRPrice money market funds. YOU DON'T WANT THIS IN A CD and will probably get better rates at one of the above than a local bank. I'd go with whichever is giving the best rate. They all will automatically take money out of a checking account on a monthly basis. You really want to shoot for at least $100 per month into this if you can. $200 per month would be better.

Once you have that I think conventional wisdom says to split the savings 50-50 between a 401k / 403b (whatever the non-profit equiv of a 401k is) and something more liquid but not as liquid as the 3-6 month safety net. I'd recommend one of the Vanguard Index Funds or Vanguard Wellington. Once again they will automatically take money out of a checking account on a monthly basis. I'd recommend shooting for at least $100 a month into each. 3% to start is also a magic number into the 401k as that is what a lot of employers will match.

Once you have that it is said that it is a good idea to take 1/2 of every raise and use that to increase the amount you are saving until you get to the max on your 401k / 403b and an equivalent into more liquid savings.

I hope this helps.

As an aside, a plan similar to the above meant that when I was laid off and the unemployment and severance ended after a year (yeah, I know I was lucky), we were able to take the mid term savings (Vanguard) and use it to pay off the mortgage. Of course we had been saving for like 15 years and paying the mortgage for like 15 years.

[identity profile] kdsorceress.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 03:02 pm (UTC)(link)
That's a really really good point to _plan_ to do savings. You're right, I may very well forget to do them otherwise.

~Sor

[identity profile] kdsorceress.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 03:15 pm (UTC)(link)
The thing I'm currently making is less a budget per se, and more a "well, based on past experience, how much do I spend per month", with occasional instances of ridiculous (I do not go to a ball every week) to give me a little bit of extra money as padding.

The idea of making that sort of elaborate spreadsheet is appealing. I should look into playing with something similar sometime. And yes, I recognize the idea of using laziness to prevent frivolous purchases, though in all honesty, every week or two I'd probably be putting an item in my spreadsheet that was just "20$ cash from the ATM to spend on an pan and toy dinosaurs"

Household expenses is one I didn't think of, especially in terms of cleaning supplies and things like toiletries and paper products and stuff. Some of that will have to involve roomie negotiation, and it occurs to me that there will probably be other things in the "group expenses" pile, like getting a house Netflix account or whatever

I completely forgot about taxes when I wrote fn2. I suppose it would be more accurate to say "I need to be making at least 24k/year post-taxes". Luckily the numbers for being a first year teacher (again, assuming I actually get a job doing so) look to be in the 37-45k range, depending on which part of Boston/Cambridge/Brookline/Watertown/etc I get a job in. So I should be okay, once I have a job.

Yeah, I have not been thinking about the apartment thing. Part of it is that mum has said I can reclaim my childhood furniture if I want, though that leads to moving hassles. I think I plan on buying as good a bed as I can afford (because the Sims influences my life) and Craigslisting like crazy until I get a dresser and desk/4x8 with filing cabinets. Oh, and _shelves_. Shelves are crucial to my continued happiness, even if I have to make them out of cinderblock and scrap wood.

(I also need to talk to ThirdBase and see if she still has spare kitchen supplies, and if so, see if I can steal them.)

I do my best to ask for advice when dealing with stuff I don't have a great handle on. I know damn well that I don't have a great handle on money --I think I'm clever enough and organized enough not to find myself in debt, or having to make stupid sacrifices (like, do I get clean clothes or food this week) but I grew up in a relatively well-off household, and I know my brain carries over impulse patterns from shopping with mom that I can't afford to regularly use when shopping on my own.

(This is not to say my mother is bad with money, she's absolutely not. But we could afford to indulge in eye-level impulse buys (especially at the supermarket), and so that's sometimes a thing I am used to.)

~Sor

[identity profile] ms-hecubus.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 03:19 pm (UTC)(link)
In my opinion $100 a week is a huge amount to allocate for food for one person. I feed our entire family, buy diapers, toiletries and cleaning supplies on $100 a week. Plus, when you're starting out spending that amount might not be realistic. If you have roommates to offset other costs you might be able to spend more, but I was using about $40 a week when I was single.

[identity profile] macaroniandtuna.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 03:20 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm happy to share my whole personal financial management system with you via email if you like, just ask. Highlights for now though.

