You’re getting ripped off. Every year the products you regularly
use steal money they rightfully owe to you. In the first of a two-part series I’m
going to explain how I get the money I’m owed and use it to help pay for
Christmas gift giving. Then, I’m going to show you how make sure you’re getting
what you’re owed too.
Sunday, December 4, 2016
Sunday, May 8, 2016
Should You Hold Onto Student Loans for Tax Benefits?
After we paid off $110,000 in student loans in just four years my wife and I
received a lot of nice notes from family and friends supportive of our efforts
to prioritize getting out of debt. I was surprised, however, by the few notes I
received from concerned friends telling me I was losing out on valuable tax
deductions by paying off all that debt! Were they correct? Were my wife and I
leaving money on the table by paying off our student loans early? I decided to
crunch the numbers to find out.
Wednesday, April 20, 2016
The Secret Number That Can Make You Rich
Is $100,000 a lot of money to earn in a year? Is $1,000,000?
What amount determines if someone is “rich”? The answer? It’s not what you make
in a year that determines how wealth you are but an entirely different number
that rarely gets talked about.
Sunday, April 17, 2016
Reader Mailbag: Acorns and What to do Without a 401(k)
Have money questions? Got a topic you wish I’d cover that I
haven’t gotten to yet? Reach out! You can contact me directly through the blog!
My email is in my contact information, or you can reach out on our comments
section on any article. Today we’re going to tackle our first reader mailbag
article (names changed to protect readers’ identities). Here we go!
Wednesday, April 13, 2016
How to Pay for Your Tesla Now
A few weeks ago we witnessed as a species the largest product offering in history
as Elon Musk announced the opening of pre-orders for the amazing Model 3 from
Tesla. For $1,000, 325,000 people agreed to purchase the car when it becomes
available (and the number of buyers continues to grow). At a price point of
$35,000 each that represents a revenue windfall of $11,375,000,000, including
an immediate influx of $325,000,000 right
now! Today I’m going to explain how you can pay for your Tesla right now
and about buying new cars in general.
Thursday, April 7, 2016
Are you paying someone to rob you?
We keep our doors locked at night, chain up our bikes, and
keep our valuables locked in our safe deposit boxes (or at least in a good
hiding spot in a closet somewhere). It’s a painful thing to consider the possibility
of being robbed. Few acts are so personally violating as having the bounty of
your hard work taken by someone who did nothing to earn it. And yet for millions
of Americans across the country they get bilked out of thousands of dollars
every year, and they pay for the
opportunity! Who are we inviting into our finances to do the burgling?
Financial advisors.
Tuesday, April 5, 2016
4 Huge Mistakes I Made That You Don't Have To
Everyone makes mistakes. Small mistakes. Giant, colossal,
f-up mistakes. Sometimes we make financial mistakes. Today we’re going to talk
about some of the terrible mistakes I made that eventually led me to facing the
music, getting my sh*t together, and cleaning up my finances. Also, starting
this blog. Let’s go!
Sunday, April 3, 2016
How we spent just $10,000 on a Wedding, Two Receptions, the Dress, Rings, our Honeymoon, and More
I’m not sure how long the wedding industry has been a giant
scam, but those of us who have gone through the process of getting married
recently know exactly what I mean. Visit a cake baker and say, “It’s for a
wedding,” and watch the prices magically jump 50%. Tell a caterer you’re
getting married and watch them swap out their menus for their “60% more
expensive deluxe version” conveniently serving the exact same shrimp cocktail
you get from their “it’s any other occasion” menu. When Mrs. Stark and I decided
we wanted to get married, we knew we’d have to do it on our own terms. With a
maximum budget of $10,000 we managed to host a wedding for 100 people, four
round-trip plane tickets to the Midwest from Seattle, a honeymoon to Hawaii, a
breakfast reception for our family, the dress, and two wedding rings. This is
how we did it.
Tuesday, March 29, 2016
Rethinking Retirement
Today is the first in a multi-part series about what we
think of when we think of “retirement.” In today’s discussion we analyze what “retirement”
means colloquially, how it differs from “financial independence,” and we’ll
touch on re-thinking it entirely. Let’s get started shall we?
