Sunday, December 1, 2024

November Snowflakes

I'm tracking money coming in this year from interest, credit card rewards, and other miscellaneous places. 

Amex Rewards $57.11
US Bank Rewards $36.36
Chase Rewards $7.76
USAA Interest $0.10
NFCU Interest $78.40
FNBO Interest $81.64

Total $261.37
YTD $2,930.91

In the past credit card rewards money was going to the van loan. That is now paid off! All extra income is being saved. In 2025, we will be accumulating as much cash as possible as we prepare for my husband to transition out of employment with the military. 

Van Loan Paid Off!

On November 22, we made the final payment on our van loan. The final payment was $654.37. I expect a little bit of interest may come back to us, since banks ask for 10 days of interest on final payments to cover any float while payment clears.

We were sending over $1,200 a month towards this loan. In the last few months we increased it by another $950. All that money is now going to be saved to prepare for my husband's retirement from the military and into civilian employment. 

We are debt free except for our mortgage. 

Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Our Van Loan

We purchased a new 2023 Honda Odyssey late August 2022. We paid for it with cash and a loan at 3.49% for 48 months. The principal balance started at $40,399. We have consistently made payments of much more than the minimum for just over two years and have a balance today of $5,725.96.

We currently plan to pay off this loan before the end of the year, possibly before the end of November. I have never been one to want to hold debt any longer than necessary...paying the bank interest sucks! 

The less debt we hold, the fewer expenses we have relative to our income, the more space we create for flexibility. The ability to adapt to increasing prices and inflation. The flexibility to put our money into places that earn us money. The flexibility to spend on things with meaning to us, like family vacations.

We are also about 14 months away from my husband retiring from the military. He may get another job because he likes to work, but we are also minimizing our expenses to live on the pension he will receive and our retirement savings. The less debt we are obligated to the better! 

I highly encourage anyone reading to get your house in order. Cut unnecessary expenses, establish an emergency fund, pay off debt as fast as possible. Regardless of income, we have personal responsibility to ourselves, our family and community to be a good steward of the resources given to us. 

Friday, November 1, 2024

October Snowflakes

I'm tracking money coming in this year from interest, credit card rewards, and other miscellaneous places. Reward money is going towards paying down our van loan. Each month I calculate the total and send it in towards the principal of the loan. Interest is just accumulating in our bank account to add to cash savings this year. 

Amex Rewards $38.93
Chase Rewards $19.81
Lumbee ROC $39.61
USAA Interest $0.11
NFCU Interest $80.70
FNBO Interest $103.89

Total $283.05
YTD $2,669.54

Still on track to 'earn' more than $3,000 this year. I notice that tracking this extra income from interest and rewards from credit cards brings me to a place of gratitude. It's like appreciating the cherry on top of an ice cream sundae or the cool breeze on the hot beach. May you find gratitude in your life and in your financial situation. 

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

The Payback: October Progress

We are paying ourselves back for the car we helped our daughter purchase. The goal is to return $11,000 back to our savings account by the end of 2024 or sooner! These payback posts are to track that progress.

October Progress
10/1 Income $425
10/15 Income $515
Total $940

YTD $11,000
Left to Goal $0

This goal for 2024 is DONE!! Make a plan, work the plan and you will see the results you are working towards. 

Tuesday, October 1, 2024

September Snowflakes

I'm tracking money coming in this year from interest, credit card rewards, and other miscellaneous places. Reward money is going towards paying down our van loan. Each month I calculate the total and send it in towards the principal of the loan. Interest is just accumulating in our bank account to add to cash savings this year. 

Chase $39.73
Ebay offer $0.20
Amazon Rewards $8.92
US Bank $40.64
USAA Interest $0.14
NFCU Interest $77.79
FNBO Interest $109.01    

Total $276.43
YTD $2,386.49

On track to 'earn' over $3,000 this year in rewards and interest. 

