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You’ll Never Believe How Much the MMM Family Spent This Year…

Hiking near home, fall 2014

Hiking near home, fall 2014

Here we go again!

As we do once every year, Mrs. MM and I have spent the day nervously tallying the sinful blizzard of excessive spending that we have been committing over the past twelve months.

If you aren’t familiar with my budgeting style, it is “I Don’t Have a Budget“. Since we know there’s no chance of running out of money at this point, we make spending decisions based on our values rather than splitting up a fixed stream of income into categories every month.

While this is a hazardous approach for beginners*, it works very well once you have trained yourself with my alternative point-of-purchase approach. In short, whenever you feel like buying something, ask yourself the following questions:

  • Will buying this really improve my overall lifetime happiness?
  • Is there another, more efficient way to meet this same need?
  • Can the same benefit be had if I delay the purchase?

While I still follow these rules because they have become a habit, the application can be sloppy at times due to the fact that we are still just ordinary flawed humans.

Highlights of 2014 in the Mustache Household

first_wall

First day of framing the new roof, January 2014

Even retired life seems to be full of change and adventure, and this suits me just fine. This year our boy grew up another notch, and we found his need for creative freedom really started to clash with the formal structure of school. This led us to full-time homeschooling. That required much more time from both of us parents, curtailing some of our other activities but also teaching all three of us a lot more about life and learning. Although the transition amounted to a couple months of emotional face punches, it was worthwhile as such punches generally are in retrospect.

We Moved

2014 will also go down in history as the year of the new house. Although we actually bought the place in late 2013, I started the project in earnest by tearing off the roof last January, framed and welded and sheathed the new structure through February and March, then stepped inside to do the electrical, plumbing, insulation and other trades before outsourcing the drywall. We moved in to the barebones residence in June and I’ve been working since then on more carpentry and details. All in all, we’ve spent about $80,000 on the complete rebuild so far, which I have kept separate from the regular spending budget. This is because the net spending on the new house (after selling the old one) is still a large negative number.

Details of the new house project, where the money went, and before and after pictures will get their own separate post. It is taking a while because work progress has slowed dramatically due to the aforementioned homeschooling

Business and Pleasure Endeavors

The 9-year-old Little MM seems to be following in his father’s path – finding machines, space and science fiction, and creating electronic music (under the stage name Killbone7) to be more interesting than any organized activity we try to coax him into. Luckily he has a growing club of other junior nerds that have banded together for these activities, so he will have company when he starts the next Microsoft or Google from our garage in another six years or so.

This detail is relevant in a spending article because although stuff like this is amazingly educational, it costs the parents very little. We would fully support him if he were into more expensive things like sports leagues, and I do remind him that that is a better way to meet girls once he gets to high school.

Mrs. Money Mustache took the lead on homeschooling, burning through stacks of books and websites and distilling it down once she realized the practice is incredibly unregulated here in the US. As long as you can get your kid to pass a very basic test at the end of each year, you can do whatever you like. We are using this as an opportunity to speed up the educational pace considerably and do fun stuff instead of boring stuff. She also started a secret crafting business on Etsy which I won’t dare mention here lest she lose all her free time to an increase in sales.

And of course old MMM continued to build stuff out of wood and occasionally type some shit into the computer, juggling the demands and opportunities of the Internet against the pleasure of real world physical work. I indulged in a couple of these opportunities for some blog-related travel including Ecuador II and Camp Mustache, both of which will happen again in 2015.

But enough of this blathering on, for it is time for the final number. In the wealthy and spendy year of 2014, the MMM family managed to blow the following incredible of money on ourselves:

$25, 330

And here is where it all went:

Category20132014Comments
Mortgage Interest00
Property Taxes2,5172,120New house has $1000/year cheaper taxes. This figure pro-rated based on months lived in each
Food and Dining7,7397,109
   Groceries   6,984   6,593
   Wine/Beer   466   322
   Restaurants, Coffee Shop   288   194
Healthcare3,7894,268
   Doctor Visits   425   484Includes some personal therapy surrounding our boy's school issues.
   Health Insurance   2,855   3,272$273 / month
   Dentist   366   512Mostly for kid dentist preventative work
   Pharmacy   143   n/a
Auto and Transport2,231490
   Gasoline   1,022   71Excellent!
   Insurance   330   347
   Registration & Testing   294   72
   Express Tolls   80   
   Service & Parts   422   n/a
   Public Transportation   81   n/a
Utilities1,6491,614
Cell Phone300300
Internet Access360360
Home775429
   Home Renovations   383   19
   Home Insurance   392   410
   Landscaping/Plants   85   n/a
Donations/Charity6151,155
Crossfit650330
School Tuition00
Misc2,6232,098
   Shoes & Clothing   606   492
   Sporting Goods   566   76
   Shopping Misc   965   654
   Books   46   61mostly used books
   Other   440   815Netflix, kids activities, homeschooling school supplies, local plays, apps, CC annual fee, cash withdrawals, foreign transaction fees
Travel1,9345,057Wow!! $1908 for xmas trip to Canada, $382 passport renewals, $216 flight home from SFO, $552 vrbo in San Fran, $880 safety pirate trip, $245 train travel, $727 flights for summer trip to Canada, $51 Super Shuttle, $96 Mrs. MM 40th Birthday Trip
TOTAL25,18225,330
   Subtracting Tuition, Donations   24,567   24,175
   Subtracting travel, crossfit   21,983   18,788
   Subtracting organic/luxury food   19,678   16,442Assuming a 33% increase on groceries due to organic + meat.
   Subtracting home renovation expense19,29516,423This is what our "no frills" living cost would be, unless we moved to a smaller house (Note: Misc category could be cut down a lot as well)