Sunday, March 27, 2016
How Much That Splurge REALLY Costs You...
Full disclosure time here at The Bill Stark Blog: I suck at
staying in my budget for my weekly personal spending. Time and again when it
comes to Budget Night at the Stark household my wife has chastised me for not being able to
stay within the boundaries of my budget for eating out at work and buying the
things I want. One solution to my over spending problem? Looking at the math
behind what those added expenses truly cost. The results led me to change
everything.
Thursday, March 24, 2016
Would You Drop Cable for $40,000?
When my wife and I paid off over $100,000 in student loans in four years we didn’t
do it simply because it felt good or for some moral purpose. When we paid that
debt off we saved ourselves thousands
of dollars in interest. That’s not noble, it’s self-serving. Today we’re going
to look at what happens when you spend just a few more dollars each month on
your mortgage (hint: you get rich faster!). Let’s go…
Tuesday, March 22, 2016
Stop Paying Your Boss So You Can Work
How much would you pay
your boss for the chance to keep working your current job? $10,000? $20,000?
$30,000??? If you’re like most Americans you’re unwittingly paying your boss
thousands of dollars to work your job and not move up in your career field.
Today we’re going to put a stop to that and put a plan in place to get you your
money.
Sunday, March 20, 2016
Budget Night at the Stark Household
For many it’s a day filled with such dread that most
families skip it entirely. But there’ a way to make using the most powerful financial tool in your arsenal into an enjoyable highlight of
your month. So how do the missus and I make budget day one of our favorite
parts of the month? That’s what I’m here to discuss today!
Thursday, March 17, 2016
Has the 401k Failed Americans?
The Economic Policy Institute recently released a report and
detailed study posing the question, “Have 401ks failed Americans?” As the
United States has shifted from a pension-based retirement society to one in
which workers rely on their own 401ks we’re experiencing a first in our
history: the majority of workers’ retirement savings are self-directed. That
poses new challenges for the nation as a whole. So have 401ks failed Americans?
Tuesday, March 15, 2016
You're Not a Bad Person
It’s easy to work on your personal finances once you’ve had
a few successes. The adrenaline and endorphins you get from doing something
right snowballs into wanting to do more things to help your situation. But
getting to that point? It’s a psychological mess of guilt, fear, and paralysis
that prevents perfectly reasonable people from making seemingly obvious
financial decisions. I know personally: that was exactly me only a few years
ago. Ignoring my mail, refusing to take calls from numbers I didn’t know, assuming
that whatever my money troubles were they’d be dealt with if I just ignored
them long enough. When I finally realized the downsides to that approach I felt
immensely guilty. But you know what? None of those decisions made me a bad
person. And no matter how much you’ve f*cked up your finances, they don’t make
you a bad person either.
Sunday, March 13, 2016
How We Paid $110k in Student Loans in Just 4 Years
March 12th, 2016 is a momentous day for the
missus and me. Why? Because it marks our official debtfreeniversary: today we
conclude paying off all the debts we owe. The bulk of our debt, $100,000 in
student loans, we managed to pay off in just four years and before a single
payment was actually ever due! So, just how did we manage to get rid of our
debt? I’ll tell you…
Thursday, March 10, 2016
The Casino You Visit Every Week
Casinos are master classes in the art of getting consumers
to spend. Their labyrinthine designs force non-gamblers to walk the farthest
distances through them in order to find their way out, all to maximize the
likelihood you become a gambler. The things you’re most likely to need sit deep
inside the centermost areas lest you simply skim past the slot machines and
card tables to grab something easily on your way to the hotel. The things you
walk by are designed to entice with lights, sounds, and a sense of wonderment
to get your purse strings loosened. There isn’t a clock to be found to indicate
whether you’ve reached the time you said you would leave, and oxygen is pumped
inside to help you remain refreshed and energized for longer so you never get
too tired to stop gambling.
