I think there are just so many variables as mentioned.
Frugal "outside the box" thinkers will get much farther on less.
We lived a very comfortable lifestyle on less when we initially had kids. But we saved 75% - 90% of our incomes before we bought a home, and probably saved 50% until we had kids. Gave us a tremendous start. & this wasn't for more than 2-3 years post college. Bought a home at 23 and had kids at 25. Dh lived with parents through college (so he saved a ton). I didn't. But used to living on a shoestring I saved a ton easily, out of college.
Anyway, living in an area with expensive rents, we were able to put a chunk down on a really nice home and have a smaller mortgage than anything we could rent as a family. As homeowners we get tax breaks so we pay far less taxes than in your example. BUT your numbers are probably fair for renters. (BTW we owned a condo. A house was impossible - to rent or to own. We moved to afford a house).
Life insurance - buy when you are young and healthy (20s). We pay that much for 5 times the coverage.
Cars - We save $100/month to buy two $10k cars for cash, every 15 years. We drove old clunkers that cost nothing for a LONG time. They were extremely safe and reliable.
I think that's the thing that bugs me where we live because the housing bubble was big and robust. We bought early with a lot of cash down. We can afford far more than people trying to rent or buy in 2005. People often assume we make 2-3 times the income IRL because we have a nice home. But it lacks the context. Plenty of people who bought before us can live very comfortable lifestyles on much less because they don't have the same mortgages as those who are buying now. So housing becomes a pretty big variable. Buy a decent starter home in 1998 for $100k or 2005 for $500k. It makes a huge difference. If we were a few years older, I don't think we'd have a house payment, honestly.
Frugal "outside the box" thinkers will get much farther on less.
We lived a very comfortable lifestyle on less when we initially had kids. But we saved 75% - 90% of our incomes before we bought a home, and probably saved 50% until we had kids. Gave us a tremendous start. & this wasn't for more than 2-3 years post college. Bought a home at 23 and had kids at 25. Dh lived with parents through college (so he saved a ton). I didn't. But used to living on a shoestring I saved a ton easily, out of college.
Anyway, living in an area with expensive rents, we were able to put a chunk down on a really nice home and have a smaller mortgage than anything we could rent as a family. As homeowners we get tax breaks so we pay far less taxes than in your example. BUT your numbers are probably fair for renters. (BTW we owned a condo. A house was impossible - to rent or to own. We moved to afford a house).
Life insurance - buy when you are young and healthy (20s). We pay that much for 5 times the coverage.
Cars - We save $100/month to buy two $10k cars for cash, every 15 years. We drove old clunkers that cost nothing for a LONG time. They were extremely safe and reliable.
I think that's the thing that bugs me where we live because the housing bubble was big and robust. We bought early with a lot of cash down. We can afford far more than people trying to rent or buy in 2005. People often assume we make 2-3 times the income IRL because we have a nice home. But it lacks the context. Plenty of people who bought before us can live very comfortable lifestyles on much less because they don't have the same mortgages as those who are buying now. So housing becomes a pretty big variable. Buy a decent starter home in 1998 for $100k or 2005 for $500k. It makes a huge difference. If we were a few years older, I don't think we'd have a house payment, honestly.
Comment