I am richer than my friends and it really bums me out. I want them to experience the same peace and happiness that I do but I found out quick they don't want to hear it. So I just stopped bringing it up. And whenever they talk about their problems that are easily solvable I just nod and go "uh-huh". It breaks my heart but they don't want to hear anything.
@justinkirschner518426 күн бұрын
YES! This is arguably the most frustrating thing about loving this content. You want to be a financial education resource to friends/family, but the reality is this. You can sow the seed, but at some point they gotta water it.
@CurieBohr26 күн бұрын
They are stuck in the consumer matrix. Just enjoy your time with them. Don’t try to parent them.
@dwight_s26 күн бұрын
This ^^^ 100% This.
@bucknut947526 күн бұрын
Many of my friends make significantly more than me and complain about silly things that should not even be a problem for them. I just cringe and move on. I try to point them in the right direction without being too forward or direct about it so as to not make them feel bad.
@genxx272426 күн бұрын
I had the same situation with a friend and coworker regarding her health. I said something to her a long time ago, and never said another word as she became more and more overweight and finally obese and prediabetic with bone spurs in her feet. All I said when she complained about this and that was “that’s too bad.” But it put more pressure on me at work, compensating for her low productivity absenteeism, an increasingly bad and manipulative attitude. She wound up ruining my quality of life all around. Thank God for early retirement.
@kennethwers26 күн бұрын
Happily married. Three great kids. Retired!! With enough money to do what I want within reason. Yes, I am wealthy in my way. Highest household income was 62k.
@bucknut947526 күн бұрын
That is true wealth. Well done
@bradleygraves591526 күн бұрын
Just to encourage others: I was broke in 2015 at age 47 and one month away from not being able to pay the rent. Embarrassed, ashamed because I knew better. 2024, own a house that will be paid off in 6 years, $300k in investments. I upskilled, GOT RID OF ALL DEBT - except the house of course. YOU CAN DO IT!!
@Natanaelinvests25 күн бұрын
This is trully inspiring, thankyou for sharing
@blairkinsman347724 күн бұрын
Same here .. yup, it CAN be done like these guys say
@44andbroke2413 күн бұрын
We did the same, but at 44&46 years old. We had 120k in consumer debt. This was in 2016. Sold an rv and spent 3.5 years paying everything off. I will never have consumer debt again. Although we had made a couple good decisions. 1st we bought a small house in 2009. 2nd my wife has always done a 401k. Although never contributed more than 4% In 7 years we have achieved 1 mil in net worth. This is with just typical jobs, I'm a union truck driver and she works in the back office of a local bank.
@wpelfeta26 күн бұрын
My friends don't know how wealthy I am. In fact, I haven't even told my parents. These days, I feel like it's smarter to be quiet with your money.
@genxx272426 күн бұрын
It’s always been smartest, and considered food manners, to keep it confidential. And you can’t un-ring the bell.
@aliali-ce3yf26 күн бұрын
UHC CEO found that out the hard way
@rebeltheharem702826 күн бұрын
I've only told my mom how much money I have, but she's a miser and spend thrift like me, so its no problem. Well, it actually is a problem, since its hard to get her to treat herself sometimes.
@creditczar697926 күн бұрын
Yes! I told my mother CONFIDENTIALLY when I retired as she was very concerned. That info went straight to my sister, who mow resents me and from whom my family and I have been estranged. My bad!
@genxx272426 күн бұрын
@@rebeltheharem7028 A spendthrift is someone who spends carelessly. It’s really a problem that we now have generations growing up without reading good literature, and they don’t know what words mean.
@hockeyhalod26 күн бұрын
I love personal finance so much that I want the stigma of talking about it gone so I can make sure my friends are on pace, haha.
@timmyd381926 күн бұрын
I think the best way of doing that is to casually talk about generic finance things like how the upcoming admin may impact the market. Ask what your friend's investment strats are because you're looking into new strats, or (my favorite) talk about your friends job industry and get some info related to stocks in that industry so you can "make some trades later" with info from someone you trust. At some point they will ask you about some of these things and really understand you know what you're talking about. Personally, I have friends that now ask me financial questions even after they've met with financial advisors because they don't quite trust the advice they were given.