Monday, September 16, 2024

The Payback: September Progress

We are paying ourselves back for the car we helped our daughter purchase. The goal is to return $11,000 back to our savings account by the end of 2024 or sooner! These payback posts are to track that progress.

September Progress
9/1 Income $425
9/15 Income $515
Total $940

YTD $10,060.00
Left to Goal $940

Next month we can cross this goal off as complete! 

Tuesday, September 3, 2024

August Snowflakes

I'm tracking money coming in this year from interest, credit card rewards, and other miscellaneous places. Reward money is going towards paying down our van loan. Each month I calculate the total and send it in towards the principal of the loan. Interest is just accumulating in our bank account to add to cash savings this year. 

Chase $43.05
Amex $68.43
Amazon Rewards $4.99
USAA Interest $0.15
NFCU Interest $80.08
FNBO Interest $97.89

Total $294.59
YTD $2,110.06

On track to 'earn' over $3,000 this year in rewards and interest. 

Tuesday, August 27, 2024

The Payback: August Progress

We are paying ourselves back for the car we helped our daughter purchase. The goal is to return $11,000 back to our savings account by the end of 2024 or sooner! These payback posts are to track that progress.

August Progress
8/1 Income $425
8/15 Income $515
Total $940    

YTD $9,120.00
Left to Goal $1,880

Two more months of payments equal to $940 and we can cross this goal off as complete! 

Sunday, August 4, 2024

July Snowflakes

I'm tracking money coming in this year from interest, credit card rewards, and other miscellaneous places. Reward money is going towards paying down our van loan. Each month I calculate the total and send it in towards the principal of the loan. Interest is just accumulating in our bank account to add to cash savings this year. 

US Bank $26.08
Ebay offer $4.69
NFCU $50.00
Chase $6.67
Amex $21.68
Amazon Rewards $4.04
USAA Interest $0.14
NFCU Interest $79.75
FNBO Interest $94.97

Total $288.02
YTD $1,815.47

July was a good month for interest and credit card rewards! 

Saturday, July 13, 2024

The Payback: July Progress

We are paying ourselves back for the car we helped our daughter purchase. The goal is to return $11,000 back to our savings account by the end of 2024 or sooner! These payback posts are to track that progress.

July Progress
7/1 Income $425
7/15 Income $515
Total $940    

YTD $8,180.00
Left to Goal $2,820.00

Three more months of payments equal to $940 and we can cross this goal off as complete! Previously we had been adding $915 a month. The additional $25/month will help get us to the final payment to ourselves on October 15. 

Monday, July 1, 2024

June Snowflakes

I'm tracking money coming in this year from interest, credit card rewards, and other miscellaneous places. Reward money is going towards paying down our van loan. Each month I calculate the total and send it in towards the principal of the loan. Interest is just accumulating in our bank account to add to cash savings this year. 

Chase Rewards  $17.16
USAA Interest $0.12
Amex Reward $35.63
NFCU Interest $76.09
FNBO Interest $91.55

Total $220.55
YTD $1,527.45

On track to accumulate around $3,000 in interest and credit card rewards in 2024! We are grateful of every penny that supports us. 

Tuesday, June 25, 2024

The Payback: June Progress

We are paying ourselves back for the car we helped our daughter purchase. The goal is to return $11,000 back to our savings account by the end of 2024 or sooner! These payback posts are to track that progress.

June Progress
6/1 Income $415
6/15 Income $500
Top off $16.68
Total $931.68

YTD $7,240.00
Left to Goal $3,760.00

I topped off the amount paid year to day to even it up, with $16.68. Four more months of payments equal to $940 and we can cross this goal off as complete! Previously we had been adding $915 a month. The additional $25/month will help get us to the final payment to ourselves on October 15. 

Wednesday, June 12, 2024

Tips for Making a Large Vehicle Purchase

Recently my nephew reached out to ask if I had any tips, advice on making a large vehicle purchase. He was looking at buying a full size truck with a sticker price of $25,000. He also mentioned having fair credit, thus the loan would be a high interest rate. Generally, I would say just don't do it, but ultimately everyone must make their own choices based on their own judgement. 

