When I tell people I'm a Retirement Specialist with ValuTeachers, they want to know for themselves how do I fund my own retirement, "I have high credit card debt", "I want to buy a house", "I want to pay for my kids College education", etc. My thought is why can't you do both: Fund your Retirement and your other obligations/hobbies at the same time.
EMERGENCY FUND: This is an area I need to improve on. You need to have 6 months to a year worth of monthly expenses in your Emergency fund. I have used my emergency fund to pay for unexpected expenses (car maintenance, health expense, etc). You can still do both: Fund your Retirement and your Emergency Fund.
DEBT PAYMENT: In 2009 I was in a car accident. Thus, I had to make car payments again. I bought a used car. With this new payment I wasn't able to finance my Roth Account to the max or fund my emergency account at the level I felt comfortable with. However, I still made it a priority to pay off my credit card balance each month. If I'm not able to pay off the full balance, I pay at least half of what I placed onto the card that month. I use Reward Cards so I get cash back or can redeem the rewards for Gift cards(great to redeem as a Birthday and Anniversary gifts). I still fund my retirement and pay down my debt.
The point is even if you have a hobby (in my case travel), funding an emergency account, and/or paying your credit cards, you still need to fund your retirement account. The standard amount to save is 15% of your gross pay. I looked at my gross pay the other day, took 15%, and it gave me an amount I should be investing. I looked at the actual figures and I was paying $5 more than I should. I was investing 7% into my State retirement fund, $100 into a 403b(LSW/National Life Group), $100 into a Roth 403b(LSW/National Life Group), and $25 into a Roth IRA with Edward Jones Investment.
You can do this. Go ahead and invest in your retirement. Whether you are in the education profession/non-profit sector or not remember to invest first in your State Retirement and then other supplemental places (Roth IRA, Traditional IRA, 401k, 403b, Roth 403b).
Rhonda W.
The Trevi Fountain in Rome, Italy. Personal photo from Rhonda W.
TRAVEL: I love to travel and give it priority in my life. You learn so much from travel. My twin sister Sharee recently shared our love of travel on the Holstee Manifesto page. Prior to 2009 I didn't have a car payment so I saved what I used to spend on car payments to fund my retirement by maxing out my Roth Account ($5,000). My income in Education was not very high so I supplemented my income with various part time jobs (SAT proctoring, working football games, concert events, family shows, etc). Many people saw me at so many places they wondered when I sleep. I make it a priority to not only fund my retirement, but also Travel.
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EMERGENCY FUND: This is an area I need to improve on. You need to have 6 months to a year worth of monthly expenses in your Emergency fund. I have used my emergency fund to pay for unexpected expenses (car maintenance, health expense, etc). You can still do both: Fund your Retirement and your Emergency Fund.
DEBT PAYMENT: In 2009 I was in a car accident. Thus, I had to make car payments again. I bought a used car. With this new payment I wasn't able to finance my Roth Account to the max or fund my emergency account at the level I felt comfortable with. However, I still made it a priority to pay off my credit card balance each month. If I'm not able to pay off the full balance, I pay at least half of what I placed onto the card that month. I use Reward Cards so I get cash back or can redeem the rewards for Gift cards(great to redeem as a Birthday and Anniversary gifts). I still fund my retirement and pay down my debt.
The point is even if you have a hobby (in my case travel), funding an emergency account, and/or paying your credit cards, you still need to fund your retirement account. The standard amount to save is 15% of your gross pay. I looked at my gross pay the other day, took 15%, and it gave me an amount I should be investing. I looked at the actual figures and I was paying $5 more than I should. I was investing 7% into my State retirement fund, $100 into a 403b(LSW/National Life Group), $100 into a Roth 403b(LSW/National Life Group), and $25 into a Roth IRA with Edward Jones Investment.
You can do this. Go ahead and invest in your retirement. Whether you are in the education profession/non-profit sector or not remember to invest first in your State Retirement and then other supplemental places (Roth IRA, Traditional IRA, 401k, 403b, Roth 403b).
Rhonda W.
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