FelixDeCat
Lifer
this.
i would like to know if anybody ever turned down a 100k job because it was too low.
*raises hand*
edit: Oh, I thought you said $10,000 job.
this.
i would like to know if anybody ever turned down a 100k job because it was too low.
it depends how much of your life you gave up to get there and how hard you have to work for it
Where in NYC? My friend just moved there and paying $2.8k for a 600 sqft apt in Chelsea.
I live near the Twin Cities and $100k can support a family of four.
If you're the type of person that has to have car loans and CC debt up the ass, then, no, you probably won't find $100k is enough.
$100k is still a very good salary but not the "OMFG you make $100k" like it was 10+ years ago.
EDIT:
According to Paycheckcity.com, $100k/year in Minnesota with 4 allowances (family of 4), 10% saved for 401k, $250 per paycheck for health insurance, gives one a 2 week paycheck of $2,550. That's $5,100 every 4 weeks.
This could be their monthly expenses:
$1,400 Mortgage
$300 Utilities (Elec, Gas, Water, Sewer, Garbage)
$100 Cell Phones
$150 TV and Internet
$100 School Lunches for 2 kids
$100 Car Insurance
$300 Car Payment
$200 Misc (Life insurance, student loan, etc.)
$2,650 Total expenses
$2,450 Disposable income
If the family saves $850 per month and lives off of $1,600, that's a very comfortable wage.
i can see it being good for a single person, maybe for a couple with no kids. what about couple +1 kid? +2 kids? +3 kids? is this still enough to make a good living? read an article earlier where the author thinks 100k just isn't what it used to be.
Can support is the key difference and your estimates are low. My utilities/monthly bills alone are almost 800/mo. A 1400 mortgage puts them at a 200k house, while a good idea, it goes along with your other underestimates on living.
But that proves my point further, it's not a lot of money and will allow one to "get by" and save some for retirement.
It's not some magic number and quite normal for professionals these days.
this.
i would like to know if anybody ever turned down a 100k job because it was too low.
liesIf someone offered me 100K, Id laugh in their face and pee on their desk
If someone offered me 100K, Id laugh in their face and pee on their desk
Definitely. Being able to pay off my house in like 4 years (taking into account that a third of that goes towards other expenses) instead of 25 would be quite something.
I honestly don't know what I'd do with all the extra cash at the end. I'd end up buying stuff I don't need like a corvette, and ridiculously powerful servers and upgrade my PC with the latest and greatest every month, just because I can.
Still a nice chunk of cash compared to a typical 40-50k gross per year job though.
Low? I based them on my own budget numbers and, as someone who lives near the Twin Cities, I think I have a better idea what a TC resident's bills look like than you do.
$100k is "a lot of money," but, like all things, it all depends on what you do with it. Safe to say, however, that unless one lives somewhere with a very high cost of living, $100k will get a family by unless they spend it stupidly.
You have a bizarre perspective of what $100k will buy you. Paying off a house in 4 years, buying a Corvette and upgrading your PC monthly? Please.