Ultimately, I broke down my advice to these eight tips. I think the one many people don't consider is number five. 

1)Determine the full price of the purchase. Sales tax, licencing, total interest over life of the loan and insurance. A car purchase is never just the sticker price. 

2)Use an auto loan calculator to work through various monthly payment scenarios. Longer term, will cost more interest, but may have lower payment. Here is a great calculator

3)Financial experts advise not to have a monthly car payment of more than 10% of your monthly take home (after tax) pay. This leaves room for other expenses, but is just a guideline. Know the maximum you can afford.

4)Get the shortest term (length of loan) and interest rate you can that fits into your budget. If you can, pay more than the monthly payment to pay off faster and save interest. If it doesn't fit into your budget don't buy it, buy something less expensive.

5)Ask yourself if the purchase and debt will keep you from other financial goals, such as paying other debt down, buying a house, or saving for retirement. Adjust accordingly. 

6)Get an inspection from a certified mechanic before purchase so you know what condition vehicle is in before you commit to the debt.

7)Always keep cash on hand for licencing, repairs and insurance deductible.

8)Consider purchasing GAP insurance if the vehicle loan balance will be more than Kelly Blue Book trade in value. 

What tip is your favorite? Do you have other tips for people making large purchases, like a vehicle loan? 

Sunday, June 2, 2024

May Snowflakes

I'm tracking money coming in this year from interest, credit card rewards, and other miscellaneous places. Reward money is going towards paying down our van loan. Each month I calculate the total and send it in towards the principal of the loan. Interest is just accumulating in our bank account to add to cash savings this year. 

Chase Rewards  $6.98
USAA Rewards $10.12
US Bank Reward $29.15
Amazon Rewards $10.00
Amex Reward $37.26
NFCU Interest $79.14
FNBO Interest $94.24
Total $266.89
YTD $1,306.90

Total rewards sent to van loan this month was $93.51. We now owe less than $15,000 on our van. The goal is to pay off the middle of next year. 

Friday, May 31, 2024

A Tip on Paying for College

I was at a high school graduation party this past weekend and the topic of paying for college came up with a woman that has a very young child. I happened to share a little bit of our method of putting our two daughters through college over 7.5 years. 

In order to cash flow a portion of college using the income coming in at the time, we chose not to take on car payments during those years. We had paid off our vehicles several years before they entered college, but we chose to drive older vehicles during those years we were paying for college. 

Specifically, we purchased a 2007 Honda Odyssey van in 2008. We paid off the loan in 2011, if my memory serves me correctly. We also purchased a 2007 Honda Ridgeline in 2011, which we paid off in 2013 or so. I do not remember the car payment amounts.

A car payment of $250/month is $3,000 a year. A car payment of $500/mo is $6,000 per year. There are families that spend much more on car payments. Eliminating any car payment you have by paying off car loans early or at least ahead of college tuition will allow you to use that money towards tuition or housing. By no means do I imply that only eliminating a car payment can pay for college. I point out that this cash not being put to other debt, such as a car loan, can be applied to the cost of college expenses. 

Ideally, a car would be paid off six months to a year prior to the first college tuition payment, so that this money could be saved to put towards the first payments and reduce the reliance on loans. Of course, there are many other tips and ways to pay for college, but for us, not having auto loan payments and driving older vehicles while our girls were attending college helped us not take out very limited student loans. 

My husband is still driving his 2007 Honda Ridgeline to work everyday. We purchased a 2023 Honda Odyssey in late 2022, just months after we paid the last of the tuition for our youngest daughter. This is the van loan I reference in my posts that will be paid off in 2025. We currently send at least $1200/month to this debt. 

We did take out one small student loan for our oldest daughter, when she realized she needed to spend another part time semester to finish up classes due to scheduling conflicts. Because we had both daughter's attending school, the loan made the most sense, since we had not planned for additional time at school. She has received the money to pay it off, but is currently using it to cash flow her master's degree, and putting the student loan in deferment. 

