"I was able to move back in with my parents in Milwaukee, which has helped decrease my living costs significantly. My parents don't charge me for rent or groceries I'm also able to stay on my family's phone plan. Living with such minimal expenses is something I won't have the luxury of doing again, and I wanted to seize the opportunity."
"Right now, I'm making around $2,500 a month after taxes 40% of that is directly deposited into a high-yield savings account, and another 20% goes toward my student loans, of which I have $30,000 left to pay. I put $300 in my Roth IRA, $100 into an emergency fund, and $100 toward investments in my Robinhood account. I invest in some ETFs, fashion stocks, health and tech companies, and silver and gold."
"This leaves me with around $500 left over a month, some of which I deposit into a savings account specifically for travel. The rest is what I like to call my "fun money." My "fun money" is for discretionary spending and miscellaneous expenses. From eating out with friends to gas money and subscriptions, I set aside around $100 a week for "fun" purchas"
Hannah Kennedy moved back in with her parents in Milwaukee and pays no rent or groceries while remaining on the family phone plan. She earns about $2,500 per month after taxes from remote social media work. She allocates 40% of income to a high-yield savings account, 20% to student loans (about $30,000 remaining), $300 monthly to a Roth IRA, $100 to an emergency fund, and $100 to investments via Robinhood in ETFs, stocks, and precious metals. She saves roughly $500 monthly for travel and discretionary "fun money," budgeting about $100 per week for personal spending.
Read at Business Insider
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