@YaBoiBond26 күн бұрын
I agree with the guy above! Slow roll it until it becomes a natural part of the convo. 3 years ago my group of friends wouldn't talk about anything. Now financial stuff is one of the top convos we have. I now know what my friends make. Where their money goes. And what their financial goals are. They know the same about me. Now we can compare information we are learning in our everyday lives. Its really fun
@CurieBohr26 күн бұрын
As somebody who has been investing for decades, never ever give your friends investing advice. They will invest, and when the market goes down a little, they will sell, and they will blame you.
@bucknut947526 күн бұрын
I don’t care if some people don’t like it. I talk about it and I know for a fact that many people’s lives around me have improved because of it. They have told me as much.
@mdel31026 күн бұрын
Haha I feel this, when the topic comes up I can’t help but vomit up all my knowledge. I wish it was normal to causally talk about it.
@michaelday698726 күн бұрын
The thing we forget about when they say "Keeping Up With the Jones'" is that we are also the Jones in other peoples eyes. So our overspending impacts other people in our lives.
@bettedavis926126 күн бұрын
Thank goodness I don't compare myself to others, then. I also don't want others to compare themselves to me.
@josephlantz633122 күн бұрын
This is a really interesting point. I’ll try to remember this in my own life.
@xmochix60426 күн бұрын
I took part of this survey, it was fun. Anyway, I am richer than all my friends and my side of the family. Hubby's side of the family is a different beast, they know to save/invest combined with working hard to increase income! I wish the people I know are doing financially well. I want the best for my friends.
@LAZERZ-OP26 күн бұрын
Truly glad to have found this content in my 20's. This is life changing material if you have the discipline to stick with it. Thank you for the free content!
@bjornandersson62505 күн бұрын
""I AM SO EXITED TO TALK ABOUT THIS"" is literally the only way possible these videos should start! Keep up the good work!! :D
@logicalmisery373726 күн бұрын
All of my friends are pretend wealthy. They're also imaginary.
@psyskeptic997926 күн бұрын
😆
@michiganman84525 күн бұрын
Same, but I could die tomorrow and they're having fun today.
@mrjuvy4924 күн бұрын
Wait until you invite them to go on a great vacation, or cruise. Then you know they are not planners.
@nursevinyl618525 күн бұрын
I never compared myself to others, that is the main thing i taught my wife and kids. I listen to people, when they brag and they vent out. I keep the good traits and dump the bad ones. Life is too short enjoy it in the right way. No debt beside the house and almost paid off. College fund set aside for the kids. I always thank God!
@Waffle_Haus26 күн бұрын
Any other average Americans out there who watch this show?
@mrkraymnd26 күн бұрын
You have to start somewhere!
@antionetteportillo162226 күн бұрын
Me, I just hit $100k retirement, and I'm 30. I can't imagine having 400k-700k. I also don't own real estate and need to build up my emergency fund 😮💨
@Waffle_Haus26 күн бұрын
@@antionetteportillo1622 you’re ahead of me! I’m 34 and only have 50k saved for retirement. I do have about 185k in house equity so that helps me sleep at night. We’ll get there!
@Idratherbewithmydog26 күн бұрын
Yup, only have $1000 saved, paying off 5 figure debt, learning retirement and investing!
@kennethwers26 күн бұрын
Their clients are the top earners. Not middle class. But the foo steps still work.
@SiJay319126 күн бұрын
Love your content guys! You help even the playing field. Went to an expensive college and have many wealthy friends. I am from a middle class family who had great work ethic, good income, but low financial literacy. They helped me pay for school and I am super grateful. Despite that had to work summers and weekends to get by while my friends partied. Had 2 jobs most of my 20s. 10 years later I'm making more than 90% of my college friends but will likely NEVER catch up to their equity accumulation. Many of them getting 5-6 figure contributions from family towards home purchases, weddings, etc and will inherit 7 figure estates. It's good to be around people who are more successful than you because it will motivate you. and I've learned a lot from my more old money friends about investing. Everyone's journey is different.
@joycewright538625 күн бұрын
I’m very wealthy because I’m retired, healthy, and debt free. That’s all I need.
@anthonyb366925 күн бұрын
Did Brian realize when he said 19:01 “we’re right at the halfway point” literally 50% into the video haha 😂
@MrColonelbbc26 күн бұрын
That joke… national guard 😂😂😂😂 love these guys!!!! I am in tears at this reaction… rewind that part 3 times!!!
