Budget Breakdown (Ep. 13) Low Income Family, High Cost of Living | FrugalFitMom Podcast

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  • Опубликовано: 25 окт 2024

Комментарии • 226

  • @applesandoranges9916
    @applesandoranges9916 Год назад +71

    I would like to see an episode where Christine lets Hailey do shopping for a one person week, and see how an actual young person, starting-their-life would shop.

    • @letsgrosh
      @letsgrosh Год назад +1

      I LOVE THIS!

    • @rachelcrossen8136
      @rachelcrossen8136 Год назад

      Oh yes, that would be interesting

    • @findingaway5512
      @findingaway5512 Год назад +2

      Ooo fun. I bet her thinking process and commentary in the store would be great. 😂

  • @violetwithey4618
    @violetwithey4618 Год назад +117

    I think that part of the food budget issue is no place to store cold foods. If they don't have the storage for a week of cold foods they're always shopping for food . And that is probably causing lots of impulse purchases.

    • @pamelasanders5657
      @pamelasanders5657 Год назад +13

      Good point. Wonder if they could put a fridge/freezer in a storage shed? Long term, a solution for food storage might help. With a garden, there would be a lot of preservation too which would require storage.

    • @Hannah_MK
      @Hannah_MK Год назад +13

      Maybe doing Walmart grocery pickup instead of browsing the aisles could cut down on impulse spending in that scenario.

    • @bbfarmz3200
      @bbfarmz3200 Год назад +6

      In the past we have had a small freezer outside. No shed just out the back door. Freezer we got for free when neighbor put outside with the trash.

    • @judytieger8976
      @judytieger8976 Год назад +7

      That could very well be true about lack of cold storage. You can pick up a small chest freezer for about $150.00. Or maybe an extra small frig with a small freezer. If one is organized cold food can be organized in a small refrigerator freezer combo.

    • @angelfain8040
      @angelfain8040 Год назад +5

      I live in a tiny house and have plenty of freezer space, at least a month's worth

  • @andreawinn9420
    @andreawinn9420 Год назад +55

    As a side hustle could they rent out a portion of their land for other people to have a garden to help with their costs?

  • @alexenright1743
    @alexenright1743 Год назад +9

    OMG I love how he is talking to/about you and how he's looking at you Christine. That man is in awe and respects you so much! Keep up the great work you too :)

  • @tiffanyrobinson332
    @tiffanyrobinson332 Год назад +57

    I really, really appreciate that Dave brought up how hard it can be to learn to shop for real food and food deals, teach yourself to meal plan and cook - I didn't have any of those skills until four years ago when I started watching Christine's main channel. It's taken four years for me to feel even a little bit proficient at any of those things. My folks didn't do food that way and so it was all brand new. Even a little bit at a time, even as I have learned to do those things imperfectly, I've seen results in our nutrition and in our budget. It was/is so worth it. Thanks for all of your work and education, Christine - literally one of the best teachers I've had.

    • @JD-th6ss
      @JD-th6ss Год назад +2

      I grew up not knowing how to cook despite my mom being an excellent and frugal home chef. After having my own family, I had to learn how to cook and there was absolutely a learning curve for every element: planning, budgeting accurately, shopping efficiently, cooking well, even proper storage. If it takes chefs months of concerted effort in formal school, why would anyone be able to do this well right away? It took about 2-3 years of cooking for me to pull off delicious meals easily. Now I can whip up lots of dishes without trying because I have foundational skills, but I had to learn them as an adult! Absolutely agree that many people who already have these skills underestimate how long it takes to actually build them up.

    • @tamaraliscia3408
      @tamaraliscia3408 Год назад +1

      Good for you! The longer you cook, and the more ingredients you use, you'll become even better! But, I'm sure you're a better cook than you give yourself credit for!
      I've been cooking for 50 years and I still have "oopsies!" ... don't concern yourself with that because even chefs don't always perform to their own expectations.
      I didn't know how to cook when I left home at 20. I taught myself to cook using a Betty Crocker cookbook ... one of those that uses cream of anything soups and boxed food items. I learned what dishes were supposed to look and taste like, how to put ingredients together, and mainly how to cook. I eventually was able to learn to to scratch cook and bake, which I really enjoy. Now I cook foods specific to different countries ... all with a grocery budget, of course.

