Married filing jointly. DH is 44, I am 50, three daughters are ages 12, 10, and 7. We moved to a town 30 miles north of Seattle and purchased our home in April 2016.
Purchased home for $432K
Appraised in April 2019 for $510K (Redfin estimate is currently $550K, but we believe it would sell closer to appraised value)
Current payoff amount: $388K
I homeschool our three children. This is a lifestyle decision and something that is important to our family, especially as all of our family members live in other states. Similarly, our Forest School expense is one of our few non-negotiables as we determine how to move toward financial comfort. I have a masters degree in counseling, although I am no longer licensed and I hadn’t planned to work until my children are older. My husband is a benefits manager at a corporation that requires him to be in the office M-F at a location 15 miles from our home, which amounts to a 30-45+ minute commute depending on I-5 traffic.
With our ages, dependents, and lack of financial cushion at this stage, we aren’t trying to FIRE, but frankly, I’m terrified when I see the numbers required for my husband to stop working even at age 67. The most recent online calculator I used gave a figure of $3.9mil to maintain our SOL into retirement. Clearly, we’re not going to make that goal at our current spending levels. Is that how much we actually need??
Writing this information out, we see (and already knew but tried to keep our heads in the sand) many places we could reduce. The amount of money we spend on cereal alone each month is outrageous, and we just sat and estimated that by working on simple fixes like our grocery and media, we could put aside $4-500/month. However, that feels a little like putting a bandaid on gangrene. Of course, it’s better than continuing along our current trajectory, but what else can/should we consider?
Rent for a family of 5 is going to easily come in equal to our mortgage payment and that is for just a 2 bedroom. I’m willing to consider renting, especially at a location closer to my husband’s office, though, if it means we could expedite this process and get us closer to a feasible amount of retirement savings. Our home was built in 1945, and it will need to have the exterior painted soon, along with needing a new deck. Obviously, our lawn maintenance, as listed below, is also a huge expense as someone lovingly landscaped a gorgeous garden in our 1/3 acre. Sadly, I do not possess a green thumb, nor does my husband enjoy yard work, which is why we tend to farm out that labor at big costs.
Gross Salary/Wages:
$172K ($150K with an annual 15% bonus*)
Individual amounts of each Pre-tax deductions
401K — $650
HSA — $450
Insurance — $200
Dental — $100
Vision — $100
Life — $60
Long-term disability — $50
Dependent life — $100
Adjusted Gross Income:
$10,790 x 12 = $129,480-27,270 = $102,210 annual take home (roughly $8K/month after taxes)
Taxes: Federal, state/local, and FICA.
$27,270
Current expenses:
Mortgage/property tax/insurance: $2525
— P&I $1925 — T&I $600
Auto: Kia Sorrento $460, Volvo $0
Auto insurance: $145
Gas: $300 -- Volvo = $45 1x/week; Kia = $60 2x/month
Student loan payments: $525 for two, at 3-5%
Food: $1200
Internet: $80
Phones: $100
Media: $85
Utilities: Water/sewer $90; Electricity $125; Gas $150; Garbage/recycling $60
Clothing: $150
Forest School: $375
Swim lessons: $150
Lawn maintenance: $125
Pest control: $38 (we live near a lake, and because of our mild winters, rats can be a problem here. This covers trimester spraying and bait stations.)
Dog: $60
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Approximate monthly expenses total: $6768
*Misc: Bonus allocation typically used for travel, gifts, miscellany, and home maintenance (so far, new windows/water heater, electrical work, closet addition, etc.)
Assets:
$3K - car
$70K - 401K
$20K - employer stock (awarded annually)
Liabilities:
Original mortgage amount $415K. 30 year fixed at 3.875%
388K remaining
Student loans - Balance 1: $31K at 3%; Balance 2: $8K at 5.5%