@Cormin26 күн бұрын
I'm glad you remade this episode. It's such a catchy phrase and excellent way to think
@vaderwashere36525 күн бұрын
It is hard with friends that are much much poorer than us. We live in a high cost of living and high wage area, but a couple of my friends rent small apartments and drive beater cars - not by choice, but because they can't afford more. We are very fortunate that our friends don't make it awkward, but we definitely don't bring up our investments, 401Ks, net worth, how much our cars cost, etc. around them. On a side note: I do agree that habits are more important than income (per The Money Guys)... however, a high income makes it super easy to be a multimillionaire when you already have good habits.
@thomasreedy475125 күн бұрын
Well that’s dumb. Why would you need to flash your net worth when talking about finance? Dude, the s&p 500 is up 30%, have you checked your 401 lately? Such a statement doesn’t have anything to do with whether or not you have millions.
@Atrus99926 күн бұрын
Whoever came up with "cashnal guard" is definitely a dad.
@TurtleColonel26 күн бұрын
Cashnal guard is a total dad joke, but it kinda slaps though 😂
@misssophiamae24 күн бұрын
Oh I will be using “cashnal guard” for sure. Let’s get this bish into the general vernacular!
@RocketRenee4625 күн бұрын
I just turned this on. Just because someone buys the cheapest (priced) house in a neighborhood does not mean they are poorer than their neighbors. It just might mean they saved money and like doing upgrades or repairs themselves. But with that said, Brian still makes a great point if indeed they ARE poorer than neighbors.
@chipper672926 күн бұрын
Just doing the company retirement thing I was able to hit 100k at 30 and be debt free. Withholding from the paycheck is the only way to go. At 41 now I have found that living in one of those HIGH cost of living areas for 15 years and living like we were broke, the cup over floweth now and that is why I have sought out what to do with the excess savings. The power of having roommates when you are paying off student loans, then staying in a 1 bedroom and only owning 10yr old cars for a decade pays off dividends. People thought we were crazy staying in our small place even after kids started showing up but it saves 5 figures a year!
@oldbuddyben25 күн бұрын
I'd like to see those household income charts done at say 150k, 200K, 300K, etc. Also, I wonder how much higher the percentage would be that couldn't come up with, say $2k, $3k, $5k, etc for an emergency. I love stats and data! Thanks for the video.
@Mehwhatevr23 күн бұрын
I'd like to see those household income charts done with purchasing price parity comparisons. how much disposable income do these higher income individuals actually have? I make 50k, but I'm killing it compared to someone in New York making 100k. I see others have pointed out that household income might be 2 people.
@shakdown8525 күн бұрын
“Cashonal Guard” to your self-rescue. Great contribution Nick! Thanks Money Guy for sharing.
@rigon2825 күн бұрын
I don't feel bad about my wealth. I moved to USA at age 11 with English as second language, started working at 18 no college degree making $35k and now making $80k. But I never bought an expensive car and invested everything I could and now have $1.3 million.
@merc7paul21 күн бұрын
I'm in the same boat moved to Canada at 18, 35 now 😂 no degree, same income same net worth
@87vortex8726 күн бұрын
Dang I'm bang in the middle of the financial mutant stats. I'm an average financial mutant! Love it
@bucknut947526 күн бұрын
Excellent work
@lanadov94518 күн бұрын
I am very anxious about money. Your video made me feel like I can figure it out! Thank you.
@blairkinsman347724 күн бұрын
I didn't take the comparison as destructive - I need: 1) to know what I have to do 2) to know that it can be done I actually have one of the smallest houses on the street .. it has appreciated more than average (that part is true) .. I don't really know my neighbours we don't talk much
@SarahWilley83826 күн бұрын
I love "Cash-nal Guard" !
@leitm391226 күн бұрын
My friends suck with money. Most of them don't even want to try and get better so I just let them know to talk to me when they change their mind but I can't force them to be better financially. So yes, I'm definitely richer than all my friends.
@brent.robinson25 күн бұрын
When i saw the title of this video my first thought was "who cares". That's the mindset you need. Don't compare yourself, just do what you need to do.