  • @roxpar1816
    @roxpar1816 Год назад +14

    On my next grocery trip I'm going to imagine Christine is walking beside me and watching me! Let's see how different things will be!

  • @TheCrossLegacy
    @TheCrossLegacy Год назад +4

    I teach produce hacks here in the PNW and had a tedtalk on food waste. Living in the Seattle area that has one of the highest grocery costs of the US I am still able to do a grocery budget of $135/person per month for an organic allergy family.

  • @greenlantern1986
    @greenlantern1986 Год назад +13

    I wish there was a conversation with the budgeters prior to the video. Having so many questions leads to way too much guessing.

  • @afcopwife
    @afcopwife Год назад +20

    After living in the PNW, their grocery budget is only slightly higher than average I’d say. Also, consider if they have any food allergies. Food allergies cost more money; typically because you’re buying alternatives or higher quality ingredients. As a food allergy sufferer, I either go without (not always great if you’re already limited on your ability to eat certain things) or pay more for the few things I can eat. We used to spend 800+ while living there.

  • @isntitlovely
    @isntitlovely Год назад +18

    One of my favorite budget date nights is a picnic at a local park! Sometimes we sit there and listen to or watch something on one of our phones, too. Still get date night with a budget that's the same as just eating at home!

    • @judytieger8976
      @judytieger8976 Год назад +3

      I was going to suggest that for this couple. A nice park with barbecue facilities in a nice setting. Just having some alone time is the goal.

  • @SharpMT
    @SharpMT Год назад +25

    I live in Salem, Oregon and I followed Jordan Page's grocery budget and including inflation, for a family of 4 just meal planning and buying sale items, you can easily budget $125 to $150 per person/per month. So around, $500 a month for a family of 4 can eat well!

    • @lindaandrews2309
      @lindaandrews2309 Год назад +2

      I live in Corvallis, Oregon and I agree with you. By the way, Idaho is considered part of the PNW! Our grocery prices are still about the same as yours, Christine. Great video!

    • @cherishrake9562
      @cherishrake9562 Год назад +1

      Single mom of three in Portland that's about how much I spend on our groceries a month.

  • @Michelle-js5kh
    @Michelle-js5kh Год назад +18

    As a person who’s lived in her 21’ travel trailer for the better part of the last 5 years, I am not shocked a lot of these families are realizing that living tiny is very hard when you have littles. Me and my partner are looking at buying one of these ill fated RV’s or tiny homes from someone who didn’t know what they were really getting into. Best of luck to them, truly!

    • @saxgunn1
      @saxgunn1 Год назад

      66yf gas seeds u opp?🎉🎉

  • @dawnwhetzel4651
    @dawnwhetzel4651 Год назад +9

    I totally agree, I bet a large part of the food budget is storage. At 250 sq ft, you have no room to store anything. And Im surprised that they are gardeners; usually food storage is high on the list, like canning, fermenting, dehydrating, freeze drying,etc. I also believe the entertainment budget is so high because there is no space for activities at home, so its just easier to go out. Invest in a few games, puzzles or outdoor activities.

  • @CookingwithSteph849
    @CookingwithSteph849 Год назад +12

    I want to say thank you to you and your family. It took a lot of discipline and I have saved so much I have actually cut my food bill for a family of 4 in the PNW to 400 a month from 1000. It really does take disapline. ❤

  • @Sher1965
    @Sher1965 Год назад +10

    I purchased a van that had a little less than 100,000 miles on her when I pregnant with my now 13 year old child. My van now has over 250,000 miles on her and is running strong. Maintenance to the vehicle is the key.