For those of us pursuing the path of financial fortitude
casinos are not a place we’re likely to spend much time. But there is a place
we go to nearly every week that is designed much the same as a casino to keep
you in it as long as possible, to maximize the amount you spend, and to
overwhelm you with billions in psychological research to ensure they get the
most of your bucks. That “casino”? Your local grocery store.
Monday, March 7, 2016
Marketing, The Bill Stark Blog, and I Give you $5
Like many websites, The Bill Stark Blog is all about making
money. Unlike most other websites,
however, the person who this blog makes money for is not me, the owner, but you, the reader. The only cost you pay
is typing in the URL to your web browser. I have a nice job and a comfortable
lifestyle thanks to the 10 Steps, protecting my family’s life from lifestyle creep, and using the most powerful financial tool in the world to keep us honest so I don’t need a side hustle of a website when I can instead return the favor to the
people who taught me how to get my financial life on track by paying that
knowledge forward.
From time to time I’ll be able to hand you special deals you
may not be able to get anywhere else that can save or earn you money. Sometimes
to get those deals I have to get paid as well. I’m going to explain how you can
always be certain I’m looking out for you, why I might offer something like
this, and prove that at The Bill Stark Blog it’s always about you coming away
more financially happy than when you arrived. After all, the highest “payment” I
get is when you post a link from us on Facebook or share us with your friends.
Plus, at the end of today’s piece I’m going to give you $5.
Sunday, February 28, 2016
How to Make Money With Your Tax Return
April 18th is the day your taxes are due this
year and it’s a date that is quickly approaching! For many Americans tax day is
something of a holiday because we typically overpay our taxes during the year
and then get a refund from the government at the end of the year. That means
millions of us get a windfall to the tune of hundreds or thousands of dollars.
In the past your impulse might have been to spend that money quickly on something
frivolous and soon forgotten by the time the next tax day rolls around. As a
reader of the Bill Stark Blog you’ve now had your eyes awakened to the power of
your money. This year let’s do something new with our tax refund: let’s use
that money to make us even more.
Here’s how…
Thursday, February 25, 2016
The Politically Radical Act of Living Frugal
$2,100,000,000,000. That’s the total annual global budget for spending on advertising. It’s an
astronomically astounding number: $2.1 trillion dollars. Every single part of
that multi-trillion dollar spend is targeted directly at you, trying to get you
to buy something you had no intention of buying. It’s so powerful the average American has spent over $15,000 more than they earn trying to keep
up. We spend so much on stuff most of us are one bump away from being broke. What if there was an alternative
option to a life of consuming so much stuff it left you impoverished?
What if you said “No,”?
Tuesday, February 23, 2016
When You're In Too Deep
Recently on Facebook a friend of mine made a somewhat
despondent post about their financial situation and how it felt they were in a
hole so deep there was nothing they could ever do to get out of it. I reached
out to ask if they’d been reading the blog to which they responded, “I’m
nowhere near the financial space to begin taking advantage of the stuff you
write about.” I wondered if that was true and started considering the fact that
while I write a lot about maximizing situations like having access to a 401k I
haven’t spent as much time writing about what to do in a financial situation
with little means and the feeling that your situation is hopeless. Today we’re
going to change that.
Sunday, February 21, 2016
The Bill Stark Guide to Repaying Federal Student Loans
If you’re like millions of Americans you have student loan
debt and you’re interested in figuring out how to pay your student loans back.
Or perhaps you want to know how to lower your student loan payments, lower your
student loan interest rate, or lower your student loan repayment total. Luckily
for you there are loads of ways to accomplish all of these things with programs
offered by the federal government. Today we’re going to talk about the many
ways you can make managing your student loans easier.
Thursday, February 18, 2016
Behold the Power of a Fully Operational Emergency Fund
(Don’t miss a thing!
You can now sign up for email updates each time I write a new article. Simply
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The biggest challenge to taking control of your personal
finances isn’t having too little money, or owing too much, or even lacking
information on how to gain that
control. The reality is? For far too many people, caring about this type of
thing just isn’t sexy. By reading The Bill Stark Blog you’re already well ahead
of your average American and in today’s installment we’re going to talk about
that oft overlooked, highly critical, super important, totally unsexy key to
gaining control over your financial wellbeing and future: the emergency fund
and its cousin the emergency cushion.
