It depends on where you live and on your particular situation. Hubby & I live in SC and have our rural home paid for, no debt other than monthly bills like utilities, insurance, food...stuff like that. Both our vehicles are old (2003 & 2001) but we keep 'em running and they are doing fine so far! (Someday they'll conk out on us!) Our annual household income is from our Social Security checks, my MS'ing & Merch'ing part time, and his part-time umpiring in the Spring thru Fall. And all that together totals up to around $38K/year. Plus we get around $2000/year in interest on annuities, so about $40K/year. We do tithe our income to our church, so that basically puts our living wages at around $30K/year. We have had to repair our furnace, our cars, repair outside stairs and posts to our home, stuff like that. I do most of my clothing shopping in thrift stores. And grocery MSing helps a lot. We live happily and within the means we have. But we couldn't live on this income in many parts of the country. We are grateful for what we have and where we are.@Madetoshop wrote:
Most of you? I know we could never, ever live on $44,625/year. Every situation is different. I do agree with you regarding living paycheck to paycheck. High stress. :-)
@myst4au wrote:
I am sure that it depends to some extent on where you live. The average household income in NJ is $85,245
@maverick1 wrote:
@myst4au wrote:
I am sure that it depends to some extent on where you live. The average household income in NJ is $85,245
I looked it up...actually that is the median, the average is higher due to high wage earners.
@Madetoshop wrote:
Most of you? I know we could never, ever live on $44,625/year. Every situation is different. I do agree with you regarding living paycheck to paycheck. High stress. :-)
@Madetoshop wrote:
No, I could not. I see your point and realize the first $44K is federally free of tax. As an aside, our state income tax rate is HIGH. Still, we could not do it. WE work hard and play hard. If we couldn't, we wouldn't play so hard. :-) I see a lot of our required monthly expenses not listed in the URL/article posted. RE Taxes, commutation costs, $31 for gas(?????), home insurance, car insurance, health insurance is way greater than $35 even if we are insured by our employers just to mention a few. My employer takes out over $100 from my paycheck for health insurance every two weeks (family coverage) and my DH has a big deduction as well. I am thankful that it is a great plan and all of our dependents are covered. The amounts for utilities and groceries are wishful and not at all realistic for what we incur. MY point is, I know it's do-able for some but not for many others. I so enjoy your posts and look forward to seeing others post with their viewpoints and experience.