    • @dianasimplifies
      @dianasimplifies Год назад +2

      Exactly! We just fix whatever breaks and we don't sweat it. It's pretty much always going to be cheaper than a monthly payment

  • @elizabethkelly9790
    @elizabethkelly9790 Год назад

    Definitely recommend talking to friends about jobs. Our daughter was looking for a job and no one had any availability where she looked. We happened to be casually talking about it with friends and one of them said, hey, we need hostesses at our restaurant. We stopped by the next day and got her paperwork rolling. Then another friend said hey, come work with me selling ice cream so she was able to grab a few more hours. Also, a family friend asked her to pick up her younger kids from school after she started driving and take them home for a snack and homework. These would have never happened otherwise.

  • @mickalaloeffelbein4935
    @mickalaloeffelbein4935 Год назад +8

    I live in PNW, specifically western Washington. (Eastern wa is cheaper). $900 for 4 people is only slightly high. I budget diligently with $500 a month for food (no junk, all ingredients, cook from home constantly) and we are a 3 person fam. EVERYTHING here involving kids is expensive. Basic activities, clothes, school, childcare... and we buy second hand a lot for a minimalist amount of clothes and toys. Paying only $1050 for land is very cheap. Apartments in the area with only double the sqft of their tiny home is around $2000.

  • @melissachapman6213
    @melissachapman6213 Год назад +8

    Your videos on your budget meals is what has helped me and my family the most! We try not to go to the grocery store every day and we have saved some serious money shopping at our local krogers! I have a deep freeze and I use it to freeze everything possible! I have 4 kids I don't have time to be wasting food! We have spent the last year and a half getting better on our grocery shopping, planning and budgeting and I'm still learning and trying to cut cost!

  • @effrayechilde1363
    @effrayechilde1363 Год назад +5

    I live in Washington near Seattle. Very expensive. Food is usually about $900 a month for a family of five. $130 eating out equals about once or twice a month.

  • @eileenspruill6067
    @eileenspruill6067 Год назад +11

    I actually like the 'gift' budgeting because of birthday parties that the kids would probably be invited to. But if it's 80 a month, it has the opportunity to be adjusted.

  • @cameroncardner2476
    @cameroncardner2476 Год назад +6

    I live in Nevada and using some of your tips and tricks Christine I have been able to cut our food budget down from 800$ to $600 a month going with your $150 a person for a family of 4. Your advise has been so helpful . Thanks Christine

  • @oxfordcreekfarm
    @oxfordcreekfarm Год назад +2

    Would love to learn shopping tips if you want to stick to organic, non toxic foods. They’re very pricey but I’m not willing to compromise health.

  • @saeedanasir
    @saeedanasir Год назад +11

    Love these breakdowns and genuine advice that you both give. As you guys have many requests, is there a chance to have 2 Budget Breakdowns in a week??!! Thanks for all you do.

  • @autumnlove7931
    @autumnlove7931 Год назад +1

    This video is great...so many ideas to cut specific areas of a budget. And I see a nod to my favorite series, Stranger Things!

  • @kimberlywasher7759
    @kimberlywasher7759 Год назад +1

    I would totally let you follow me around while I grocery shop!!! And I’m so intrigued by this no snack lifestyle! I have been watching your frugal fit mom videos and wondered where your snacks were and this totally explains it!!! I told my kids TODAY, “no more snacks!” I am nervous and excited to learn from you!! I may have to send my budget in! This is awesome!!!

  • @bobbieseright5117
    @bobbieseright5117 Год назад +5

    My husband and I have been looking for a pickup for $20,000 for a few years. Around here they have 300,000 miles on them for that price. $35,000- $40,000 minimum for 100,000 miles

  • @laurajackson1264
    @laurajackson1264 Год назад +4

    In 2012, i had a job that paid so little that i had $20/month + $12 EBT grocery budget. Turns out, i like simple foods and i didnt go hungry. Due to health issues, my food requirements are more expensive now, but my monthly budget is about $170. Cutting the food bill can totally be done.

  • @FaithWolper
    @FaithWolper Год назад +16

    It would really helpful if you had a 30 minute conversation with family to get answers to the questions you bring up. The advice would be more helpful too.

  • @MC-fv8gs
    @MC-fv8gs Год назад +4

    If one of them works in a grocery store, they can easily get stuff on clearance. I know just from working in retail as soon as something goes on clearance everybody knows about it. And that's when you want to go punch out for lunch and get it off the clock. We always knew what is going on clearance.

