For those of us making $30,000 or so a year thats roughly what the average American pulls in annually reaching the millionaires club seems like a long pipe dream. Student loans, credit card bills, and ordinary expenses (from groceries to phone bills) can get in the way of amassing any serious bank. Emron Andrew, coauthor of Millionaire by Thirty, started out with a $30K salary. Now hes pulling in a seven-figure income. Howd he do it? Here are a few insider tips.
Stop trying to live like your parents
living like your parents, large house, saving, money, job
stop trying to live like your parents
The primary danger for 20-somethings striking out on their own is trying to maintain the life they were accustomed to at home. This despite the fact that their parents spent years, decades even, working to achieve their lifestyles. At your age, they were probably scrimping and sweating building their careers with sweat and smarts. Now its your turn.
Analyze your budget
budgets, expenses, spending
receipts and checks
Youve got to get real about your spending habits. The authors recommend withdrawing 80 percent of your take-home pay for three months and dividing it into envelopes marked long-term savings, short-term savings, rent, clothing allowance, food, cable bills, partying, etc. Thats a concrete method for truly absorbing which expenses are necessary and which youre frittering away.
Get the millionaire mind-set
invest, save, money, cash, investment, stocks, rich, pay
model with a cash register
So many people are always on a constant, seemingly never-ending quest to get out of debt, says Emron. I stopped thinking solely about paying back banks and credit cards and started paying myself first. He recommends tucking away 20 percent of every dollar earned. Dont blow that cash at the Sephora counter. It should be stocked away in savings or an investment plan.
Pay off student loans slowly
saving money, piggy bank, pay loans, pay bills
pay off student loans slowly
Its contrary to what youve heard, but Emron says its exactly what helped him make more money in the long run. Since the interest rate on student loans is typically low, he recommends only paying the minimum and using the extra money to earn interest at a higher rate.
Renting is a big waste of money
renting, buying, housing, market
new york city skyline
Stop renting. The money is going nowhere, advises Douglas. Its only benefiting your landlord. Not you. The mortgage on Emrons first house was actually less than his rent. Buying your first home is a huge commitment. But real estate has, generally speaking, proven a reliable financial asset that appreciates over time. (Were talking long term here.) If youve got good credit, the current woes in the housing market could be a windfall for you. Start bargain hunting.
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