I believe I wrote quite a bit about how we paid for college along the way if you want to scroll back on previous posts. One daughter was an out of state student and attended for five years with two majors, and the other was an in state student and completed her degree in 4.5 years (she also had a minor). 

Happy to answer questions on the idea of not having car payments while paying for college in the comments. 

The Payback: May Progress

We are paying ourselves back for the car we helped our daughter purchase. The goal is to return $11,000 back to our savings account by the end of 2024 or sooner! These payback posts are to track that progress.

May Progress
Income 5/1   $415
Income 5/15 $500
Total $915

YTD $6,308.32
Left to Goal $4,691.68

More than halfway on this goal! Expected to complete this goal in October of this year. 

Wednesday, May 1, 2024

April Snowflakes

I'm tracking money coming in this year from interest, credit card rewards, and other miscellaneous places. Reward money is going towards paying down our van loan. Each month I calculate the total and send it in towards the principal of the loan. Interest is just accumulating in our bank account to add to cash savings this year. 

Chase Rewards  $5.02
USAA Rewards $5.64
US Bank Reward $3.26
Amazon Rewards $3.64
Amex Reward $28.67
NFCU Rewards $50.00
NFCU Interest $62.16
FNBO Interest $90.85
Total $249.24
YTD $1,040.01

Total rewards sent to van loan was $96.23. We've been staying on track with our plan for 2023 thus far. Make a plan, then work the plan. Keep going towards what you are trying to achieve for your finances. The effort is worth it!

Tuesday, April 30, 2024

The Payback: April Progress

We are paying ourselves back for the car we helped our daughter purchase. The goal is to return $11,000 back to our savings account by the end of 2024 or sooner! These payback posts are to track that progress.

April Progress
Income 4/1   $415
Income 4/15 $500
Total $915

YTD $5,393.32
Left to Goal $5606.68

Almost halfway complete on this goal! It will take another six months to complete, unless I change plans in some way to start throwing more to it. I could start counting interest earned on savings, but for some reason I want the payback to come from income earned. We will get there! 

Tuesday, April 9, 2024

The Mindset of Abundance

I've been working on my mindset on many things in life. I like to think I am a positive person most of the time, but I have caught myself many, many times harping on myself or even to my husband about spending too much money. This was a bit surprising and irritating to me to become so aware of about myself. I know some of this is from the past. We did live on less. We did live paycheck to paycheck and it was important to watch the dollars. Frugality and saving have been a key part of where we are today with a healthy paycheck, nearing retirement with pension and a seven figure nest egg. 

The mindset years ago was to create that nest egg, to save for a rainy day knowing we only had ourselves to rely on. I wanted to get to retirement and know that we didn't have to work until our last breath. I wanted to fund retirement and have options. That mindset worked! We were focused on a goal and watching the spending was part of that path.

Unfortunately, I find my mindset on spending needing to change. We are not in the same place financially when I started tracking the spending. We do have cash, we have options, we have built a nest egg. And the nest egg is still growing. 

I did some calculations. Our retirements accounts are seven figures and rising. We are still adding to our retirement accounts. My husband still wants to work after he retires from his military job with a pension. Income is still coming in for the foreseeable future. The rule of seven, which says that an investment earning 10% on average per year will double in seven years. I was a bit floored by that number. Then I doubled it again for the next 7 years. In 14 years, I will be 65 and that is PLENTY of cash to do a whole lot of things and cover living for 30 plus years. 

Doing the math and looking at the real future value of what we have saved showed me I need to loosen up the mindset on spending. While I don't need to turn the other way and spend every last dollar, I definitely need to lighten up my mindset when I see money spent that for whatever reason seems too much or unnecessary. 

I actually feel very abundant after doing these calculations with our retirement accounts. We are saving plenty and there is plenty of income to let us buy what we need and want without having to hold a poverty mindset into the future. I also believe that what we focus on expands. I am focusing on abundance. My life is full of abundance and cash to buy what I need and want. 

