I’m not a natural when it comes to personal finance. I love shopping and having nice,
top-of-the-line, shiny, brand new things.
However, I’d also really like to be financially secure. I read Dave Ramsey’s Total Money Makeover a
few years ago and the envelope system definitely worked for me. I just stopped when I moved to Minnesota two
years ago and since then I haven’t been the best budgeter.
The truth is, I’m in a better financial situation that I’ve
ever been. I mean, I’m not rich by any
stretch of the imagination. There’s just
no reason for me to live paycheck to paycheck at this point in my life. And that’s exactly what I’m doing. That’s why I was at the bank withdrawing cash
on Black Friday instead of standing in line for a new TV (something I REALLY,
REALLY WANT too BTW).
After looking at my particular financial situation, I will
be changing a few things though. For
example, I only have two credit cards and will be concentrating on paying off
the bigger of the two first. The
interest on the bigger card is significantly more and paying that card off will
save me upwards of $80 a month to roll into other debt. My student loans, however, have the same
interest rate so I’ll go ahead and concentrate on the smaller one first. Those are my only current debts (~$2,800 in
credit cards and ~$45,000.00 in student loans) but my student loans are more
than what my grandmother’s house cost when they bought it in the 1970s!
The next difference is I won’t be pouring all of the
residual cash after I pay my monthly expenses into my student loans or credit
cards quite yet. Why you ask? Because rent in MSP is expensive. I’m pretty sure that what I pay for my 500
square foot basement studio actually pays the entire mortgage on my landlord’s
triplex. Since this is actually one of
the few major cities where buying actually makes more sense than renting, I’ll
be buying a house.
I’m hoping that I’ll be in a place by the end of winter or
beginning of spring in 2016. There’s no
way I’ll be able to save up a full 20% down payment by that time but even if I do
an FHA loan with 3.5% down and have to pay PMI, I’ll still be paying less than
I am now. And then I can deduct an
interest from my taxes. I’ll also have
more space and the opportunity to have family come visit, maybe even move up, or at
least look at getting a roommate to help fund my debt snowball.
After I buy a house, then I’ll start focusing one student
loan at a time, followed by my mortgage.
In the meantime, I’ll be visiting the bank every two weeks and filling
up envelopes. I’ll do another post on
how I setup my envelopes to work for me right now.
Do you have problems budgeting? This method is the only one that has EVER
worked.
Do you regret taking out student loans? I wish every day that I could turn back time
and not go to graduate school.
The only reason I am in grad school right now (I'll be done in 3 months!!!) is because my work paid for 70%. I was able to pay the other 30% without taking loans. However, I did have $30K in student loans when I graduated college, and that was SO tough to pay off. I would still take out the loans, bc my degree was helpful, but I would have tried to pay them while I was in school. I made decent money working through college, and it would have helped to put money toward loans instead of using the money for partying...live and learn.
ReplyDeleteCongrats on almost being done with grad school! I'd eventually like to go back and get an executive MBA but my company doesn't pay anything towards it. Plus, it won't affect my current salary one way or the other. And my degree program didn't even allow us to work. We had to sign a contract saying that we wouldn't. Something that I definitely wouldn't agree to now. Live and learn.
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