Tuesday, February 16, 2016
The High Costs of Being Broke
I’ve talked before about doing “ramen math” in college, when I was so broke I calculated
exactly how to spend every last dollar and on paydays had to write a bad check
to have enough gas to get to the bank to deposit my paycheck. I had to risk
beating the gas station’s deposit to the bank with my own and if I missed? Bank
fees, bounced check fees, even potentially criminal charges. At the time I had
so little money there was no other option. My “ramen math” days taught me a lot
of lessons but none was more important than this simple fact: being broke is really expensive.
The reality in America (as in most places) is that having
more money is better than having less.
That seems comically obvious but it means more than its face value: when you
have money, it’s much easier to get more money. When you don’t have a lot of
money you get charged fees and expenses simply because you don’t have more
money. What costs are there to being broke? Read on…
Sunday, February 14, 2016
Magic Dollars and the Most Powerful Force in the Universe
It’s been just over a century since the great Albert
Einstein successfully predicted how gravity works and now we’ve confirmed he was right. What’s that got to do with personal finance?
Gravity has long been held as one of the most powerful forces in the known
universe but there’s a force that’s even more powerful. A force whose power you
can choose to harness for yourself. A powerful force others will harness
against you if you let them. This force’s name? Compound interest.
The Magic Dollar
Thursday, February 11, 2016
How One Family Earns $100,000 But Pays just $11.25 in Taxes
The deadline for taxes in the United States is April 18th
this year. That’s coming up much more quickly than you think and if you haven’t
done your taxes yet this year it’s nearly time. Before getting to collecting
all of your tax forms and filing your paperwork, however, I’d like to introduce
you to a family that’s about to do their taxes. We’ll call them the Savers: Mom
Saver, Dad Saver, and Baby Saver.
Like many Americans the Savers don’t mind doing their share
in paying the portion of taxes they owe. But they also know that good ole’
Uncle Sam offers them lots of incentives and programs with which they can save
on their taxes. For 2015 the Savers decided they were going to make the most of
these opportunities and see just how low they could get their taxable income
and, thus, how little they could pay in federal taxes. Between the two of them
Mom and Dad Saver earned a combined $100,000/year and they file jointly. Let’s
dig in to see how they do on their savings.
Tuesday, February 9, 2016
The Deadly Costs of Lifestyle Creep
When I was in college I used to do something I called “ramen
math.” It was the time towards the end of the month when money was really tight
as you waited for your next paycheck, and to make every dollar stretch you had
to get creative about every expense. How long could you live on just ramen?
Would anyone notice if you walked out of the dining hall on campus with food in
a plastic container? The most dire was getting gas: I’d go to the gas
station/restaurant I worked at, fill up my car with gas, write a check to pay
for it that I knew would bounce, then pick up my paycheck for the week and race
to deposit it before they could deposit my
check. Ramen math was an embarrassing but necessary part of my life and I knew that
someday, someday I’d put it behind me
and always have enough money.
Sunday, February 7, 2016
The Great Diaper Debate
My wife and I are having our first kid in about a month and
no matter how frugal you are having a kid costs money. How much? Depends on who
you ask, but estimates peg it at approximately $250,000 and that’s before considering paying for college. A quarter ‘mil is pretty
expensive even if you don’t pay it all upfront so we set out to examine a few
ways to minimize those costs. Up first? Diapers.
Thursday, February 4, 2016
How to lose $1,000,000 on Your 401k
February means it’s tax season and in 2016 you have until
Monday, April 18th to file without facing penalties. For many of us
doing our civic duty is a bit of a pain; sure it’s nice driving on public
streets, sending the kids to public schools, and living in a generally stable
society, but why do I have to pay so
much of the burden? The answer is: you don’t!
