I’m about 6 months away from paying off the mortgage, so my focus is on that and by listening to your videos and others on mortgage payoffs helps to keep me motivated.
@BobSharpe3 ай бұрын
You got this! How exciting to be on the brink of the freedom from the mortgage!!! Congratulations
@TrappedQue3 ай бұрын
I make about $70k/yr. I up my 401K contribution every year by 1% when I get a raise. My current contribution is 16%, employer is matching 3%. I am completely debt free, paid off house in April. Life is good.
@BobSharpe3 ай бұрын
Love it! Congrats on the full debt freedom!!!
@jwarren09053 ай бұрын
That's great! Q: why wouldn't you only invest up to the max match rate from your employer, then dump the rest in say a Roth for better tax breaks for retirement?
@bmc95873 ай бұрын
Love your channel , Bob. I like your down to earth approach and use of real life as well as your personal examples. In 2017 I started digging myself out of a hole. Like you I was in the negative net worth category. With an income comparable to your mid level income in this video I've been able to invest, pay off all debt (except mort @ 3% int.) and I now have a half mil net worth and climbing. Kinda got a late start as I am in my early 50's. But healthy, employed, and not about to stop. I strive to invest 50% of my take home pay every month. Thanks for the great videos!
@BobSharpe3 ай бұрын
Thank you so much, and what a great comment!! Congratulations on that net worth and the growth - you're still young and it's only onward and upward from here!!
@43DW3 ай бұрын
I’m investing 15% plus company match. The rest goes to our mortgage. 100% Debt free is the freedom we want for our family.
@BobSharpe3 ай бұрын
Love this!!!
@melissabrady27463 ай бұрын
1. Vacations with family 2. Date nights with husband 3. Helping others in need Thanks for the great content Bob!
@BobSharpe3 ай бұрын
What a great list! Thanks for sharing
@JohnPaul-ol5zl3 ай бұрын
@melissabrady2746 very good. First stabilizing one's is key. We can't help others that are drowning until we learn to swim well, but also helps if we have our life-vest during the efforts to help a weak swimmer.....No judgment, just reality. I'm also a proponent of living comfortably Not lavishly. One, because it is True financial freedom and two - you are more able to help others at a more efficient way for yourself and them. Quality over quanity. Best to drive a decent dependable car and live in a humble decent comfortable home, the stressing how on how many more months it will be till the fancy car gets repo'd and the house gets foreclosed on. Many individuals would be in amazement on how fast the "impressing others luster" fades. The feeling might be great in the short term, but eventually everyone realizes it does very little to none for their own lifes to be impressed by the expensive things others "own". Work hard for your money, allocate/budget it appropriately and enjoy life with the spouse and kids on the weekends. Don't die broke/in Debt and especially don't die with millions in the bank that you never truely enjoyed because you want to be rich instead of wealthy in the things that truely matter.....Family being one. -God Bless.
@michiganman8453 ай бұрын
I make 86k plus overtime. My employer check is for bills and investing. 25% I have a side hustle mowing lawns that generate 10k-13k/yr. That money is used for camping, vacations, and helping my kids buy their first car.
@BobSharpe3 ай бұрын
That's awesome - and really great to hear your side hustle pulling in that great money. Congrats and tahnsk for commenting!
@xabiergranja3 ай бұрын
1. Travel. 2. Videogames. 3. Biking. Everything else doesn’t matter much. I’m actually “scheduled” to pay my 30y mortgage in under 10y by March 2026, and trying to add even more to the extra principal I already pay so I can potentially pay the whole thing off by next summer! Then, financial independence begins.
@BobSharpe3 ай бұрын
This is so great to hear - congrats on being on the homestretch of the mortgage!!! Let me know once that date rolls around - a big congratulations will be in order!!
@criminalelement4943 ай бұрын
1. Weed 2. Health Food 3. Nice Hotels 4. First Class
@appleztooranges3 ай бұрын
Weed is number 1
@DavyDavePapi3 ай бұрын
I'm not even making 40k. I really need to find a career/job to increase my income so I can invest more and live more affordably
@micahpauldunford20522 ай бұрын
Wow..I tell everyone I meet the same thing and they look at me like I'm crazy almost 60% of the time unless they are older than me 50..u hit everything on the head. Thanks..I hope people are listening
@elpatl743 ай бұрын
Top 3 1- Playing golf with my Son and watching how well he plays and continues to grow. 2-Travel with family during the summer. 3- Being financially secure and knowing I can focus on helping my Son learn to save for his future. I started poor and will never consider myself "Rich". Only that I can do what I want when I want and will always get the best deals I can and save as much as possible so that I can enjoy doing what our family wants to do. Everyone can achieve their goals. Use a spreadsheet and don't give up if you have a slip. Just get back on track and do your best. But always remember to save, but to also enjoy life and THAT is when you will realize you have achieved financial freedom!!!