  • @bbfarmz3200
    @bbfarmz3200 Год назад +3

    I so hope this family as well as others are open and receive the knowledge you are sharing and apply it to their lives !

  • @jennifereyler6182
    @jennifereyler6182 Год назад +1

    I love that you are always real. Christine, you are awesome at what you do. Hubs and I raised 3 good humans on 1 income and it was a blast. Our best work ever.

  • @erikabritton5341
    @erikabritton5341 Год назад +1

    Another possible hit to the food budget would be organic foods, as a potential homesteading family I'm sure they are prolly looking to be more organic, which costs $$.

  • @kimberlywilles8343
    @kimberlywilles8343 Год назад +1

    I always grocery shop with a budget, a food list, and calculator. I can’t go over my budget and watching the Calculator add up you actually see where you’re spending the most money. It helps open your eyes vs just grab and go grocery shopping.

  • @aprilnickels3433
    @aprilnickels3433 Год назад +6

    My brother lives in Washington state and I know when I visited him about 5 years ago the prices in the stores were about 3 times more expensive than here in Ohio. So I do know that all things in that area very expensive.

  • @heidijenkins4968
    @heidijenkins4968 Год назад

    Love this. So interesting to listen to. I was raised by a smart, frugal, budgeting set of parents, which I am so grateful for. But this made me want to see where we can cut things even more.

  • @mindylarsen3910
    @mindylarsen3910 Год назад +18

    I don't know the laws of the area, but wonder if they could rent out some of their land to another tiny house owner.

  • @paulacostello6912
    @paulacostello6912 Год назад +2

    You should link that video you did about all the tips to have the lowest grocery bills. I know you talk about it a lot, but there was one FFM video that really encapsulated it all. Best i've ever seen.

  • @terrahhall8789
    @terrahhall8789 Год назад

    Christine you and I think alike. Love this new channel.

  • @unouluvem95
    @unouluvem95 8 месяцев назад

    Dave does have a point!! Minute 16 when is says you have the discipline to do it. Some people are really out there and now not is hard.

  • @brentderksen
    @brentderksen Год назад +2

    In my brain I see Christine slapping my hand as I reach for the reese! That would be so fun to have her shop with me... too bad I live up in Canada.

  • @Budgetingflamingo
    @Budgetingflamingo Год назад +4

    I would earn extra money on the homestead by renting out some of the land for other tiny houses or RVs. You would need to figure out the electrical situation but if you add two or three other families (and it can be away from your section of the land) you can easily add $600-750 each rental. I would also side hustle something either from the homestead (like a flower garden or goat soap), or get a second job. I work at a gym for $11 an hour (super low, I know) and take home an extra $800 a month. All goes towards my extra car payment. With two of them side hustling, they can make extra money to find those goals. Short term sacrifices.

  • @dianasimplifies
    @dianasimplifies Год назад +4

    So for some of us our food budget is like your Pelaton/exercise/hiking/biking budget. Once you eat grass fed beef and organic chicken one time, you will never go back to the conventional sale meat at your local grocery! It's spongy and gross IMO. That's prob not where their money is going but just in general after watching a lot of your videos and you stating that conventional food is the same I can tell you 100% it isn't. Conventional bananas make me very ill. Organic bananas don't make me feel that way. There is a def difference in quality and my health. I've seen many comments on some of your videos where people said they were allergic to what is put on conventional produce. Having said all that my food budget isn't actually that much higher than it used to be and I'm very willing to cut in other areas of my life. We don't do any streaming services and we drive extremely old cars with almost 300,000 miles. We keep our bills as low as possible and we have no debt. House has been paid off for years. ❤❤❤

  • @sheila3936
    @sheila3936 Год назад +2

    What even is allowance/spending when there are already other categories like eating out, entertainment, subscriptions, household misc, gaming, two gift lines, vacation, etc.? Perhaps cash that wasn’t tracked?

  • @OneMamaToAnother
    @OneMamaToAnother Год назад +2

    Gifts might be for their kids to take to parties. Victoria Island is the Arctic.... you mean Vancouver Island. Which BTW is a place your family would absolutely love! Beach, mountains, surfing, trails- it is heaven.

