Money Matters
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Nesties, I have a couple of questions for you all so please advise! I am between the age of 24 and 34 and I have a very small 401k. 2000.00 (SMALL). I am a little torn between investing in a 401k and building a regular savings account. I guess my biggest fear is, putting a lot of money into retirement and not living long enough to even see it to enjoy it. Currently I have stopped contributing and have been saving 100.00 a month into a regular savings. I really want to get my ducks in a row before January 1-2016! my questions for you all are: sn: i know every ones opinions vary and everyone has different situations
1. what is priority for you all RETIREMENT OR BUILDING AN EMERGENCY FUND
2. how much liquid cash do you save in a regular savings monthly. ( i think i may need to increase my amount)
3. how much liquid/ready to use cash do you have available at your fingertips in case of an emergency? ( right now i have 2000.00) my goal is 10,000.00)
thank you all in advance!
Re: **Multiple Questions**
1. Both, but since we are 33 we already have an established e-fund with maybe 4-6 months worth of expenses in it (We just bought a house so we are working on building that up little more). But we also increase our 401K percentage every year and will be opening ROTH IRA's soon so this has become more of a priority for us.
2. If you are on the younger side I would make sure you establish some sort of e-fund...only if it's $1,000. You want that cash on hand in case an emergency happens. The amount varies per month for us, it just depends on how much extra we have left after paying bills.
3. We have about $12K in our e-fund but want to get to $20K. Houses are more expensive than condo's so we want to be prepared for the more expensive fixes. My company is also integrating with our parent company over the next few years so there is a chance I could get laid off.
2. This is not an easy one to answer. Between what we are adding to our e fund and just general savings (car repair, vacation, insurances) we are probably saving 25% of our income. Half of that for yearly items like insurance, but the other is just savings.
3. Our E fund is about 40k. It used to be 25, but we upped it significantly when we bought a new house to cover mortgages and taxes during a layoff. Total liquid if you include all other savings (new car, house repairs, those listed above) is probably close to 70. This is way more than we should have liquid, and we were looking at better ways to invest some of this until we needed it, until dh company had its first huge round of layoffs earlier this year. We will be keeping it liquid for now.
2/3. Our liquid savings/efund is only $1,000 and we contribute no additional every month. Our monthly 'bare bones' expenses and mortgage only take up about 20% of our take home pay, so if needed, we could redirect our retirement contributions, entertainment and 'mad money' plus extra debt payments in lieu of a larger emergency fund.
2. how much liquid cash do you save in a regular savings monthly. ( i think i may need to increase my amount)
3. how much liquid/ready to use cash do you have available at your fingertips in case of an emergency? ( right now i have 2000.00) my goal is 10,000.00)
2. We save in our joint accounts $700/month total (not including the amounts that go to our individual accounts). That is across all our various joint accounts for house, efund, car, vacation, etc. We are working to get the house/efund account up to between 20k-25k within the next couple years, then will re-evaluate how much to save in liquid savings vs retirement savings. More will likely go to retirement at that point.
3. Across all of our checking/savings accounts, probably around 15-20k. With the goals we have, that will be up to around 35k in a few years. We want a 6 month efund plus have enough to pay for a new roof for our house outright.
2. how much liquid cash do you save in a regular savings monthly.
3. how much liquid/ready to use cash do you have available at your fingertips in case of an emergency?
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Welcome to the board! There is a lot of wisdom here. For your situation, it seems like you should focus on both beefing up your retirement and your e-fund/savings. Considering you already have a decent start on your savings goal, I'd especially focus on your retirement. Like @hoffse points out, money has an exponential time value. I'm just making this number up, but to hit a goal of $5M at retirement, will take putting away substantially more money for someone starting at the age of 35 vs. the age of 25.
1. what is priority for you all RETIREMENT OR BUILDING AN EMERGENCY FUND
My priority is retirement....or more specifically...creating passive income I can retire on through investing in rental properties. For me, that is the best option because I don't want my money tied up in a retirement vehicle that I can't access without penalties until I'm in my 60s. But then, I do have a chronic illness that makes me much more vulnerable to not live much past my 60s and/or have increasing serious medical problems. However, if that is not your situation, 401Ks and that kind of thing are excellent choices for some of your retirement savings.
But, if you're nervous to tie up all your retirement savings in retirement-type accounts, putting money into some good mutual funds for long-term growth can also be a great...yet very liquid...option. Though you'll lose the tax savings retirement accounts have, so that's the downside.
2. how much liquid cash do you save in a regular savings monthly. ( i think i may need to increase my amount)
3. how much liquid/ready to use cash do you have available at your fingertips in case of an emergency? ( right now i have 2000.00) my goal is 10,000.00)
I keep an e-fund of around $1,000, but also usually have another $1,000 hanging around in various accounts. Although I own a house, I don't have any kids, so that is part of why I keep it on the lower end. I also have multiple sources of income and a large Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) I could (but wouldn't normally want to) tap into. So those are more reasons I feel comfortable being on the low side with my savings.
But I don't have a low savings because I spend recklessly. I just focus on putting my excess income on paying my HELOC down. Which is an instrumental account in expanding my "real estate empire". Or at least it will be an empire one day, lol.
Absolutely true!!!! This really is a personal decision no matter what expert you listen to.