@BobSharpe3 ай бұрын
Excellent and inspiring!! Thank you for commenting
@Golfplyr3 ай бұрын
1. Vacations with the wife 2. Vacations with our siblings and their families 3. Saving to become financial independent
@BobSharpe3 ай бұрын
This is a great list! Thanks for sharing
@Thedonron123 ай бұрын
I'm 34 single, no kids never married no debt (minus small mortgage) making 130k and 45k of that goes towards my investments. Will pass millionaire status around 38/39 just crossed half a million in net worth.
@teresahunt55213 ай бұрын
I'm 59 and have 401k, trad IRA and individual stocks. Should I open a ROTH too? My HYSA is at Citi at 4.4% My children are grown. No grandchildren. I enjoy working I guess. Lol (I really do enjoy nursing. They will probably have to force me into retirement in my mid 70s to early 80s. Health is wealth kids!)
@BobSharpe3 ай бұрын
Thanks for commenting! The Roth is your call completely. Typically if you think you may benefit from avoiding higher tax rates in the future during retirement, then that is where it can be helpful
@teresahunt55213 ай бұрын
@@BobSharpe Thanks Bob! I'm debt free so trying to allocate wisely.
@drsonnysell44713 ай бұрын
Thanks Big Bob
@BobSharpe3 ай бұрын
You’re most welcome
@punisher66593 ай бұрын
Thanks for the great content.
@BobSharpe3 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoy it! Thanks for commenting!
@PilgrimAmbience3 ай бұрын
I would like to see a video with european salary. I live in Romania where the salary is 900$ per month. How much you think i save per month to have an 90.000$ account!
@appleztooranges3 ай бұрын
I don’t like that 3-6 months during Bidenomics! If a furnace goes, your car goes, roof leaks, and other emergencies you’ll be SOL and have zero left. Just my thoughts. Don’t even feel comfortable having $20k or less nowadays
@JohnPaul-ol5zl3 ай бұрын
Although I don't agree with you fully, I feel your frustration/possible anger with the economy the past few years. The pay at most average jobs is not keeping up with inflation and such. Damn government is just letting the rich become richer than before. I work hard, but get crums as a salary raise. Yet the CEO gets a raise and bonus that equals the Total Sum of the salary of 100 employees...... Capitalism unchecked. He could retire today and live another 30 years very comfortably and still have a few million left over on the day of his funeral. This is just going off 1-year of his earnings.....multiply it by a few decades of earning ridiculous amounts of money and it is beyond un-ethical.
@A-A-Ron-223 ай бұрын
😂 and Trumpy poo poo pants did better- you’re a joke
@supercruchynoodle3 ай бұрын
Amex is HYSA 4.25% I’m guilty of lifestyle creep…. Oooof 😮
@nedaddy12 ай бұрын
I just started getting into investing early this year. I came across your channel looking for advice and joined in on the $5/day challenge. I did that for about a month into VOO and then added $5/day into QQQM. Looking forward to more videos in the future!
@RGTomoenage11Ай бұрын
Pay debt before the emergency fund?
@hananovingerАй бұрын
According to Dave Ramsey (this guys philosophy is very similar or borrowed from him) suggests to save $1000 first. Pay off debt. Save 3-6 months worth of money what your month expenses are. Then pay off mortgage.
@RGTomoenage11Ай бұрын
@@hananovinger thank you Hannah
@FA90823 ай бұрын
The median US income is 40k not 60k. A lot of times I watch your videos im like where the F is this guy getting his numbers from 😂
@BobSharpe3 ай бұрын
Ah but I have receipts on where the F I get my numbers 😂. You have to look at the latest data given by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (government). In Q1 2024 the avg is $60,000. Link: www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/wkyeng.pdf Take your weekly earnings reported, averaged by gender, multiplied by 52 weeks - you’ll see where I get my numbers. I try to provide latest documented data - not old data.
@romariosmith4223 ай бұрын
Credit Karma has a savings yield of 5.10%. BOOM!!!
@A-A-Ron-223 ай бұрын
Do you have the link for that?
@BobSharpe3 ай бұрын
Whoa! I'll check that out! thanks for sharing
@BarnabyBarry3 ай бұрын
Cool video-Moved to Thailand-$400 monthly brand new condo walk to 🏖️-gym/sauna/jacuzzi/steam-cheap and healthy food-online investing daily (wake up early)-buy t bills-local charities-easy to transfer $ via wise-pretty younger gf