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#42 |
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#43 |
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I've been spending more than I am earning for the past 3 years. Damn, I need a real job. Not much chance of that for the next 4 years though. I |
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#44 |
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#45 |
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#47 |
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I make sure that I have at least 1K USD in my checking account at all times. Anything above that either goes into the market or paying off large purchases such as my last three debaucherous months of:
Other notable expenses are:
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#48 |
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#49 |
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I have divided some non-per-month bills to match with per-month.
Rent 220 € Electricity 18 € (36 € per 2 months) ADSL (Internet) 30 € Water 20 € (240 € per year) Basic home insurance ~7 € (~ 80 € per year) Food 150 € Other 50 € The social insurance institution? (KELA) pays about 170 € from my rent. Social welfare office pays my electricity, water, rest of the rent, basic home insurance and then gives 417 € per month to cover other expenses like food and stuff. I can save about 150 euros per month while being unemployed. |
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#50 |
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To the OP, you should be paying off debt rather than saving. Once you have a little buffer for emergencies (say a month's expenses), your primary objective should be debt capital repayment.
As the house is paid for, me and the missus put £1,000 each month into our joint account to cover the following monthly costs: Council tax £200 Gas £55 Electricity £35 Water £60 Cable (phone, internet and TV) £80 Petrol £200 Food £400 Life insurance £20 The account is "swept" down to a balance of £500 a few days before we pay in, meaning the excess is automatically transferred to a savings account, roughly £1,000 pcm. That money is then used to pay annually recurring costs: Car insurance: £2,500 Car maintenance: £2,000 House insurance: £500 TV licence: £145 Plus holidays, stuff for the house and then weekends away for weddings etc is already "pre-paid". Most of our spending is done on my AmEx and I usually settle this outside of the house stuff unless she's been on a shopping spree. |
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#51 |
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To the OP, you should be paying off debt rather than saving. Once you have a little buffer for emergencies (say a month's expenses), your primary objective should be debt capital repayment. I used to know a bloke who was saving up to pay off a debt, I always said to him, dude, just pay the debt off first because you'll get stung by the interest, basically he would pay the minimum allowed,yet transfer a couple of hundred quid into his saving to save up and pay the loan off in one big lump. ![]() |
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#52 |
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very good system you have there old bean, very similar to me. |
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#53 |
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Even if you have debt you should save as well. If you don't and an unexpected bill / purchase comes up then you're in even more debt. ![]() unless you mean to impulsively decide to go to Germany to look at the wunderland giant train set imporium |
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#54 |
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Even if you have debt you should save as well. If you don't and an unexpected bill / purchase comes up then you're in even more debt. 1) pay off debt and service "surprise" with more debt 2) pay off less debt, save and service "surprise" with savings You are invariably worse off in situation 2 due to relative interest rates. |
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#55 |
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It's a commonly held belief, but there are two options: |
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#56 |
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So say I'm paying off a loan at £400 a month and saving nothing but my car engine blows up and I need to spend £500 on it I should then get a credit card to pay this bill? I appreciate that there might be a small interest advantage in this, but I'd rather save £100 a month and pay off £300 a month to the car loan. I don't really have much experience of having large debts tbh. what I would do in this situation is, pay as much off of my credit card as possible whilst none of these "unforseens" are lurking and then if needed make a payment with the credit card whilst the same month making sure I keep up a payment whilst ensuring I slap a larger payment into the credit card the following month. |
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#57 |
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So say I'm paying off a loan at £400 a month and saving nothing but my car engine blows up and I need to spend £500 on it I should then get a credit card to pay this bill? I appreciate that there might be a small interest advantage in this, but I'd rather save £100 a month and pay off £300 a month to the car loan. I don't really have much experience of having large debts tbh. |
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#58 |
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The best method to paying off debt is in consolidate to a single source (multi-sourced debt is one of the biggest culprits to bankruptcy) and to pay in bulk payments, as frequently as possible. Instead of 100 to Capital One, 125 to HSBC, 75 to Best Buy and 100 to Tim's Rhinoplasty; consolidate it to 400 to a single source. You will probably get a lower cumulative interest rate as well.
Also, match up the frequency of your payments with the frequency of your income. If you get paid twice a month, split your monthly payments in half with each paycheck. That way you only allow interest to compound for half of the time, while still paying the same amount. This method can shave a surprising amount of interest off of the total. Using QD's scenario, technically Option 2 is worse financially, but there are things in life that can not be bought on credit (drugs, whores, down payments). Throughout my early career, I have been paying off college credit card debt whilst still saving. Now that I am nearly done with the debt |
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#59 |
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well, I don't know how you can have an "unexpected" bill/purchase tbfh One should always have at least a 1000€ or something like it on the bank in case something urgent needs more than 50€. |
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#60 |
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One should always have at least a 1000€ or something like it on the bank in case something urgent needs more than 50€. I try to keep 1 monthy salary for emergencies and another one for big ticket items, despite having a significant free cashflow each month. |
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