@UNDERDOG18UNDERDOG1824 күн бұрын
They care! Lots of jealousy out there
@deemiller502425 күн бұрын
The BLESSING of Preparing now, verses the DESPARATION of Later.
@SS-nd3ew26 күн бұрын
Hey Brian. Your audio book is not available on Spotify. Could you please confirm when it’s gonna available. I would love to listen your book. Ty
@ddff524226 күн бұрын
Comparison is the thief of joy.
@joelplatt265126 күн бұрын
Not if you compare to the right people 😂
@ddff524226 күн бұрын
@joelplatt2651 good luck with making sure you compare to the right people.
@logicalmisery373726 күн бұрын
And my parents always comparing me to my sibling means I've never known joy
@AaBbCcDdEeF25 күн бұрын
It’s actually the king of motivation.
@ousefk547625 күн бұрын
Not if you are Elon Musk
@diligentDawg9926 күн бұрын
Thanks as always for the content! I look forward to seeing how you continue to incorporate survey results. I got some catching up to do to reach median net worth of your audience (and average Americans for that matter). Currently expecting to hit $0 by age 30, but should be back in with the financial mutant median sometime in my 40s.
@matthewmeals483326 күн бұрын
400k for 20 y/o’s is crazy
@ColeRees24 күн бұрын
To be fair, it was a box you checked on the survey. I’m 27 and just hit 100k a month ago, so I technically fell into that bucket as well. I think most of the “mutants” in their 20s are in the 100k to 200k range, maybe a bit more
@colorblindkid72024 күн бұрын
I just turned 30 but I left the decade with an investment account of 255k. Really got the income to make that happen at 26 years old. Wife and I left our 20s with a net worth of 690k. You got this!
@td6923 күн бұрын
@@colorblindkid720well done! What’s been your average income throughout the years? How much do you try and save monthly ?
@Nightfire52621 күн бұрын
I think it's hard because it's a decade spread. It would almost be more palatable if they did it in 5 year intervals. I'm 29 and about to leave my 20's with about 600K net worth, but I'm on the cusp of being in the 30's - so it feels like I shouldn't be compared to the same group that has 20/21 year old individuals just starting the journey.
@ColeRees21 күн бұрын
@@Nightfire526 agreed. Nice work btw, over half a mil on your 30th bday is a huge accomplishment. I’m shooting for 250k with my salary. Definitely a stretch goal for me but I think it’s possible!
@21stcenturydadd26 күн бұрын
How many houses has Brian visited so far and where am I on the list? Another good video as always. I’ll leave the light on!
@LearnWithTheBest26 күн бұрын
He won't come unless you leave some milk and cookies by the fireplace.
@TalkToMe2Day25 күн бұрын
Part of why we hit 6 figures before 30 is because $100k today is $75k just four years ago. Rent in my area, for the same apartment, went from $995 to $1650 in those four years. That would even indicate that $100k in my area would be even less than $75k four years ago.
@AnonN-sr6uu25 күн бұрын
I think they got overly excited with the HH income, cause it’s “household” which means 2 people. They should do another survey asking for individual income.
@Mehwhatevr23 күн бұрын
good point.
@danaconda1221 күн бұрын
Very grateful I found this channel this year. Was never bad with money but this channel has gotten me hooked on personal finance and saving for my families future. Thanks money guys!
@Peepsuk123423 күн бұрын
My wife is convinced that our friends are more weathy due to their new cars, home renovations, etc. We’re probably in the top 10% of family income but I chose to pay down mortgage, invest in our pensions and kids funds. I suspect our friends lifestyles are built on a mountain of finance.
@allenmanning198725 күн бұрын
I have the ability to give my savings accounts nicknames; I've just renamed one of them to my "Cashional Guard"
@Joenzinator26 күн бұрын
I'll just answer the question. Yes! I'm 38 and I've built up enough to retire in 5-7 years. I live in a nice neighborhood, and everyone is driving around in luxury vehicles, while I drive around in my used minivan. But when I get to talking with my friends, they all have crazy amounts of car debt and HELOCs. I know one guy who did a cash-out-refi on his house and used the money for a down payment on a Tesla.
@crashtestdummy197226 күн бұрын
When i was 19 I remember always thinking how so many people have such nice cars and always felt like I was doing things wrong financially until I got older and realized that the vast majority of people with really nice vehicles are buried up to their eyes in debt.
