Comment on Melbourne Chit-Chat Thread đ«šđ«„đ¶âđ«ïž - Saturday, 7 December, 2024
melbaboutown@aussie.zone âš2â© âšweeksâ© agoThis is so good!
The way I save is by having an auto deposit into a separate âhigh interestâ account every time I get paid, as modest amounts stack up and not seeing that money means it isnât missed.
Baku@aussie.zone âš2â© âšweeksâ© ago
I have a bit of a cheeky saving strategy - I pay 25% into tax, but donât actually have enough money to need to pay tax. Itâs kinda like an interest free, automatic, recurring, term deposit
I was actually meant to open a fixed term at tax return time, but thatâs when all the bads were happening, so I was kinda stressed (and a bit depressed), and through a series of very poor financial decisions, wasted the majority of it. Itâs all worked out in the end, though. I timed it so the TD will end around tax return time, so I can lump that in with it and reinvest
melbaboutown@aussie.zone âš2â© âšweeksâ© ago
All things considered youâre doing well. I struggled to manage money when I was younger and then learned
Baku@aussie.zone âš2â© âšweeksâ© ago
Thanks.! My biggest trouble is being uncomfortable having money. Always grew up worrying about it, and then being worried itâd get stolen, so now if I have money I go into how fast can I spend this mode. Thatâs why Iâm so fond of these fixed terms and things like voluntary tax deductions
Should probably figure out how to fix that. Oh well. Iâm sure Iâll work it out one day
dumblederp@aussie.zone âš2â© âšweeksâ© ago
I grew up with similar. It wasnât until Iâd saved my first $1000 that the rest sort of came easily. But I also needed to be in a position in life where I was earning enough and being frugal for that to happen.
Alamutjones@aussie.zone âš2â© âšweeksâ© ago
Oh, Iâm the same. My financial brain is in two halves - half of me KNOWS I have a safety net now, but the other half is driving and that half is used to being poor as shit.
My safety net is real, but doesnât feel real
RustyRaven@aussie.zone âš2â© âšweeksâ© ago
You probably chose the âdo not claim the tax free thresholdâ option on the intitial paperwork. I did that when I first started working - I didnât know what it was, so figured I shouldnât claim it. It did lead to some lovely tax returns until I told payroll to change it, but these days with high interest in bank accounts available it is not such a good strategy.
I use automatic payments to divide my pay up into a bunch of different accounts, so the money that I have available to spend is separate from the money put aside for bills or savings goals. Having everything divided up into smaller amounts earmarked for specific spending makes me much less likely to spend it on something less important than having it all in one place.