- Junior and senior year, when I was renting an apartment off campus, rent+utilities (electricity, TV, and internet only, water and heat were included in the rent)+groceries+renters insurance ran me I'd estimate at about $900 per month, maybe $1000.
- You may or may not want to set up automatic bill pay for recurring expenses. I don't do that myself; having to pay bills manually forces me to keep track of what I'm spending, and keeps reminding me that whatever a given bill is is a part of my budget. A lot of people find it useful though.
- "If there is money in my account I can buy things, if there is not, I can't" - That's better than a lot of people do, sadly. Be careful with credit.
- Speaking of credit, if you don't have one, get a (one is enough) credit card and use it for whatever you normally spend money on. Having a (good) credit history is important.
- Travel is indeed expensive. Even with gas at $3.50/gal I'd bet driving is cheapest, whatever the distance, although it's almost as slow as taking a train (can be) and you have to concentrate on driving, instead of doing whatever like you can on a plane or train or (god forbid) bus. (This from someone who has no problem sleeping at a rest stop before pressing on - you may want a hotel room instead, which obviously changes the price.) More drivers traveling with you in the same car decreases your share of the cost and increases the speed at which you can travel, since you don't necessarily need to stop altogether to rest, just switch drivers.
- Bikes are cheap and easy to fix, enough that I'd call that a non-expense in a monthly budget. Get a couple spare tubes, some chain oil, and a decent set of bike-repair tools and you're good.
- Hard drives are cheap. I saw a good-quality 2TB single bare drive on Newegg for I think $80 the other day. Call it $110 when you add a good case for it. Tech and gadgets might be something you want to budget some amount of savings for, actually. Personally I build a new computer every three or four years, which seems to be the point at which tech and prices have progressed enough to make a serious hardware upgrade worth it to me.
- I've got about $1000 put away as an emergency fund, like your "oh shit I just broke my leg" fund. The key, I think, is to put it in its own account that isn't super-easy to access like the rest of your money (I figure if it takes a day or less to transfer to a usable account, it's not hard enough to access), and don't touch it unless absolutely necessary.
- Basically, spend as little as you can get away with while not depriving yourself too much, and save as much as you can stand to not use.

I don't think it's crass. More people should talk about money more often. It might encourage some self-reflection and learning or something. Self-awareness is key.

Re: tangentially

[identity profile] kdsorceress.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 03:22 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't know about that 30% budget thing. I hope that's not true, since I think I'll be spending more than that (though hopefully not a lot more once I'm settled). Part of that is Boston's an _expensive_ city to live in. I have friends in Atlanta who used to pay for their whole two BR apartment what I would pay for the price of quarter apartment up here.

The corollary almost certainly isn't true. Discounting the initial expense push (furniture, household items, deposit, etc), I think I'm looking at about 1.5 times rent+utilities to live in the manner I would currently (ie, as a young twenty-something) like.

I have no idea when the curriculum was written. In my defense, I think the apartment I had chosen might have been "parent's basement", but I still think that's low for rent (I believe my mom was paying her dad 30% of her salary when she was doing that). If it helps, I think I wound up drawing the card that gave me like...a 6k yearly salary? Maybe 14k? I know the highest salary in the class was only like 25 or 40k (For being a "politician"

Yeah, it was an awful game.

~Sor

[identity profile] kdsorceress.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 03:29 pm (UTC)(link)
That's entirely plausible. I've almost never had a point where I was responsible for feeding myself and had access to buying groceries --I've either been at home, nomading it (at which point I don't generally have the space to store anything more than a couple things, so I eat a lot of quick food or eat out.), or been on the meal plan.

Roommates and I haven't even begun to discuss shared food versus personal food, and whether or not we'll have regular communal meals or how that'll work. I don't know, maybe I should write out a week's worth of groceries and spend an hour in the grocery store finding out how much that costs me.

You're also _really_ good at using coupons and sales, and otherwise getting a bargain for food and stuff. I'd like to be better, but a little is getting into the habit, and I just haven't gotten there yet.

~Sor

[identity profile] kdsorceress.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 03:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Toiletries and cleaning supplies are indeed crucial, and I forgot about them.

I'm not planning on a pet for a long while, I don't think. Certainly not at this stage (though at least two of my three future-roomies want pets (bunnies and turtles) so I'm going to be looking for a pet-okay apartment)

Health insurance is some sort of mandatory for being a MA resident. I will happily stay on my parents as long as possible, or until I decide that no dammit I really *do* want my tattoo already1, and then I'll research that.