@bucknut947526 күн бұрын
My family thinks we are struggling because I work a lot and we drive old cars. Congrats on your success.
@Joenzinator26 күн бұрын
@@bucknut9475 Thanks. And go Buckeyes!
@sergiocastillo207626 күн бұрын
I like the cashnal guard!
@jolenelouwagie445426 күн бұрын
Thank you MG! This is the survey recap we were hoping for. Already shared this episode multiple times!❤
@atxvr425 күн бұрын
When you’re talking about net worth by age towards the end, is this individual net worth, or joint / household net worth for married couples?
@michaelsd28424 күн бұрын
I believe the survey they did was household vs individual
@Brand_______26 күн бұрын
Can you guys talk about how things change for single vs married people. With only one “potential” SS check, do single people need to save more? I understand being single is cheaper than being married, but many of the fixed costs are the same for single vs married people. So is the 25% general guidance enough for single folks or should we be saving more? What other differences should us single people think about when planning for our future?
@evr0.90425 күн бұрын
Being married is cheaper per person than being single. It's not apples to apples. Also depends on lifestyle.
@vaderwashere36525 күн бұрын
If you are living off of 1 income now, then 25% of that income should be enough for retirement (depending on what age you started being able to invest 25%). If you are going into debt while living on 1 income, then investing 25% might not be possible - married or not. Live within your means now (if you can), wisely invest 25% as suggested, then you will have a big and beautiful tomorrow. We are married and we do not take that into consideration when we invest 25% of our combined income. Our combined income is the same as if it was a single income. You can probably use their wealth multiplier if you want to deviate from 25% and then include your cost of living area (low or high), etc. Best to assume 25% or get a financial planner for a more tailored approach.
@rhondavigil79526 күн бұрын
We have friends that are all over the financial range.
@bobknob844026 күн бұрын
What is the youtube page for Poor Money Guy Show?
@spyridon766926 күн бұрын
Any get-rich-quick sub will do
@rhondavigil79526 күн бұрын
Caleb Hammer 😂
@dashmow980926 күн бұрын
Dave Ramsey Show
@arh123425 күн бұрын
Dave Ramsey's mindset approach is excellent - follow him closely until you're at least out of high interest (more than ~10%) debt.
@brittanysedey985726 күн бұрын
I’ve heard that you end up with the same spendable wealth if ho with traditional but change your contribution to account for the tax savings. Is traditional 401k and Roth IRA the way to go?
@emoney123126 күн бұрын
Depends on your tax rate now vs. what it will be in retirement.
@Joenzinator26 күн бұрын
If you are able to max out the IRA, then maxing out a ROTH is more money saved since the taxes are already paid. If you are just looking for the maximum tax advantage, then it depends on your income level now vs income level in retirement. I think a mix of traditional and ROTH is desirable, because you can essentially choose your own tax rate. For my 401(k) the employer contribution is traditional, so I do ROTH for my contribution even though I'm in a high tax bracket. In retirement, my income will still be $250k+ from utilizing the 401(k) and RMDs. For estate planning, ROTH is also desirable so your beneficiaries don't have to worry about the taxes. To summarize, look at the tax brackets. I'd say if you are in a 24% and below tax bracket, then ROTH is definitely the way to go. So if you are married, it's if you make less than $364,200. If you are single it's $182,100. Tax rates jump to 32% over those amounts, which is pretty steep. But depending on how much you have in traditional 401(k) and IRAs, it might still make sense to do ROTH.
@General867526 күн бұрын
If the tax rates and investments are the same, then ROTH and traditional are the same, but if you put your riskier investments in Roth and your safer investments in Traditional, you will have some tax advantages. Furthermore, if you will have a high marginal tax rate while contributing, you probably want to go with traditional more often. It takes some bets and sophistication!
@ryans282926 күн бұрын
The real question is can you afford to be around your friends and vice versa; and if not, is everyone okay with that?
@BinJim31X2425 күн бұрын
LOVE the CASHinal Guard
@nazeercurry524826 күн бұрын
Great information 🎉🎉🎉
@ctcristo25 күн бұрын
what's really not clear in the episode is are they talking about individual or household income? individual or household wealth? that makes a huge difference.