There was a time in America when saving for retirement
wasn’t financially viable. A century and a half ago “poorhouses” existed to
take in the infirm who, after a lifetime of working 80 hour weeks doing manual
labor for a meager existence, found themselves destitute and incapable of
generating additional income. They were sent off to live alone, under-cared for,
and impoverished until they died. Luckily a horrified nation decided, “We can
do better.”
The end result featured a strengthening of things like
pensions and the creation of Social Security. Eventually the government decided
there was a benefit for society in creating programs that incentivized people
to save for the future privately as well. The best way to incentivize them? Pay
them money! That’s how the 401k was invented.
Tuesday, February 2, 2016
5 Things You Spend Too Much on (and How to Save Thousands!)
One of the saddest realities of living in America is the
simple fact that nearly two-thirds of us have less than $1,000 in savings. That means the average
American can’t afford a sudden medical expense or car repair without taking on
costly debt. How did we get ourselves into this position? For most of us it’s
because we spend too much on things we imagine we need. But it doesn’t have to
be that way! Here are five things Americans spend too much money on and how you
can cut your costs and save.
Sunday, January 31, 2016
How to Save Hundreds on Your Cell Phone Bill
There is no doubt that in the 21st century cell
phones are one of the most disruptive technologies humans have managed to
invent. How disruptive? There are nearly 330,000,000 cell phones in use in the United States alone, a
statistic that gets even crazier when you consider there aren’t even that many Americans in the United States! But as powerful as the technology
is it has a pretty major downside: cell phone plans are costly.
The American model of cell phone coverage worked, for many
years, in stark contrast to the rest of the world. You sign a multi-year long
distance contract and buy the phones allowed on that cell phone provider’s
network, often for a subsidized cost. Man, remember when AT&T was the only
place where you could get an iPhone? Meanwhile, in the rest of the world you
buy the phone you like then get cell coverage month-to-month at the rate you
can afford from whoever is willing to offer you the best deal. You pay the
phone’s full price but the competition in the coverage market more than makes up for that cost in
savings.
For years we had a backwoods cell market in the United
States: restricted access to phones, long contracts locking you in to rates and
providers, and no competition keeping those rates high. Then a funny thing
happened: AT&T tried to buy T-Mobile and the government said, “No.” When
that deal fell through T-Mobile hit upon a new business model best described
as, “Man, fuck those other guys.” Soon they were offering long distance plans
at half what the other big companies were, with the option to have whichever
phone you like, and without a contract! The era of discount cell providers had
begun and now we live in an era where if you’re paying more than $50 each month
for your cell plan (particularly if you have a contract) you’re getting robbed.
Tuesday, January 26, 2016
The Best Career Decision You’ll Ever Make
My wife wasn’t yet 25 when she finally convinced me to start
caring about my finances. We had just recently moved to Seattle, Washington after
meeting in college. In fact, we had only recently graduated and packed up the
life we knew to move all the way across the country when I was offered a dream
job in the games industry. It was a lot for her to leave her family, friends,
and everything she knew to follow me, just a college boyfriend, to start a
brand new life together.
After moving we came to the time of the year in which we
needed to do our taxes. The job I had gotten after college was the most money I
had ever earned with a starting salary of $50,000. As a contractor I had a lot
of expenses to pay that my full-time colleagues didn’t (healthcare, for
example), but it was by far the most money I had been given in a twelve month
period of time. Meanwhile she had earned about half that amount as she had
switched careers entirely and bounced between a few jobs while we settled in.
And yet as we sat to go over our various tax forms I realized something: she
had the exact same amount of money in savings as I did. How could that be?
Sunday, January 24, 2016
The Most Powerful Finance Tool in the World (and it’s free!)
My friend Sam created that graphic for me, tongue firmly in
cheek. I find it fitting because today we’re going to talk about the single
most powerful tool in the personal finance arsenal. Anyone can employ it. It’s
more misunderstood than CDOs or credit default swaps. Best of all? You guessed
it: it’s absolutely free.
The tool? Your budget.
Wednesday, January 20, 2016
What to Buy When Buying Stocks
A lot of people make a very nice living telling folks like
you and me what stocks to buy, then taking a cut of our money. It’s a pretty
old game, and it’s rigged in their favor. It’s so rigged, in fact, that the cut
they take of our money can soak up as much as two-thirds of our long-term gains
and they’re not even legally required to act in our financial best interest!