  • @sheilak1844
    @sheilak1844 Год назад +3

    Fun compensates for the tiny house. You need a relief valve

  • @kimrhodes378
    @kimrhodes378 Год назад +16

    I wonder how much of the food and eating out budget is because they are working too many hours and don't have time or bandwidth to cook from scratch. Working less hours might actually save them money.

    • @berrypatch5583
      @berrypatch5583 Год назад +1

      They would qualify for food stamps.

    • @dianasimplifies
      @dianasimplifies Год назад +3

      @@berrypatch5583they would not qualify for food stamps with the amount of money they are making. She keeps saying it's not much money. It actually is. I've been married 31 years and we have never made that much.

  • @mommamoore
    @mommamoore Год назад

    great idea for Christine to shop and help people learn new ways to shop!!! i would love watching that to learn from her!!!!!!

  • @melissahowell8363
    @melissahowell8363 Год назад +7

    Pick me pick me! Im in Northern Utah, an hour south of the Idaho border and would love to have you teach me how to make better choices at the grocery store. We are a family of 5 with a 14 yo, a 10yo and a 2yo.

  • @sarahhayes317
    @sarahhayes317 Год назад +2

    I'll throw a point out because I'm a homesteader. Homesteaders lean towards very natural foods. Grass fed beef, locally sourced meat, organic everything. The price tag is much higher to eat this way. I grow my own pork and chicken and it's way more expensive. I live in Oregon so I get it. Also they lack potentially storage for bulk shopping or stacking up. I cook all our meals from scratch and with my family of 7 our budget is significantly higher than there's.

    • @tamaraliscia3408
      @tamaraliscia3408 Год назад

      That was my assumption, too. Their problem is, they have a money problem, as in, not enough to sustain that lifestyle and to save to build. Some things need to change so they can reach their goals.

  • @daniellecomeau2996
    @daniellecomeau2996 Год назад

    Dedicating a bin in the refrigerator to foods that need to be eaten/close to date really helps with meal prep and cuts down on food waste.

  • @ashleyjohnson6647
    @ashleyjohnson6647 Год назад +2

    I spend approx $400 a month for a family of 4 (kids 11 and 13) on groceries and household items in IL, I looked up Walmart prices in Seattle and basics were the same exact price as mine. I shop once a month, mostly Walmart pickup, some from Sam’s Club and a small amount from Aldi. We do get some convenience food and snacks. On our extra check months we spend about $100 more on meat to freeze.

  • @TeacherMomBudgets
    @TeacherMomBudgets Год назад +2

    Love these budget videos! Another great one here!
    The Stranger Things drawing is the best…couldn’t help but catch that in the background! 😊

  • @territ.2741
    @territ.2741 Год назад +1

    I was thinking the same thing as another poster about renting their land to others with tiny homes. Also in the summer possibly either growing a larger garden and selling at a Farmer's Market or renting out land for others to garden that can't because they live in an apartment, etc. Another idea would be to pay more each month for their land to save on interest and pay the loan off sooner.

  • @leepayk-bann3489
    @leepayk-bann3489 Год назад

    I am from Australia even though there are big differences between how we do retirement we call it Superannuation paid by our employer and college(University) funding is kind of similar but we get loans to study from the Government your ideas about handling debt and living within your means are very helpful. I love the advice you give it helps me as a viewer too. Thankyou.

  • @joanscott7209
    @joanscott7209 Год назад

    I love this video! Gifts other than birthday or Christmas = graduation, memorial, anniversary, GoFundMe,

  • @tamaraliscia3408
    @tamaraliscia3408 Год назад

    Maybe they can build a shed (insulated) to put a washer and dryer in so they're not taking laundry out? And put a small freezer in there.

  • @Julie-gz2lx
    @Julie-gz2lx Год назад +1

    If they live in the PNW, shop at Winco!
    I live in Portland Oregon and shop almost exclusively there. It’s employee owned and generally their prices can’t be beat

  • @thriftgirlshopper
    @thriftgirlshopper Год назад

    I also have gifts and birthdays separate on my budget. ‘Gifts’ are for people outside my immediate family. This includes weddings and baby showers for me.

