• @UmeU
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    28 days ago

    Bringing in 17k+ per month after tax and cannot afford a home?? I call bullshit. A $750k home is 5k per month including HOA/tax/insurance. That’s less than 30% of their take home.

    They could double their payment and pay it off in 5 years, with 7k per month to live on, then they live rent free for the rest of their lives.

    This article feels like propaganda. Homes are over priced but 250k per year is a lot of money.

    • @TempermentalAnomaly
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      28 days ago

      They want to keep their monthly mortgage payment between $3,000 and $3,500 — or around 30% of their monthly take-home income of about $11,000.

      This makes it seem like they only take home a little more than half their wages.

      Something doesn’t add up. The only issue I see is one might be an independent contractor. Or they’re excluding health insurance and 401k.

      Edit: some quick digging. First issue is the definition of take home pay.

      Take-home pay is the net amount of income received after the deduction of taxes, benefits, and voluntary contributions from a paycheck. It is the difference resulting from the subtraction of all deductions from gross income. Deductions include federal, state and local income tax, Social Security and Medicare contributions, retirement account contributions, and medical, dental and other insurance premiums. The net amount or take-home pay is what the employee receives.

      But the bigger issue is the 30% rule. 30% is on gross and not take home. This would give them a out 7k per month. I bet they’re following the advice of someone like a Dave Ramsey. These people are not victims.

    • @TargaryenTKE
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      328 days ago

      It’s Business Insider, always read whatever they say with spoonfuls of salt

    • @[email protected]
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      128 days ago

      Well, they are saying they bring home $11k, not $17k a month, not sure where you got that number. With $11k of income, spending $5k on mortgage is less appealing. Especially if you consider a risk of layoff.

      • @UmeU
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        328 days ago

        The headline says they make 250k, or around 21k gross. 17k was my estimate of net. Article doesn’t match the headline.

      • @[email protected]
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        128 days ago

        Not to mention savings, retirement, saving for your kid’s college, paying for their school (depending on whether or not the public system is good or not where they live), car payments, medical bills, student loans…

        Don’t know what OP is smoking, but nothing he says makes sense.