After reading a lot of responses on the "Monthly Savings" poll I have a question for anyone wanting to answer. Some of you voted that you don't put anything into savings so my questions is what if something happens in an emergency? What do you do then? I'm just totally curious because we're (S12) is all over the map on this one.
Re: Monthly savings question?
Now, we have a line of credit on our home. We opened it when we bought the house (we had a large down payment so we have plenty of equity). We've never used it, but if there is some type of emergency that drains our savings, we can just write a check off the line. No monthly fees so it costs us nothing unless we use it.
I can see this for sure. We used the envelope system in November for "no spend" to help us really stay in check specifically gas/groceries since everything else is paid online. I loved using cash because I knew what I had at that exact moment. No need to "balance" a checkbook. It also helped us budget better for the amount we could comfortably put into savings and the extra left over was so nice to put on other bills. We'll be permanently using the system starting in January.
I guess there is a difference between short-term and long-term savings, and I think a lot of people answered the poll differently depending on how they see short-term savings/budgeting.
[MC 11.20.11] [DS born 9.24.12] [DD born 10.15.14]
Now, I have a chunk of savings I'm currently eating into for the next 2 years, and investments that I consider 'true' emergency money. We have separate savings for our wedding and another (small) savings for DD.
SO and I only recently started thinking about it as 'our' money and I'm struggling somewhat to change how we save/spend based on what that means.
We currently save x amount of dollars but before pay day, we often have to pull it out of savings and use it. So we're not really saving any money. We just hope for nothing bad happens because it screws us. During college pre-marriage, I used extra student loan money to help pay my bills and it's going to suck when we are actively paying it off. When things get tough enough you just pick and choose who gets paid and who doesn't. Hints why our ob still isn't fully paid for DD after 15 months.
Life gets hard sometimes and you just have to find a way to make it work. We're definitely in a better place then when we got married. More financial stable but still paycheck to paycheck. I'm thankful everyday for my husband's job because it makes the biggest impact on our life.
We luckily have parents that are pretty well off, so my dad has stepped in and given us a no interest loan to help pay down debt. We are literally slashing everything and hopefully selling our house for a profit.
It sucks but we hope nothing else happens and that we can make it through this without permanent or long term financial damage. Someday we will be able to save as much as possible.
I was always having "emergencies"... Like bald tires, or having to buy gas the day before payday. My parents did loan money a few times, but it was a BAD idea to borrow from them (held over your head forever). I sold stuff on eBay until I had nothing left
It is such a slow climb out. I bet Dave Ramsey's method would have helped me climb out sooner. I dunno, sometimes people are in such a hole that asking why they don't save- as if they have a choice- seems like a slap in a face. If it were me, I'd reply: I'm broke not stupid.
And I guess to me the 25% did not seem high. It seems low.