  • @bbfarmz3200
    @bbfarmz3200 Год назад +1

    I have always shopped the sales and made meals accordingly. I had a friend who made her meal planning and the shopped… her bill was astronomical. She just would not change her ways and they had such difficulty making ends meet. We ate well meal planning and sales. Getting up early to hit those mark down sales was fun by we were able to eat well for so much less money

  • @valeried2941
    @valeried2941 Год назад

    You are AMAZING! I live for your grocery haul and budget videos!

  • @mandy3486
    @mandy3486 Год назад +1

    So excited for a new budget breakdown!!! Thanks Christine!

  • @sarahfrazer8709
    @sarahfrazer8709 Год назад +1

    We live in oregon and things are outrageous compared to where family lives in Missouri. We pay triple here in Oregon.

  • @OurHilltopHomestead
    @OurHilltopHomestead Год назад +3

    My grocery and household budget when we first were married was &20-$25 a week and every week I knew that I would but the pack of toilet paper for $1.00. I had no clue what I was doing and had to walk around the store with a calculator. This was in 2008 btw!!!

  • @AnnemarieHuffman
    @AnnemarieHuffman Год назад

    I live in Washington near Bellingham area.We have a family of 5, 3 boys, the youngest being 16 years old. We spent 1200 on groceries last month, that does include dog food and paper products. We do shop Fred Meyer sales and some Costco products that we also look for sales in. It is an expensive area, but beautiful.

  • @findingaway5512
    @findingaway5512 Год назад

    We would always do state campgrounds and long road trips as a kid. I remember we would pass KOAs and beg to go there. It was the epitome of luxury as a kid. I think we only went there one time and my dad wasn't happy about it. 😂

  • @jessicavanderhyde3997
    @jessicavanderhyde3997 Год назад +3

    I love these, but i wish you asked them more details before breaking it down. Like, what does electronics mean? Could you ask that before the podcast?

  • @OurHilltopHomestead
    @OurHilltopHomestead Год назад +2

    CAN YOU DO A VIDEO WITH SCENARIOS FOR IRAs???!!! That would help to understand how to start one, how much to put in them, only put I. A small amount etc! I’ve listened to other channels, read books. I really need to ask but I don’t even know where to start with that!

    • @KO-lw4lo
      @KO-lw4lo Год назад

      1. Figure out if you want a Roth (no tax savings now but tax free taking out) or traditional (tax break now). 2. Go to a low cost brokerage (Vanguard or Fidelity). 3. Set up an account ( this will be like having your shopping cart)4. Then figure out what to put in there. There are tons of choices from mutual funds to individual stocks.

  • @moneywithjustliving5258
    @moneywithjustliving5258 Год назад

    New Subscriber here. You have an awesome channel. Thank you for sharing.

  • @lauranewman564
    @lauranewman564 Год назад

    I love these!!

  • @Kim-cy3fd
    @Kim-cy3fd Год назад +1

    Great video you guys! I found it very helpful to see your process, thank you 😊

  • @joaniecarothers9352
    @joaniecarothers9352 Год назад

    Come down to my place and shop with me!!! I shop a half an hour from St. George in Nevada. Spent $178 at Walmart yesterday and about fainted!!! Probably will last for two weeks. Only “luxury” items were seltzer water and gluten free cookies for my daughter. Love your videos!!!

  • @cassidiroberts6473
    @cassidiroberts6473 Год назад +1

    Born and raised in Washington. Family of 3 and Fred’s was the place I shopped. There and winco. $200 a month easily.

  • @heidiann8743
    @heidiann8743 Год назад +1

    A house solution could be to buy a single wide trailer home and sell their tiny home. This could give them more space in the short term until they can build their home.

  • @heathersmeather
    @heathersmeather Год назад +1

    😆 I will volunteer my husband to go shopping with Christine. He always comes home with convenience foods and snacks. AND I would be embarrassed if Christine had to knock Dr Pepper out of my hands. However, we live in the salt lake valley. We are tentatively planning a visit to Idaho and Yellowstone in July, but that would be vacation shopping…hm. We buy a lot of snacks and convenience on vacations.