@lauriechan296626 күн бұрын
I have $6k at 0% left owed on my mattress. Other than that, I have zero credit card debt.
@jablanguado773823 күн бұрын
Good job, get & stay on the grind!
@Johnrl2126 күн бұрын
I will argue with you guys a bit about balance transfers. I did it many years ago when I started my journey. It definitely helped. But like you say, only if the behaviors have changed.
@Casch4417 күн бұрын
All my numbers say I’m richer than everyone around me. Yet, somehow I feel like I’m the only one ever saying I cant afford things.
@onewayofliving24 күн бұрын
I'm the poorest among my closer friends. Richer than my acquaintances. I like it that way.
@Mehwhatevr23 күн бұрын
honestly. it's easier being poorer than your friends haha.
@dragoon1269mn24 күн бұрын
You should do the net worth with home equity removed
@darbyohara25 күн бұрын
23:50 “1 in 4 aren’t getting full employer match” ?! It’s more like 1 out of 2 don’t put into 401k let alone match. Every company I’ve been at the participation rate is like 45-50%
@Fushu71321 күн бұрын
I make over $100k and live in MA near Boston (an expensive area). I have 2 jobs, the 2nd adds to the previously mentioned $100k. I'm looing to buy a house in a MUCH cheaper area while working remotely. You guys are helping to keep me not only on track, but ahead of the average. And when I get to the lower cost of average area, I'm set up to already WANT to work a 2nd job (in the same industry as my current 2nd job) because that is what I'm used to. I will be ahead of the curve and following all of your advice. Thank you!!!!!
@mariquitademira65398 күн бұрын
Dang!! I was feeling really good about myself till 35 minutes into it when I saw how low my networth is compared to FMs! 😆😮
@gomerhondo724926 күн бұрын
Making $100K is not the same as it was 25 yrs ago. Min wage jobs 25 yrs ago was ~$5 per hour. Today fast food workers make +$15 per hour in CA.
@crashtestdummy197226 күн бұрын
Ok. But 100k is still a lot in the vast majority of states bro.
@ameliabaran93226 күн бұрын
$15/hr may sound like a lot for minimum wage workers (and it's much better than the $7.25/hour I was making in TN less than 10 years ago), but even someone working full time at that wage is making just over $30k before taxes. Making $100k is still a great accomplishment today, especially if you're young.
@davidmclifton125 күн бұрын
Bo is so excited
@brooksbecker29920 күн бұрын
New York City's median income is shockingly low. I think it's actually lower than the median for New York State.
@Delasoul45726 күн бұрын
What was the sample size for your survey?
@porsche930226 күн бұрын
I'm a little confused because it was also household income but they were talking about it and themselves as if it was individual like when he said he wanted to make 6 figures by his 30s and he thinks we are too based on the info. But that chart only shows dual income of 6 figures. It could be 50k a piece.
@maccrew61225 күн бұрын
Doesn’t really matter - response bias would be incredible.
@JordanSheppard-fi4po18 күн бұрын
I drove a $1,300 civic for almost 6 years now, the car is boring but, I was able to buy a fixer upper in a nice neighborhood. My house is starting to look nice, I’m making extra payments to pay it off early.
@jacobgabaldon57526 күн бұрын
People definitely lied on that survey. 24 years old and just made 140k this year but I probably know 2-3 others in our 20s breaking 100k. Live in a mid COL city.
@dobia448625 күн бұрын
Lol no ur in the extreme, 24 making 140 is rare it's probably just your peers that make u think it's common
@OGN12324 күн бұрын
Agreed. I am 29 making 130k and I feel like it's still a lot compared to most. I am quite good at budgeting so wealth has accumulated.
@jablanguado773823 күн бұрын
I don’t think people lied. You’re comparing people you see in daily life, which is the “global” selection of the population, versus a specialized portion of the population who pays attention to finances on KZbin, which will typically be above average compared to your “global” peers. I’m also in my 20’s and I’ll be comparable to the 40’s financial mutant results by the time I enter my 30’s.
@vinn77426 күн бұрын
If you were middle class most of your life but you've become rich... it's hard to fit in with the middle class because you have none of the financial issues they have and you can't really fit in with the ultra-wealthy because you are the poorest of the rich... this a net worth between 4 and 10 million. You are in this phase where you don't fit in with either group.