I'm not really sure how much bike maintenance will cost, partly because I'm terrible and don't really do anything to regularly maintain my bike. Advice here would be awesome, if you have any.

Phone is another thing I forgot, but I think I lump it with "utilities".

Snow shovels and other household stuff like that is totally part of the toiletries/cleaning bit I forgot all about.

Glasses...I don't even begin to know. It's like a four hundred dollar charge every three or four years? Will certainly attempt to get at least one more pair while still on the 'rents insurance (though if I can, it'd be decent to pay for it)

~Sor

[identity profile] kdsorceress.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 03:36 pm (UTC)(link)
I can do this! I can do this as best as humanly possible!

...can I send you an e-mail sometime if I start to do this and get really lost and confused?

~Sor

[identity profile] ms-hecubus.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 03:46 pm (UTC)(link)
Planning your meals around sales helps a lot, even if you don't use coupons. I didn't when I was single and often resorted to cheap frozen dinners. You save more cooking at home, of course, but I was often out and eating on the run so Banquet dinners it was.

You guys should talk about getting a membership to Costco or Sams. You can put two people on a Costco membership so you'd have to decide who would do the shopping. It will save you a bunch on paper products. With multiple adults in the household buying in bulk makes sense.

[identity profile] kdsorceress.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 03:49 pm (UTC)(link)
I agree that automatic billing would probably be less good for me. Also, the whole shared apartment thing might make it weird, in that I don't send a hundred dollar check to the electric company each month, I just give a thirty dollar check to Ria or something.

I do need to get a credit card, yes. Recommendation for before/after I get out of college? Any thoughts on getting ricockulous airline miles credit cards (my gut feeling is that they are all scams) or other rewardy things? Or is this totally just an "ask mom" situation.

Over small (within Boston) distances, the T is cheaper than driving. Subway is (usually) faster, bus is (usually) slower, but I think the times are close to comparable. Depending on time of day and where I'm going to, bike is often faster than T, and can be faster than cars.

Larger distances result in the pros/cons analysis of owning a car. For at least the next three or four years, my preference is to not, if that's at all possible. If I stay in Boston, I think it might be --swap gas money for rides when I need to get out of town, use ZipCar when I need to borrow a pick-up, and commute to work via bike or T. I'm not sure how much monthly car insurance is, but if it's more than a few hundred dollars, I'm pretty sure it's more expensive than public transit and networking.

I don't want to totally remove the idea of my bike from monthly expenses, at least partly so maybe I can save some money and not be totally doomed when something breaks (like happened recently). But right that it's more of an initial expenditure (tools, tyres, etc) than a reoccurring thing.

The idea of saving up for a new computer every half-decade or so actually sounds really reasonable. I do know I want to get something more modern than Vera sometime in the next year, though I'm torn between going for a desktop and continuing to use Ver' as my out-and-about computer, or a netbook, and leaving her at home most of the time. I know TB are getting cheap --really, it's just where I need to have the spare 50 bucks so that when I see the sale, I can jump on it without worrying.

A thousand sounds like a good emergency fund. I like your concept of making it harder to access, though I worry about getting tied up in something where I have to pay immediately and can't access it. I don't know how plausible that situation is though.

Spend as little as possible and save as much as I can sounds like a pretty damn good plan. I'll see how well I can do that.

And yeah, I'd love the full e-mail, if you want to write it. I always like receiving such things from people!

~Sor

[identity profile] kdsorceress.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 03:50 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh man, that would be a boss idea, and I'm sad I forgot it!

I think my next post is going to have to be "what do we need to know for living in an apartment".

~Sor
austein: (Default)

[personal profile] austein 2011-03-22 04:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Renter's insurance?
Is Internet included in the utilities calculation?

[identity profile] whimmydiddle.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 04:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, but I don't know if I would be as knowledgeable/appropriate to ask as your Mom and Dad. The Web has great resources too. The last time I looked, The Motley Fool was a great resource for peons like us.

[identity profile] macaroniandtuna.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 04:33 pm (UTC)(link)
If it's a fairly consistent recurring monthly expense, rotating a bill between people works well. Or, set up a joint bank account for all of you, and pay from that.

