I save around 12% of my post-tax income. My mortgage is either 30% or 25% of my post-tax income, depending on the time of the year (social security max out increases my post tax income)…
I’m outside Seattle,USA. I usually save 0% of my income. My two mortgages are about 10% of my typical monthly income. I have to send my ex wife $5000 per month, however.
I’d have to actually check some statements to verify this, but I believe we save a little more than 40% of our post-tax income (I am including 401k and 403b plans)
Mortgage is around 30% of our post-tax.
I am working in Hartford, CT and living a suburb thereof.
I save 10% of my pre-tax income through my 401(k), and receive another 3% of my pre-tax income as a partial match to that. I then save between 25% and 33% of my paycheck (post tax, post 401(k), post health insurance, etc), depending on what happens in any given month.
I do not have a mortgage, but my half of the rent is 28% of my paycheck, and does not include utilities or anything else, so it’s pretty much where “mortgage” would be in my budget.
From the US.
Mortgage is about 28% of post-tax earning.
Retirement savings is about 21%
Mid-term savings is about 5% (money being saved for projects like remodeling.)
There is also short term savings, being short term, it gets spent.
I live in Montreal and am retired. I am not really concerned with saving at this point, but I guess we do save some, under 10% for sure. No mortgage but about 6% of our combined goes for real estate taxes.
We save about 30% of our after-tax income. I also put about 6% into a pension plan, so that’s savings of a sort–if I leave before I am eligible to retire, I am pretty sure I can roll that into a different plan.
Our house payment (mortgage + taxes + insurance) is about 20% of our after tax income. Strictly our mortgage would be 15%.
We also tend to save the semi-predictable “windfalls” of each year–tax return, extra duty pay, bonuses, etc. Those can add up to an extra 20% of my salary, so that’s a significant second string of saving.
But, like Dangerosa, we aren’t just saving for “someday”. A lot of this may be used for fertility treatments if we need them. If not, or in the aftermath, it’s designed as a nest egg so that my husband can stay home with the baby. We can live on just my income, but our rate of savings will slow to just those windfall payments, and even those will likely get tapped from time to time. I hear babies make finances less predictable.
Man you guys save a lot, I’m impressed and embarrassed because I’m what you call a financial fuck up.
I make good coin, pay a hefty mortgage (2k) and can hardly save a dime.
This thread will motivate me for my New Year’s resolution.
Our current household savings is approximately 10% right now, but that’s mostly a combination of 401K and Roth IRAs. We’re trying to save more, but we’re living on one income right now and we had loads of assorted expenses recently due to moving and furnishing a new home. Ideally, after the New Year’s, we’ll be saving around 25-30% of after-tax pay.
We’re renters, so no mortgage, but rent is approximately 26% of after-tax pay.
I can’t be arsed to calculate it right now, but I save quite an adequate amount. But sometimes I think the answer is “too much.” In my line of work, I make a decent living right now, and there’s a chance that I’ll eventually make a metric shitload. As in, I could eventually make a healthy multiple of my current total savings in a single year, and do that for several years. But on the other hand I make enough now that I don’t feel like I’m depriving myself or my family of anything by saving the amount I do.
California
6% 401 K (not counting the company match, another 4%)
About 12% additional. Now that the last kid is out of college, we are saving the tuition payment.
Mortgage - something like 11%, but 3% of that is to my father-in-law, and since my wife is an only child, we are going to be getting it back.
Excluding pensions (those are mandatory and you can’t acess them) I save about 10 % of my income after taxes every month. Now that life is expensive because of our toddler, it is a little less.