Have you done a check on your mindset around money lately? 

Monday, April 1, 2024

March Snowflakes

I'm tracking money coming in this year from interest, credit card rewards, and other miscellaneous places. Reward money is going towards paying down our van loan. Each month I calculate the total and send it in towards the principal of the loan. Interest is just accumulating in our bank account to add to cash savings this year. 

US Bank Rewards $40.98
Chase Rewards    $49.06
USAA Rewards $2.60
Amazon Rewards $10.46
NFCU Interest $65.51
FNBO Interest $93.52
Total $262.13
YTD 790.77

Total towards van loan was $103.10. Interest rate earned on our savings is higher than the interest rate being charged on our van loan, so I'm just doing a little bit of both, saving and paying down debt with extra income incoming! 

The Payback: March Progress

We are paying ourselves back for the car we helped our daughter purchase. The goal is to return $11,000 back to our savings account by the end of 2024 or sooner! These payback posts are to track that progress.

March Progress
Daughter Paid $944
Income 3/1   $415
Income 3/15 $500
Total $1,859.00

YTD $4478.32
Left to Goal $6521.68    

Our daughter paid us back for other expenses we covered while she moved. That helps put more money back into the pot. 


Friday, March 1, 2024

February Snowflakes

February extra income and credit card rewards!

NFCU Amex $50.00
Chase Reward $1.18
Chase Reward $42.62    
FNBO Interest $90.82
NFCU Interest $61.05   
USAA Interest $0.09 
Total $245.76
YTD $528.64

Rewards of $93.80 went to our van loan. Interest is being held in the savings accounts. 

The Payback: February Progress

We are paying ourselves back for the car we helped our daughter purchase. The goal is to return $11,000 back to our savings account by the end of 2024 or sooner! These payback posts are to track that progress.


February additions
Gap Refund $932
Income 2/1 $415
Income 2/15 $500 
Total $1847.00    

YTD $2,619.32
Left To Goal $8,380.68

Quite happy with the progress this month. Stuck to the planned contributions from income and added a significant refund to the goal, which cuts one month off the time to goal. We will keep pushing on!


Thursday, February 1, 2024

The Payback: January Progress

We are paying ourselves back for the car we helped our daughter purchase. The goal is to return $11,000 back to our savings account by the end of 2024 or sooner! These payback posts are to track that progress.

January additions

$735.94 Income
$36.38 Ebay Sale

Total  $772.32
Total YTD $772.32
Amount left to goal $10,227.68  

January Snowflakes

Extra funds and income earned in January 2024!

I'm sweeping credit card rewards to our van loan. I'm saving interest in our savings account. Any other income that arrives will be help pay ourselves back for the car we helped purchase for our daughter. I will be tracking this payback in a separate post. The goal is to get to $11,000 by the end of the year. (see separate post on this progress)

Ebay Sale $36.38
US Bank Reward $32.85
Chase Freedom $11.45
Amazon Rewards $3.99
Amex Rewards $32.76
FNBO Interest $100.34
NFCU Interest $65.00
USAA Interest $0.11
Total $282.88
Total YTD

I sent credit card rewards in the amount of $81.05 to our van loan this month. The ebay sale went to pay us back for daughter's car. And the interest is being held in our savings accounts. 

Wednesday, January 3, 2024

December Snowflakes

Time to make a concise report of the extra funds found and earned in December

Chase Reward $7.32
Amex Reward $18.60
NFCU Reward $167.37
USAA Subscriber Pmt $101.13
USAA Interest $0.10
FNBO Interest $123.39
NFCU Interest $64.90
Total $482.81

Credit card rewards and interest on our savings are the primary ways that extra income arrives in this house. I used to spend time doing surveys, or selling things online. I currently am not doing those things. I am grateful for higher interest rates and will enjoy them from a saving perspective while we can! 

Starting in January, I will sweep credit card rewards towards our van loan. I will let the interest continue to accrue in our savings account and add to the available balance.