• partial_accumen
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      114 days ago

      First, thank you for pointing out I made a mistake. I didn’t see the calculator broke it into twice a month paychecks.

      Take home for one month for $160k/year would be: $8,784

      I’ll correct my post, but $160k/year is still way too low to meet your “That much per person would give any household a very comfortable lifestyle even in a HCOL area.”

      • @SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        You’re taking out too much tax. Closer to $9,300.

        A household of two adults would have $320k gross annually, so twice that.

        Also, I’m comfortably supporting two adults in a HCOL area, with a mortgage and high medical bills, for under $125k annually.

        • partial_accumen
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          94 days ago

          A household of two adults would have $320k gross annually, so twice that.

          You don’t think that’s moving the goalpost just a bit by doubling the number of earners?

          Also, I’m comfortably supporting two adults in a HCOL area, with a mortgage and high medical bills, for under $125k annually.

          I’d be interested to hear how you’re accomplishing that. At a minimum, can I ask what your housing costs are?

          • @SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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            -44 days ago

            I changed nothing about my original comment. I said per person, not household.

            Mortgage payment is currently $5,500 / mo. Note that this is not an income of $125k annually, but net expenses as recorded over the past few years.

            • partial_accumen
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              24 days ago

              I changed nothing about my original comment. I said per person, not household.

              *Single people need not apply

            • @tomkatt@lemmy.world
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              64 days ago

              Because you can’t work forever. Burnout, aging, illness, etc. Life happens. Or do you plan to live paycheck to paycheck into your 70s?

              • @SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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                -24 days ago

                Again, that’s separate from living expenses. In my personal example, I am maxing out my retirement accounts, but those amounts are not counted as part of my family’s annual cost of living.

            • @naught@sh.itjust.works
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              34 days ago

              I’m just thinking about the “take home” figure! 160k doesn’t stretch as far as I thought it did when I was a kid

              • @tomkatt@lemmy.world
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                4 days ago

                I thought $40k was more than enough when I was a kid. But that was when you could buy a house for $30k to $50k. By the time I hit my 20s, inflation already had homes at closer to $100k, and the cost of everything much higher than when I was a kid.

                When I was growing up I didn’t know anyone making more than $50k, most made less, and they were doing fine, owning homes, etc. $160k was wealthy.

        • partial_accumen
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          04 days ago

          You’re taking out too much tax. Closer to $9,300.

          [Citation needed]

          I cited my source for the taxation in my post above as well as the rate. Feel free to cite yours for discussion.