Mickey'snewestfan
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2005
- Messages
- 4,719
How do you decide whether to "cashflow" something or put it in a sinking fund?
Right now the only debt I have is a car note, with about $5,000 to pay it off. I've paid off all my credit cards and other debts. However, my bank account is way less than I want it to be, so I thought I'd try out his program as a way to build up my savings.
If I make a budget that only consists of things I pay every month (rent, food, electricity, gym membership), I have about $1600 a month left. However, almost every month there's something else I need to pay. Sometimes it's small (a $70 soccer registration) and sometimes it's huge ($1200 for camp for most of the summer), and sometimes it's multiple things, but it's pretty much always under the $1600 mark. Or it's Christmas, or something like that.
So, I figure I could do one of two things. I could set up "sinking funds" and put aside 1/12 (or 1/6 if it's car insurance that I pay twice a year) of the cost every month, resulting in relatively consistent snowball payments month to month at about $1,000, or I could simply take it from the snowball during the month when I need it, and send of vastly different amounts averaging about $1,000.
I think the former is the "Dave Ramsey way" but the latter seems much more logical to me, and certainly less of a hassle.
I'm curious what others do, and why.
So, I figure I could do two things. I could divide the cost of the things
Right now the only debt I have is a car note, with about $5,000 to pay it off. I've paid off all my credit cards and other debts. However, my bank account is way less than I want it to be, so I thought I'd try out his program as a way to build up my savings.
If I make a budget that only consists of things I pay every month (rent, food, electricity, gym membership), I have about $1600 a month left. However, almost every month there's something else I need to pay. Sometimes it's small (a $70 soccer registration) and sometimes it's huge ($1200 for camp for most of the summer), and sometimes it's multiple things, but it's pretty much always under the $1600 mark. Or it's Christmas, or something like that.
So, I figure I could do one of two things. I could set up "sinking funds" and put aside 1/12 (or 1/6 if it's car insurance that I pay twice a year) of the cost every month, resulting in relatively consistent snowball payments month to month at about $1,000, or I could simply take it from the snowball during the month when I need it, and send of vastly different amounts averaging about $1,000.
I think the former is the "Dave Ramsey way" but the latter seems much more logical to me, and certainly less of a hassle.
I'm curious what others do, and why.
So, I figure I could do two things. I could divide the cost of the things