    • @brandyweidner602
      @brandyweidner602 Год назад

      Your not alone ,, I can't shop with mine ,, I go alone

  • @heatherkufner3879
    @heatherkufner3879 Год назад +2

    Hi, love your videos! I am all about staying fit and researching to find the best deals! I have a family of 5 and I am doing a new budget redo. I usually can keep the grocery budget at $625-700 which includes household. It gets a little over when I buy protein bars and protein/collegan powders. I noticed those are not included on your grocery hauls. Do you include that in a health budget?? Really trying to find anywhere to cut $ the variable expenses here.

  • @bbfarmz3200
    @bbfarmz3200 Год назад

    They have land…are they utilizing for food? We live in an apartment and grow our own produce in an indoor greenhouse. They could have chickens and grow fruit\veggies.. may be able to have an exemption for taxes .. need to look into requirements for that state. Incorporate what you have noted and wow.. so many ways to save money!!!

  • @courtneymillerbruce2255
    @courtneymillerbruce2255 Год назад

    Christine, I know you are debt free/mortgage free.....I'm 32yr old female. I would love to see a video about what to do once you are completely debt free. I feel lost now that I've just recently paid off my home. What do I do with my freed up income without wasting/blowing it??

  • @stevehartman1730
    @stevehartman1730 Год назад

    Put REFLECTIX on interior of exterior walls snd ceilings. Warmer n winter n cooler n hot weather. Put BUBBLE WRAP on inside of windows. Tougher n can be reused for years cuts heat bill.

  • @luciaabbaticchio1500
    @luciaabbaticchio1500 Год назад

    Come to NY...I'd love to see how you'd do a grocery budget for me. ;)

  • @fourdayhomestead2839
    @fourdayhomestead2839 Год назад

    Things to consider with a side job: does income justify childcare, time, added gas/expenses/on the go food.

  • @jillgott6567
    @jillgott6567 Год назад

    I agree
    a) cut gifts save $81/ month
    b) food to $415 save $500
    c) eating out to $ 65 save $ 68
    d) vacation cut to $200 save $153
    e) clothing cut to $100 save $16
    f) turn off television unless special show and cuts electric bill.
    g) home maintenance cut to $160 save $84
    h) cut allowances to $40 save $59
    i) laundry check into setting up a washer and a clothesline to dry overtime they will save $
    Save $961+ / month. ♥ this series Really makes me think

  • @servantwarrior880
    @servantwarrior880 Год назад +2

    We spend more on food for seven people a month than anything else in our budget. We eat all organic real whole food. This is a priority to us so we budget accordingly.

  • @angiebrowere5124
    @angiebrowere5124 Год назад

    ❤ hi guys 😊 you are awesome thanks for your content and experience ❤😊

  • @Coco_Welly
    @Coco_Welly Год назад

    Love this, you are a great team #thinkingcap ❤

  • @Karisa1316
    @Karisa1316 Год назад +2

    That’s not a high grocery bill for family of 4, where I live in the PNW. I’d call that average to slightly low. Unfortunately, I live in a big city in Oregon though. Everything is mega expensive here. It’s near impossible to shop on a budget. Food rarely gets marked down here and our grocery sales ads are terrible. Rarely is there a good sale anymore, even at Fred Meyer. There were lots of deals and sales to be had on groceries before 2020. Not now. There’s absolutely no way I could feed my family on $150 a person here.

  • @aliciaamond8148
    @aliciaamond8148 Год назад

    I can understand location, speciality diets (GF or Dairy Free or Nut Free or keto). Personally, I would cut on Entertainment, electronics, gifts, clothes, bday, Xmas, vacation, camps. Even if it's by half on each of those. Plus, learn to shop sales and deals! Coupons, Honey (or Honey Gold) etc., Rakuten, iBotta, fetch rewards etc.

  • @geniej2378
    @geniej2378 Год назад

    First time viewer, really wish the audio was podcast quality. You could get a couple of lapel mics (since you keep looking back at the whiteboard).

