The ability to save
- FrankN
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- Breakinger
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FrankN wrote: Paying yourself first and opening a separate account can be a great way to help save. My wife just did this and every paycheck she receives, she automatically puts 5% into her savings account. That way you never see it and over time this will grow.
This is something that I remember my mom doing when I was growing up. She would have so much money taken out of her check each time she got paid and that way they always had money in their savings account for emergencies. I think it's better to do it this way because you don't miss that money.
- FrugalFran
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- FrankN
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- Wanderer
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- smcc811
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- Medi
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I admit that I kind of forcing myself to save, otherwise I can always find reasons to use it elsewhere. It can be frustrating at times, true. Do you live with someone else? Maybe you can review the financial plan together so everyone can save more.amieestahl wrote: I find it nearly impossible to save money. Whenever things look optimistic it kind of slides downhill. I finally opened a separate account, specifically for saving. I'm really hoping that I can slowly build it up.
- FrankN
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- amieestahl
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- FrugalFran
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- Wanderer
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- FrugalFran
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Curry wrote:
FrugalFran wrote: Wanderer, are the Rural Development Loans only applicable when buying an existing house or can it be used to buy raw land as well? I'd be interested in looking into that, but we're looking to buy land and then build a house on it.
I don't think that is what those loans are set up to do. Buying empty land is dirt cheap (excuse the play on words), but building your own home and taking care of all the peripherals involved with that is not. If you can afford to build your own and pay for the structures needed to make the house functional, you have the money to buy land. That's their reasoning.
Thanks, Curry, that's pretty much what I was thinking. We do have the money to make it happen, but I was thinking more along the lines of maybe getting a better rate with a RDL. We're looking in a very rural area with an extremely low population, so I was just curious if it would be feasible, but I agree with you that's it's probably not an option.
- Curry
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FrugalFran wrote: Wanderer, are the Rural Development Loans only applicable when buying an existing house or can it be used to buy raw land as well? I'd be interested in looking into that, but we're looking to buy land and then build a house on it.
I don't think that is what those loans are set up to do. Buying empty land is dirt cheap (excuse the play on words), but building your own home and taking care of all the peripherals involved with that is not. If you can afford to build your own and pay for the structures needed to make the house functional, you have the money to buy land. That's their reasoning.
- Wanderer
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- FrugalFran
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