@crashtestdummy197226 күн бұрын
You don't need to fit in. Just enjoy your life and do you booboo.
@arh123425 күн бұрын
Keep living middle class. There's no need to discard friends - everyone has their own struggles. And bring nice food to the potlucks!
@MeltingRubberZ2825 күн бұрын
@arh1234 this. When you reach that point its time to give back, and do it with joy.
@brianharris96145 күн бұрын
Run that income survey but require verification of income and watch those numbers drop... Everyone makes "6 figures" on the internet.
@lauriechan296626 күн бұрын
I have no friends. Problem solved. 😆 The wealthier I become, the less friends I have. I'm fine with that.
@ericew25 күн бұрын
Yes, I don't have anyone that I can talk to about money anymore. Not friends, not family, ... kinda an outlier even within the mutant community. Half our siblings (wife and I ) are likely gonna work until they can't anymore and still be scraping by. Only celebrated once with my father who at least has a pension and I've added another 50% since then. I don't want to humblebrag and nobody else is in a position to really improve so I can't even get too many converts. I also feel like now that I have all the funds... I can't find anything that I want to spend it on, sure I've gotten a few "big ticket" items but most were practical items. It's silly but a nice heat-pump combo washer dryer is so nice, just throw in dirties and take out clean, dry, clothes.
@CaptainCrunch-lh3ev25 күн бұрын
Stuff isn't what motivates you, financial peace does, seek out how you can serve others, you will find a new mission, many options. You have the ability to make life long impactful change and develop others.
@goodlight411325 күн бұрын
*Looks around* I should of decided to be born with an emerald mine.
@bradleygraves591526 күн бұрын
A whole lot of averages here. I would MUCH rather see median amounts.
@vinyl1Earthlink24 күн бұрын
When you're over 70, and all your friends are even older, you find out how effective saving and investing are. We're in a HCOL area, and if you take advantage of the opportunities, you can create real wealth. Net worth of $5 million is not uncommon, and much more is certainly possible.
@TehkNinja10 күн бұрын
I save about 25% if you include retirement. I see saving money as kind of a game and it makes it more fun
@michaelc817925 күн бұрын
Man i would have loved to participate in that survey. Above average but not mutant lvl. Yet.
@nbrownchicago26 күн бұрын
I read and see all the statistics but when I drive around America more than 50% of the folks surely looks rich.
@jablanguado773823 күн бұрын
Fantastic! Now you see how few of them, based on the stats, are actually doing well financially. Now you can see how many are keeping up with the Joneses.
@bpenguin26 күн бұрын
Right when I get a pay raise I get behind the curve :D Is that normal?
@WideAwakeHuman24 күн бұрын
I make way more money than anyone in my family and all of my friends and it’s honestly weird sometimes. I don’t talk about how much I make or have but I really like doing nice things for them and helping when I can so I’m sure they know I have some disposable funds.
@isaacmetcalf126 күн бұрын
Is it just me or around 18 minutes you can hear Brian breathing in the background as boau is talking. 😂
@KayleeBee726 күн бұрын
I was looking for this comment 😂🌬
@jdp48625 күн бұрын
5:50, umm, aren't you misrepresenting your own data? You're talking like it's per person, but the graph says household income.
@wagon908225 күн бұрын
Good video
@rochellel743325 күн бұрын
Just because someone makes more money than you or has more than you, doesn't mean they're more successful than you. They may work in a more lucrative field, they may come from a family with money and someone bought their home for them or paid for their college education, but you had to take out student loans.
@Mehwhatevr23 күн бұрын
They may live in a more expensive area. my 50k/year goes much further than 100k in new york.
@lukeremsberg579626 күн бұрын
Shoutout to the cashional guard
@Paul-GrnHil24 күн бұрын
I get great comfort owning the smallest house model in my neighborhood knowing many of my neighbors are mortgaged to the hilt to live in theirs. I own my 2 nice cars rather than leasing various luxury brands.
@OBaegloich325 күн бұрын
My cashional guard is lead by General Dollar
@carolinecollins244125 күн бұрын
I'm glad to hear it isn't Major Bummer!
@pagpablo25 күн бұрын
Where is Florida on that list ?
