How much do you spend a month? Not everyone can answer this
question, especially when the spouse is paying for the bill. But this is a very important piece of information.
The couple should sit down and share the knowledge. It is better for the family
finance planning.
When I’m looking at a very wanted item, I’ll ask myself 2
questions. Do I need it? Can I afford it? To answer the 2nd
question, I need to know how much I have and how much I can spend.
“Affordable” does not mean keep swiping the credit card
until you can’t catch up with the interest anymore.
My cousin is working in a factory, and taking home 35K a
year after tax. When I saw him buying expensive gifts for the children, such as
the new ipad with ipad pensile, not just one, but one set per child, and each
of them also has new iphone, every 2 years! I guarantee you he has no savings
for the future. Even they live in an old small house, the monthly expense is not
that low at all.
Have you heard “one paycheck away from homeless”? Yeah, if
he lost the job, he won’t be able to keep the house for too long. Live paycheck
to paycheck has too much risk. I will feel so stressful if I’m waiting for the
next paycheck to pay for the bill. But this can be managed and avoid if you don’t
spend it all.
Let’s do a math together to figure out the monthly expense.
Housing, Utility, Food, Transportation, Insurance, and the
rest.
Housing cost varies so much depending on location, renting,
ownership, or even become zero cost if you still live with the parents.
If you own a house, there are 3 main buckets. Mortgage payment,
property tax and maintenance.
If you are renting, I guarantee you the cost is more than
owning the house, because the owner wants you to cover mortgage payment,
property tax and maintenance, of course, also the owner’s profit.
So I’ll recommend all the young people to save a lot in the
beginning of your career, and buy a house as soon as possible. Then you can
rent the spare room to your friend who never saves. Have that friend pay for
your mortgage.
In that mortgage payment, the principle is like the investment
towards your house, when you sell the house one day, you maybe get it back. But
the interest is pure expense, the bank will take as much as they can. The first
five years of the mortgage payment, more than half is interest. I always recommend people to buy the house
they can afford and pay it off as soon as possible, especially when the rate is
more than 3.75%. We can discuss this in more detail later.
Anyway, my house is all paid off, due to my frugal life
style. So I only need to cover the property tax, which is $4000 a year, and
spare another $2000 as maintenance fund. That is $500 a month.
Now let’s talk about utility.
Unless you live off the grid, you have to pay utility. If you
have city water, electricity, gas, even you don’t use any, you still need to
pay for the basic. How do I know this? I had the previous house, locked it up
for a month, turned off everything because we were not living in there anymore.
And it was spring time, so heater and AC were both off. My water bill was still
$40, electricity was around $30, and gas was also around $30. That was $100 out
of the door and I did not even use any of them. Is it ridiculous? But this is
how everything was set up. You have to pay for the basic plus what you used.
My monthly utility bill is around $200. In the winter time,
I pay more for the gas, less for the electricity; in the summer time, less for
gas, more for the electricity.
I’ll add internet and TV cable in this catalog as well. Not too
many people can live without internet anymore.
TV is totally a scam. Does not matter what company you
choose, the first year is pretty fair price, then it doubles or triples for the
next year. It forces you to switch the provider. Over the years, we tried so
many providers, and I was tired of it. Other than tons of advertisement on the
TV, I did not see too many good shows. So we decided to try couple months
without TV, but only internet. That totally changed our life. We use Netflix, YouTube,
HBO, Amazon, and Hulu. I’m not missing my TV cable at all. We give the account
password to siblings as Christmas gift, and the big family share lots of these
accounts. Netflix is paid by us, HBO is paid by the brother, and Hulu is paid
by another brother. It works out perfectly.
This cut our cable bill from $200 to $80.
I just transferred my cellphone service from Verizon to
Spectrum mobile. That cuts our bill from $60 to $28 for 2 phones. Yeah, just
found this deal in last month, when spectrum allowed you to bring your own
device.
Transportation is another big expense. We own 3 cars, it’s
all paid off, but the expense is still there. We will pay it in the future, so
better save it now. Let’s say it cost $30K for a car that can drive 10 years. If
you have the skill to make a $3000 car to run 10 years, that is good for you. Unfortunately
I don’t. So I budget $60K for 2 cars every 10 years. That is $6000 a year, and
$500 per month. Plus another $200 monthly for gas.
Insurance is simple, every year, I pay $1000 for the house,
and another $1000 for the cars.
Food is another catalog that varies so much either cooking
yourselves or dining out. With my family, we spent about 200 in grocery and 400
dining out every month.
All of the items above add together is about $2300 a month. This is just the basic living expense though,
not counting any fancy things.
If I use $2300 now, I’d better spare another $2300 to the
retirement account to make sure I can maintain the same life style when I retire,
whatever left is what I can play with.