Tri-Delta4Life
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Sep 22, 2008
- Messages
- 295
Dual high paying careers in low cost of living area
Thanks for this info! I've been looking at Kias and Mazdas, neither of which weve ever owned.Our strategy for cars is to buy a late-model used car with plenty of warranty left (typically a longer-warranty make like Hyundai or Kia) - so for example, if we were shopping right now, we'd be aiming for a 2019 or 2020 with around 30k miles. That way we get the savings on the purchase price (someone else takes the hit of that high early depreciation), plus the peace of mind of a warranty in case something goes wrong early on. Then we drive them for a long time, if not exactly forever - 10 years or more. We've not had to take out a car loan in almost 20 years, and shouldn't need to anytime soon.
Thanks for this info! I've been looking at Kias and Mazdas, neither of which weve ever owned.
Thanks for this info! I've been looking at Kias and Mazdas, neither of which weve ever owned.
You'll never save your way to prosperity. While looking for ways to save money certainly helps, and avoiding dumb money decisions is important, you're better off focusing on how to earn more, rather than how to spend less.
Truer words have never been spoken. Saving money doesn't gain you anything. Your money needs to make you money.
"You have to spend money to make money".
When you (for example) save $250. Take that $250 and invest it into something. Let's say, gardening tools, soil, and seeds. Grow some vegetables and do a roadside stand. By the end of the season you now have $500. You ended up with $250 in "found money" because you invested your original $250. This is how you use your money to make money. I wish more people understood this.
I drove my mom's Mazda for a week (while she was on vacation and mine was in the shop). I enjoyed driving it.I've always wanted a Mazda, just so I could walk around saying "zoom zoom!"
I'm not sure I agree with that.Truer words have never been spoken. Saving money doesn't gain you anything. Your money needs to make you money.
"You have to spend money to make money".
When you (for example) save $250. Take that $250 and invest it into something. Let's say, gardening tools, soil, and seeds. Grow some vegetables and do a roadside stand. By the end of the season you now have $500. You ended up with $250 in "found money" because you invested your original $250. This is how you use your money to make money. I wish more people understood this.
Truer words have never been spoken. Saving money doesn't gain you anything. Your money needs to make you money.
"You have to spend money to make money".
When you (for example) save $250. Take that $250 and invest it into something. Let's say, gardening tools, soil, and seeds. Grow some vegetables and do a roadside stand. By the end of the season you now have $500. You ended up with $250 in "found money" because you invested your original $250. This is how you use your money to make money. I wish more people understood this.
I have a hybrid Volvo and mostly drive locally. I fill my gas tank maybe every month. With gas prices increasing, I'm glad I'm not filling weekly!
I had a Tesla a while ago. Just a word of caution...I loved my Tesla, but it took around 9 months to get parts after I was involved in a fender bender. Repair was very expensive. I can’t remember the exact amount, but it was somewhere around $10,000-15,000. The other driver was at fault so her insurance covered it. Damage to my car was minimal, so the cost and the long wait were a shock to us. I sold it after it was repaired because I was afraid if I had another accident it would probably be even more expensive and just as long/longer wait for parts. It was an awesome car though!We went down to one car about six months ago. DH has worked from home since 2005 and really in the last few years we haven't needed a second car at all, but we're in our early 50s and it felt a little premature to go down to one. But the pandemic really convinced us that we really didn't need two cars. So we ditched both cars we had, a 2012 Mercedes ML350 that we owned and a 2017 Porsche Macan that we leased. We sold the Mercedes for more than we ever thought we'd get due to the crazy used car market. The macan went back at end of lease. And we leased a 2021 Tesla Y. We're about five months into the lease and we are love with having an EV. We're done with gas cars.
Even with a lease, we got $5,000 from our state as a rebate which just about covered the "money down", and then overall, going from two cars down to one, factoring in lease payment, we're saving $7,000 a year from our previous budget. We're spending about $70 a month more on our electric bill to charge it. It's an absolute joy to not need to go to the gas station and just plug the car in each night. And it's crazy fun to drive.
We're a double income/no kids household and have always been good savers and have had no debt at all for over 10 years now. That's really a game changer and it's amazing how quickly funds pile up when you hit that goal. Not having a mortgage payment is life changing in my opinion. My income took a real hit (service business) during the pandemic, but even still, we hit our normal savings goals for 2020 and will in 2021 as well. DH got a nice raise and larger bonus, stock option allocation. We didn't go anywhere or do really anything, so even with an income hit on my side....it was doable. I have been cooking at home this whole time...haven't even done takeout which is really eye-opening....huge savingst. So that savings plus DH salary increase helped us to hit our goals. We save 35% of our gross income...roughly 45% of our net. Those numbers certainly weren't always that high....they've increased over the years.
We all work so hard and it's nice to know you can get to this point, where retirement isn't too far off on the horizon and your financial duckies are all in a row.
I had a Tesla a while ago. Just a word of caution...I loved my Tesla, but it took around 9 months to get parts after I was involved in a fender bender. Repair was very expensive. I can’t remember the exact amount, but it was somewhere around $10,000-15,000. The other driver was at fault so her insurance covered it. Damage to my car was minimal, so the cost and the long wait were a shock to us. I sold it after it was repaired because I was afraid if I had another accident it would probably be even more expensive and just as long/longer wait for parts. It was an awesome car though!
Here's my advice for that situation. I had a six-month experience with the repair process. The other party was at fault in my accident, so they were required by state law to provide me with a "car of comparable utility." Instead, I went a bought a used car and, at the end, told them that they owed me for "loss of use." I proposed a reasonable cash amount, they tried to argue, I informed that that their own calculation would likely cost them 3x my proposal, and then they cut me a check. Just check Turo to see the daily rate to rent a Tesla. I also filed for "diminished value" and received a check for that. Sure, I was without my Tesla for a few months, but I made sure they made me whole; and more than paid for the used car I bought to get me through.I had a Tesla a while ago. Just a word of caution...I loved my Tesla, but it took around 9 months to get parts after I was involved in a fender bender. Repair was very expensive. I can’t remember the exact amount, but it was somewhere around $10,000-15,000. The other driver was at fault so her insurance covered it. Damage to my car was minimal, so the cost and the long wait were a shock to us. I sold it after it was repaired because I was afraid if I had another accident it would probably be even more expensive and just as long/longer wait for parts. It was an awesome car though!
I don't agree with your gardening example. If you look at your original $250 investment, plus the hours you worked to produce the $500 worth of food, your ROI would be quite low, even figuring minimum wage for your time.
And someone who didn't have gardening space (or, like me, hated gardening) could save an equivalent amount of money by finding low cost sources for vegetables--everything from u-pick farms to gleaning to shopping farmer's markets at the end of the day.
A better example might be investing in a chest freezer, so you can better take advantage of good sales on meat.
Or using the $250 to buy a bike, that you then ride to and from work most of the time. You would not only save on gas and car costs, but also on a gym membership.
As someone said above, no one ever "saved" themselves into wealth.