I've had a Chase Freedom card since I turned 18, and it pretty consistently gets rated as a good non-airmiles card. I've never had any problems, and 1% back on everything plus quarterly bonus promos is pretty good I think. It's an old post, but this (http://www.getrichslowly.org/blog/2008/09/09/credit-card-basics-how-to-choose-a-credit-card/comment-page-2/) has good card-choosing ideas. (In fact I recommend GRS in general, it's the only personal finance blog I follow.) The trick to rewards cards is that you have to pay them off completely every month; interest charges negate any sort of rewards benefits you accrue. You should also find one you like and get it before you graduate, to see if they have any sort of promotion for college students, which are usually pretty good.

By travel I meant long-distance, but yeah. Perhaps find some sort of ride-sharing deal where you drive with somebody else and pay your share, instead of being the car provider. My car insurance (which I understand to be very cheap for a 5-year-old car with an under-25 male driver) is a little over $100 a month. I'd think yours would be somewhat similar, depending on the car obviously, but I don't know. Part of it is that I'm on my family's insurance, which I think is a big benefit, single-person insurance is more expensive.

Basically cars are expensive. It's the sort of thing where a thorough cost-benefit analysis vs. public transport and mooching would be well worth it.

Desktop vs. laptop is mostly a question of use, I think, because you pay a lot (in both money and performance) for portability. The way I use a computer, and the way your mom uses her computer, stationary 95%+ of the time and only occasionally needing portability, for me means desktop plus an old but still functional laptop (plus my iPod, actually). Performance-wise, you use a lot of programs simultaneously, which I think means you could make good use of a desktop, especially with multiple physical screens.

I agree with whoever above said don't put your emergency fund in a CD; that's too difficult to access. Mine is in a plain ING Direct savings account, although it sounds like they're getting sold off soon so I might have to change that recommendation. Having a credit card is part of the emergency system; use credit (or general savings with a debit card) for an immediate emergency, and transfer from the emergency fund to pay it off ASAP. (I use my credit card for nearly everything anyway, so it wouldn't require any thought if I ran into any emergency.)

I'll get that email to you sometime this week. My system and philosophy and whatnot will require some untangling to turn into words.
ext_22961: (Default)

[identity profile] jere7my.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 04:37 pm (UTC)(link)
K and I spend around $120 a week on food for the house, toiletries, and cleaning supplies, and we have fairly expensive tastes (i.e., nice cheeses, non-generics, green cleaning supplies, etc.). On the other hand, she is a Mennonite and I am a Quaker, so we probably are unusually frugal. We usually eat out once a week, for $20-$30.

Our utilities are about $300/month + heat, which fluctuates wildly (between ~$50 and ~$300). Water is covered by rent. Besides heat, utilities include cell phones, fancy internet + cable package, and electricity; you can certainly do it cheaper. Our house is technically a 4BR, I think, and rent is ~$1900 (but we're a mile from the nearest T stop). Laundry works out to about $10/month.

When biking, I spend about $20/month on MBTA. When not, I get the $59 T pass. K drives to work in the winter, and drives to dance and grocery shopping; I'm not sure how much she spends on gas.

Beyond that, K and I live very frugally. In a typical week, I budget about twenty bucks for "mad money" — coffee and entertainment — though sometimes we fly to other countries or see a $50 concert or go out to dinner at a fancy place. I very rarely buy new clothes, but a professional clothing budget is something good to calculate (though a gift card for clothes might also be a good birthday request for relatives). Renters' insurance is a good thing to have, especially since it covers your bike even when it's not in your house.
marcmagus: Me playing cribbage in regency attire (Default)

Re: tangentially

[personal profile] marcmagus 2011-03-22 04:45 pm (UTC)(link)
I was told 25%. It's definitely true, though my housemates were certainly unable to meet that target at the salary range available to them. For reference, our combined rent was somewhere between $2100-2250, I forget exactly (4B/1Ba for those playing along at home)

If you're over 30%, especially in your likely salary range, it gets difficult quickly to find money to save, or to ever do anything fun (which is a necessity).

[identity profile] mogwit.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 05:04 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't know your eye situation, but if your eyes aren't too tricky, http://www.zennioptical.com/ is kind of magical.

[identity profile] shield-toad111.livejournal.com 2011-03-22 05:23 pm (UTC)(link)
My car insurance is ~$450 q6months, so insurance isn't that expensive. I would say that car maintenance is much more expensive than car insurance, and I have had to drop about $1000 on it when things go wrong. (Ah, upkeep on an old car...)

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