Browsing the blog archives for November, 2008.


  • Current Stats

    Start: August 1, 2008
    Debt: $124,645.21
    Income: $108,105.76

    Now: January 10, 2009
    Debt: $115,015.58
    Income: $116,552.50

    Paid Off: $9,629.63
  • Current Target

  • Meta

Hurray for CPAs!

Personal Finance

In the past, I’ve used TurboTax for all of my tax prep needs… but most of my needs were simple and easy to handle. But a couple of years ago we changed states and my employer had issues with my pay: they paid state taxes to two states and TurboTax was ill equipped to handle this issue.

Well, this happened for two straight years. And I had a CPA completely handle my 2007 income taxes. Good thing I did. Where struggling through TurboTax had me netting about $2,500, my CPA was able to handle the two state snafu correctly and had me netting about $7,000… well worth the $485 fee!

So I decided to have him look over my 2006 taxes and work that magic again. This time around, he was able to get me $3,400 back on top of what I had already gotten from the Feds and the states. Again, totally worth his fee.

We got our check from the state department of revenue today for $3,100… the $2,900 from the amended return plus $200 in interest. And with that, Sallie Mae gets out of our lives!

Hurray for CPAs!!!

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Use a Debt Thermometer for Motivation

Motivation

Sometimes when looking at the total amount of our debt, we easily get overwhelmed. Even when we are making good progress on individual debts, it’s just not making the huge, motivating dents against the large total.

Something that my wife and I did was to create Debt Thermometers to visually track our progress.

We have one thermometer that shows our progress against our total debt and one that shows our progress against the debt at the top of our snowball:

This is a simple way to provide yourself visual proof that you are making progress against your mountain of debt.

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Dave’s Baby Steps: #0: Budget

Baby Steps

Dave doesn’t really include this as an official baby step, but it can, for a lot of people, be much more difficult to accomplish than any of the seven official baby steps.

The concept is simple: write down all of your income for the month and then start listing and subtracting your expenses until the bottom-line equals $0.00. This is called a zero-based budget.

The hard part comes in (1) prioritizing your expenses, (2) figuring out how much to assign to a category, and (3) handling variable or periodic incomes and expenses.

Prioritizing Expenses

Listening to Dave’s radio show, it shocks me to hear how many people pay their credit cards and luxury expenses before they pay their home mortgage! Talk about some screwed up priorities!

Dave tells people to place these five items at the top of their budget:

  1. Food
  2. Clothing
  3. Utilities
  4. Transportation
  5. Housing

Until those five categories are paid, no other expenses get paid.

Funding Your Categories

Another issue is knowing how much money to assign to each category. This part takes time to get right. My wife are still adjusting our budget 5 months after starting our budgeting. The easiest thing to do is to look back through your bank records and assign your transactions to categories. From there you can cut back your spending to fit your budget.

A great web site that can help with this process is Mint.com. Once you sign up for a free account and you input your bank account information, Mint will download your transaction history and categorize your transactions for you. It also has per category budgeting functions to help keep you on target. It can even send you text message alerts when you bust a budget category.

Here’s a screenshot from the Mint.com front page showing an example of how your spending is categorized and graphed:

Mint.com Graph Screenshot

Handling Variable and/or Periodic Income and Expenses

Real troubles start when you have to deal with variables of income and expenses.

I’ll be honest and tell you that I’ve never had to deal with variable income, so I can’t get personal advice on that. But, if I were in your shoes, what I would try to do is to budget based upon a minimum income. If your income is never less than $2,000 per month, then try to budget with that income by funding your expense categories based upon priority. Some items at the bottom of the budget might not get funded… but at least you have food on the table and a roof over it all. If you are lucky, though, all of your categories might end up getting funded. By doing it this way, any extra income you get that month can go straight onto your debt.

Variable expenses are much easier to deal with than variable income. There are at least two types of expenses that fall into this category and they are all handled differently.

1. Monthly expenses that vary from month to month. Utility bills, fuel costs, etc. With these items, I like to budget for an annual maximum. Then at the end of the month, any cash left in that category gets dumped straight onto debt. For example, if my electric bill comes in at $350 during the hottest month of the summer, I’ll try to budget $350 per month every month. Then, in the spring and fall when the bill probably doesn’t even break $200, that’s an extra $150 per month to throw on debt!

2. Annual or quarterly expenses. Insurance payments, property taxes, annual memberships, etc. These items, with luck, are somewhat fixed or their annual increase is predictable (3% more per year, for example). The easiest and, probably, safest way to handle these is to divide them into monthly payments and set that amount aside into a savings account each month. Then, by the time the expense is due, you have the cash sitting aside ready to go. Another way to handle these, in cases where you get additional lump sums of cash (annual bonus, commissions, etc) is to set aside the full amount when a lump sum comes in. This method is a bit more risky depending on the dependability of that extra cash flow.

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Testing 1 – 2 – 3… Is this thing on?

Communication

I just installed Twitter Tools on this thing and testing to see if it can post a tweet to my Twitter account.

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Dave Ramsey, Our Man of the Decade

Baby Steps, Dave Ramsey

Back in January, my dear wife and I were talking about our finances and the amount of debt we were in. She asked me what I thought about Dave Ramsey.

Um, who?

Dave is a personal finance guru with his own radio show that is syndicated across the country and his own show on the Fox Business Network. He’s also the author of a few books on personal finance that possess the potential to change your life like they changed ours.

In The Total Money Makeover, Dave thoroughly introduces the reader to his Baby Steps:

1. Baby Emergency Fund
2. Debt Snowball
3. Fully-Funded Emergency Fund
4. Invest 15% of income
5. Kids’ College
6. Pay off home
7. Build wealth and give!

At first, I was hesitant about Dave and what a book full of common sense ideas could do for us and our $125k worth of debt. I mean, seriously! I know that we need to stop incurring debt and put more money toward paying off debt in order to fill this hole we had dug.

Well, let me tell you, this book got through to us in ways that common sense and basic math knowledge just couldn’t. We have a plan and hope now.

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Tweet Tweet

Communication

Follow us on Twitter

I can’t promise to update Twitter as much as I should, but I’ll try to at least update my debt amount regularly.

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