But I have a secret, a trick to prevent those modern day snake oil salesmen
from stealing the majority of your life’s savings. That secret? Index funds.
Sunday, January 17, 2016
Turn Debt into a Game with the Snowball Method
The problem with debt is that it’s so easy to acquire. Every
day you confront a marketing industry that spends billions of dollars every
year convincing us to constantly buy, buy, buy. While we’re in the store buying
they’re happy to offer us a credit card to buy even more while they take a cut
from our future earnings so we can have that stuff NOW. And the average
American? We’re powerless to protect ourselves. Which class in school taught
you how to defend against billions in
marketing efforts every day? Which credit card company patiently explained to
you what APY means, or which of their hidden fees could secretly ruin your
life? Is it any wonder the average household in the United States has $15,000 in credit card debt?
The worst part about debt is that all the psychology that
goes into convincing us to accrue it, to buy buy buy, leads to a mental blocker
that terrifies us to examine how much we really owe and take steps to pay it
down. Focusing on the now is what got us into the debt in the first place (“With
the new store credit card, you can have that jacket you love TODAY!”), and it
paralyzes us into being too afraid to protect ourselves in the future and crawl
back out.
Today we’re going to learn how to use the same psychology
advertisers and retailers use to enslave us with debt in order to pay off that
load and become debt-free for good. Today we’re going to talk about gamifying
your debt with the Snowball method.
Tuesday, January 12, 2016
Why Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) Are the Most Powerful Retirement Account in America
Ever sit down to do your taxes and wish you knew about the
crazy loopholes megatrillionaires use to pay $0 in taxes? You’re in luck:
there’s a legal loophole in the United States tax code that allows regular
Americans like you and me to set aside thousands of dollars in income and never
have to pay a dime in taxes. It’s called the Health Savings Account (or HSA).
Thursday, January 7, 2016
The Most Powerful Debt Payoff Method on Earth
(This is the first part of a two-part series on debt repayment strategies. You can read Part Two here.)
Debt is an insidious force eating away at your financial freedom. Give it enough rope and it will hang you as it does thousands of Americans. Did you know that last year the average American household had over $15,000 in credit card debt? (Source). Today we’re going to talk about a powerful approach to blowing that debt up in part one of a two-part series.
Debt is an insidious force eating away at your financial freedom. Give it enough rope and it will hang you as it does thousands of Americans. Did you know that last year the average American household had over $15,000 in credit card debt? (Source). Today we’re going to talk about a powerful approach to blowing that debt up in part one of a two-part series.
Sunday, January 3, 2016
5 Ways to get to Millionaire Status with a Roth IRA
So you want to be a millionaire? Here’s how a Roth IRA helps
get you there.
What in the hell is a Roth IRA?
It’s a tax advantaged retirement account for American
earners. There are a few rules:
·
If you file taxes as a single person, you can
open a Roth IRA if you earn $116,000/year or less
·
If you file taxes as a couple, you can open a
Roth IRA if you earn $183,000/year or less
·
You can’t put more than $5,500 into your Roth
IRA for 2016
·
If you have money left in your Roth IRA after
you die, your heirs may be required to take minimum distributions from it
·
You must earn income in a given year to use a
Roth IRA
Getting to millionaire status with a Roth IRA is easy
because…
Friday, January 1, 2016
The 10 Step Plan to Your Financial Future
Nearly everyone who sets a New Year’s Resolution breaks it (80% according to this article). The truth is that it’s easy to set goals, but
it’s hard to achieve them. If you’re not actively working towards succeeding at
your goal, entropy is working at tearing you down to an inevitable failure. Today
we’re going to lay out the framework for accomplishing a set of financial goals
that resonates with many, many of the people reading this: getting rid of debt
and saving for the future.
No matter where you’re starting from in your financial life,
nor where you’re trying to get, the path to financial security in America is
always the same ten steps. So let’s take a look at them…