4 points

Has anyone here chosen to make a significant / sudden change to their savings rate at some point in their life? If so, what was the story behind it?

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3 points
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We’ve done it twice. The first time was probably the most common and boring story— we bought a house. It was planned and we’d been intentionally living cheaply to save up.

The second was when my wife stopped working. This was during Covid when all the return to office stuff started and we’d just had our first kid. Now we’ve got two and she’s (mostly) a stay at home parent with a passion/hobby business.

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3 points

What brokerage/banks account do you guys use? I have a couple of banks credit cards I use. Would be like to consolidate.

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2 points

I use vanguard for brokerage (recently switched for TD ameritrade though)

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3 points

Vanguard for brokerage and Chase for banking.

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3 points

I have Fidelity and Vanguard for my brokerage. I use a local credit union for my banking.

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2 points

Nothing I’d recommend. I use Betterment for my brokerage but only because having a managed account exempts me from some employer imposed holding requirements.

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1 point

Weird, I couldn’t see last week’s post until today.

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2 points

I’m guessing it’s federation related? I frequently see comments, replies, or new posts pop up long after they were “created”. The lemmy experience is far from smooth right now.

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3 points

Weekly question:

For those with kids, what are your plans for college? How does it factor into your retirement plans?

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2 points

I should hit my fire number their senior year of highschool. If they receive scholarships, I will probably do “one more year” just in case. If they need help, I may move back my retirement date more. But it all depends on how hard they tried in highschool. If they are a C student, I would encourage them to join a community college or a technical school that matches their passions.

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1 point

We’re working on front loading 529’s. The goal is to have enough in each to cover four years at a good in state university plus some buffer. Obviously they might literally do something different but it feels like a good baseline. Finishing this front loading is one of the items on our pre-FIRE checklist as the plan is to pull the trigger long before they’ll go off to college.

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2 points

No kids yet, but assuming I do eventually:

My parents paid for my education costs almost entirely (except for books/supplies). I would want to do the same for my kids, because it gave me much more flexibility in starting my career. They were of the belief that you shouldn’t start your adult life in debt, and I frankly agree.

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