elaine amj
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2012
- Messages
- 6,180
Pay no attention to the crap in this thread. 3 Words: Mr. Money Mustache (google it!). A family of 3 living a life of luxury spending $25k per year.
As for me and my family of 4...living VERY comfortably in Pittsburgh on under $100k salary. All of this talk of $175k...if we had that kind of income I'd be able to retire within 10 years, probably less.
I'm a MMM fan too


Just wanted to add...YOUR comfy might not be MY comfy. I have a tiny house - we bought it recently and it was listed as 1200 square feet...including the basement. it has one tiny bathroom, and 3 tiny bedrooms. It is more than enough room for us. I don't need (or want!) anything bigger.
Our luxuries are eating out (Chili's!), and vacations. Having those two things available to me are what makes MY life comfy. We did it on $55K a year, and we do it now as more than double that. Those priorties did not change..
All my life I have always thought of money as finite. I know that I only have so much money to spend. It can be little, it can be a lot, but it is always finite. So even if I made $300k a year, there still needs to be a budget and there are still limits. Dunno about the multi-millionaire thing, but I imagine there still is. Think of all those superstars making mountains of money who wind up broke.
That has served me well in my financial life. Thankfully, DH is a saver too. I was a SAHM for many years and we lived very "comfortably" on his $70k income. We always had extra in the bank, had no credit card debt, could buy a modest home, and saved a chunk of money every month. We didn't have a lavish lifestyle and said no to many of the things our friends did. And we only did occasional pricey vacations.
When I started working, our income went up and it made annual Disney trips affordable and now we spend about $6k a year on vacations (we take a ton of vacations every year on this budget with heavy supplementation of credit card churning). And our lifestyle has inflated a little - more meals out, a little more reckless spending. But we still have no debt (and house will be paid off next year!), have plenty of cushion in savings, and still live well within our means.
It does make a difference what you consider comfortable. For me, feeling comfortable means that I have enough to spend and not worry about "not having enough". Even if we both lost our jobs tomorrow, we have enough financial cushion to get us through years of unemployment. If I have an unexpected bill for $10k, it's a bummer, but no more than an annoyance. As far as I am concerned, our lives feel lavish. Our frugal choices and careful attitudes towards money have made our lives "comfortable" and I am thankful for that.