  • @iluvtwbf
    @iluvtwbf Год назад +1

    Audio is on point!

  • @AndreaRuralMN
    @AndreaRuralMN Год назад

    I just fugured out my 3 month grocery average including meat stockup that will last months and its $360 for 2 adults 1 teen. USDA says that's thrifty, lowest category. I see Dave's point that some people are just used to putting in the work to save money. I just made 8 breakfast burritos for half the cost (and triple the protein) than premade ones. This week I'll be making more frozen pizzas, again, half the cost or more.

  • @GaryAndHeatherBush
    @GaryAndHeatherBush Год назад

    They don’t have e room for anything from Costco. Gifts might be gifts for others - grandparents, friends parties etc.
    Do you have a general grocery number per person in your mind that you would recommend ?

  • @jillkennedy6993
    @jillkennedy6993 Год назад +3

    Im not sure what kids you raised haha but ours are 8-10-12 and man it is pricy lol
    The sports alone in our house for 3 kids is prob close to 7000 a year. We prioritize this and have the money for it but it is far from cheap

  • @sherryr1222
    @sherryr1222 Год назад +1

    Summer camps aka childcare while working full time runs $350-$550 a week where we are. And the cheap ones always fill up. 9 x $425~/12 = $318/month. Per child (west coast).

    • @sheila3936
      @sheila3936 Год назад +2

      Hopefully they can cut that line item soon as the kids are 11 and 8. Put the 11 year old in babysitting and first aid courses and a home alone preparedness for the youngest. Also, parents should try to schedule as much vacation time as possible around non-school weeks to cut back on required child care. Parents might even take separate weeks if needed.

  • @danaa6283
    @danaa6283 Год назад

    I live in the PNW-While expenses can be higher income is also higher. They need better jobs for certain and they need to rework their budget immediately. With what they are paying for food and dinning out I could feed 10 people for the month, and remember I live here.

  • @brielambley3466
    @brielambley3466 Год назад

    For the really high food budget is it possible with both parents working full time they are buying a lot of convenience and pre cooked meals because they are just too tired at the end of the day to cook dinner? If they spend $30 a day on convenience foods eg a roast chicken with salad and drinks that would be $900 a month. And it would be really easy if you work in a grocery store to just buy something pre-made at the end of your shift for dinner especially if you get a staff discount. Maybe meal planning plus having easy to prepare meals like pasta and sauce or sheet pan meals would help?

  • @tammys5687
    @tammys5687 Год назад +2

    My parents live across the country and they have visited us exactly 0 times in the last 10 years.

  • @sharenread8677
    @sharenread8677 Год назад

    If the kids are 11+8- the parents could implicate chores for the kids.
    Hang wet clothes on line,or fence. Shop the pantry and fridge,bring lunches and bug spray and lotion and picnic. Cheaper.
    Sharen
    We use to do our long trips every 2 nd year.

  • @kellyekart4190
    @kellyekart4190 Год назад

    If they already own a substantial amount of land and live in a tiny home friendly area they could rent a portion of it to someone else with a tiny home and depending on market rates that rent could easily be 50 to 100% of their housing costs. Because they own the land and live on it themselves, they can hand pick the people so they know they are compatible and share values. Just make sure to check code and write a solid rental agreement and plan for the temporary loss of income when people inevitably move.

  • @sherylsteele7523
    @sherylsteele7523 Год назад +4

    What about renting some of their land for other tiny homes on their lot? Could be a great way to make passive income.

  • @laurencowles1232
    @laurencowles1232 Год назад +1

    Hi Christine! I have loved your main channel and podcast for financial guidance. My husband and I followed the baby steps and are debt free and just bought a house. I know the rule of thumb is 1-3% of the value of your home should be budgeted for yearly maintenance. However, is it ok to use this for cosmetic updates or should this only be for things that are broken and need fixed/replaced? Thank you for any advice!

  • @heiditonseth7788
    @heiditonseth7788 Год назад

    I am in the Pacific Northwest. I feed anywhere from 8-10 people daily (ages 7-60). I spend $800-900 monthly on food.