@thegreatestpursuit25 күн бұрын
Yall are legit
@Atrus99926 күн бұрын
For us financial mutants I feel like the answer is almost always going to be yes. 😂
@Chances2923 күн бұрын
Yeah I’m probably richer than more than half of my friends. But I definitely look poor because I don’t care much for material things. I save and invest a lot to give my family a better life, not to buy a bunch of stuff.
@roburb7326 күн бұрын
They say you are who you associate with! Thankfully, our small circle is equally as wealthy as we are. We all earn similar household incomes, have similar portfolios, and are similar in that we each have a pension, or 2 or 3. Fortunately, we're a little above 4.5x the median household income. The bigger the shovel, the easier the task! We're at 25% investment rate. It would be more but with our pensions it doesn't need to be.
@FlyinFinn25 күн бұрын
30 from MA, first year making 50k. Roth 401k at 48k and my ESOP account is ~30k~. The only reason I’m doing remotely well is because I’ve been on the slow grind working at the esop factory for 10 years and investing since 21y/o
@IrisP98926 күн бұрын
We are absolutely not richer than our friends. One couple is older than us and never had to pay for their only child's 3 college degrees. Another couple had the wife's parents purchase a house for them.
@evr0.90425 күн бұрын
What degrees?
@IrisP98925 күн бұрын
@@evr0.904 All three are science degrees. Bachelors from a university that I do not remember. Masters and PHD from MIT.
@evr0.90425 күн бұрын
@IrisP989 Why not just say Ph.D? Rhetorical question btw...
@IrisP98925 күн бұрын
@@evr0.904 I can say what I want and how I want it. You are just looking to fight with a strange.. smh....
@topezrosser275920 күн бұрын
Can we do a show for I guess low earners 50-60k earners?
@tannerdriscoll669926 күн бұрын
My friends know I have money but they know I'm hoarding it in retirement accounts so I'll never touch it haha
@LeesaLilHop25 күн бұрын
I am richer than my friends. Came from nothing. Had a friend from childhood who is still struggling turn on me and tell me I changed because I invited her on a trip to Europe.
@Laz_RS22 күн бұрын
Time to update those beer cozies, $1 beers are not a thing.
@CharlesBallowe26 күн бұрын
I find some of the stats around the "56% of Americans would have a hard time coming up with $1000" to be a little off. That stat comes from a bankrate survey on emergency savings and the specific question is basically "how would you pay for a $1000 emergency" - 44% say they'd pay it out of their emergency savings. The next highest answer is "pay with a credit card and pay it off over time" at 21%. The rest are various forms of borrow the money (personal loans, friends and family) and pinching pennies in other places. Despite being perfectly comfortable, my answer would be "put it on a credit card" and make the decision when the bill is due. I also have enough that I stopped thinking about some slice of my money as being an emergency fund. My emergency fund is either $0 or decades of expenses depending on the phrasing. I doubt people like me are a huge swing in the percentages, but they might be measurable.
@jablanguado773823 күн бұрын
So.. Is your money not working for you? Is it not invested? You write as if you have no investments, because an emergency fund isn’t invested so it is immediately liquid as needed. - And having “decades” of an emergency fund wouldn’t be too smart financially in my eyes.
@CharlesBallowe23 күн бұрын
@jablanguado7738 it's invested, some is in low volatility / low risk cash like investments. I don't particularly think of any of it as "emergency fund" and in the moment of an emergency, I'm paying with a card - I'll figure out what to use to pay for it later. (With the card, I have 30 days or more to make that decision before any interest gets charged.) That might mean selling some stock/ETFs, might mean using the cash component of the portfolio, or it might mean just not spending some of my monthly budget that's allocated to "fun" (if that's not spent, it gets invested). It's not a decision that has to be made at the point of emergency and that's what the card allows.
@DiegoMejia8622 күн бұрын
If the data from the survey is accurate, good job people, but I'm skeptical people on the Internet are telling the truth. 🤞 It's accurate
@zachrowell679525 күн бұрын
29 years old, 1.2M net worth, so I’d say probably. It’s not in my nature to want to brag to them though, so I don’t feel comfortable telling them what I’m worth or asking them what they’re worth.
@td6923 күн бұрын
Nice, how’d you do that?
@jablanguado773823 күн бұрын
Congrats! I’m also curious. I’m a few years behind you.