What the heck is going on here? With completely reckless spending and all of life’s variation, we are still within $150 (0.6%) of the previous year’s spending. There were a few notable things, however:

Groceries were still Ridiculous:

The place our sloppy nonbudgeting manifests itself most strongly is in groceries: high-end local organic stuff from the deli counter, ridiculous little triangles of cheese from the gourmet section, dark 85% chocolate chunks with my espresso, coconut and almond breakfast every morning, and an overflowing salad bowl alongside the dinner every night. And some sort of entertaining almost every week, where we actually prepare and give away large quantities of this fancy food to friends and visitors. It is hard not to feel rich and spendy when this is part of your life.

Driving Performance was Good:

Somehow, we went the whole year on only two tanks of gas for the car. In the past, I have talked up our impressive driving avoidance skills and called everyone else Car Clowns because we don’t use the car for local errands.. but then hypocritically embarked on long cross-country trips that burned hundreds of dollars of gas.  This year it seems I actually walked the talk, and the car was fired up mostly for shuttling people to the airport and to occasional hikes in the nearby foothills. I’ve even started biking for my occasional nights out in Boulder, thanks to the added speed of my Electric Bike. It also helps that the car is a Scion xA, a 5-passenger hatchback that easily exceeds 40MPG. Not on the budget is one tank of gas for my construction minivan – because it was used only for my construction business this year (except a few short trips carrying materials for the house).

Travel Spending was Way Up: 

The flip side of less driving is sometimes more spending on other forms of travel. In spring, we took an adventure on the Amtrak sleeper train to San Francisco and went North to explore the amazing coast and Redwood forests. And we closed out the year with a set of three overpriced plane tickets ($600 each!) to Canada to visit family for the holidays, something we haven’t done in winter for many years (usually we just spend every summer in Canada). Plus a great train ride to get the three of us from Toronto to Ottawa for phase two of this trip. This trip is an example of spending I would have avoided if money were tight, but it was nice to be able to afford it.

On the positive side, our out-of-pocket spending for this travel was really much lower than shown in this budget, because much of it was paid for with points from various rewards credit cards. But I decided to list the sticker price in the annual spending just to keep reporting simpler. In other words, we thought of the credit cards rewards as a form of income rather than a reduction in spending.

Health Insurance Held Steady:

We use a basic plan from Golden Rule that costs about $275 per month for the family. If this pre-ACA healthcare plan eventually expires, we’ll switch to a Bronze level plan under the new health insurance setup that will  offer more coverage in exchange for more money. You can read more about that in this 2013 post on our health insurance situation. None of us had any health issues besides checkups this year.

So that’s it for 2014. Although these updates are starting to look awfully consistent from a numbers perspective, I still find it quite revealing how powerful habits can be in dictating your spending, regardless of income.

And as I go through each year knowing that I’ll have to justify each expenditure to YOU the reader at the end of it all, I find my own life being guided gently away from the temptation to stray into bullshit spending as well.

Luckily for you, you will get exactly the same benefit this year. Because I’ll be right there watching over your shoulder every time you take out your wallet in 2015.

 

Quick answers to questions that seem to be coming up:

Why is your car insurance so cheap? Living in a city of only 90,000 people, age 40, cheap car with liability insurance only, nothing on driving record. I still use Geico insurance.

Why is your mobile phone bill so low? Republic Wireless – $25/month unlimited everything including data, or $10/month unlimited voice+text. Hint: Get the $150 Motorola G unless you are a serious techie – it is almost as good as the higher end $300 and $400 phones they offer.

 

* If you are going to train your fiscal discipline muscle with some budgeting, I am still a fan of YNAB software (You Need A Budget), which you can try out for free for a month to see if it fits your own style. Disclosure: I am a friend of the founder Jesse Mecham and think he tells excellent stories.

  • ScubaNewbie August 20, 2015, 8:54 am

    Where does your eBike fit into this spending? Looks like you built it sometime prior to Sept 2014 from your post and it cost $1,300? http://www.mrmoneymustache.com/2014/09/30/electric-bikes-gateway-drug-to-bike-commuting/ You said you have no affiliation so I’m assuming you did the $1,600 – $300 (strategic discounts) = $1,300 but I don’t see anywhere in this post where it would be categorized?!?

    Reply
    • Mr. Money Mustache August 20, 2015, 10:19 am

      Nice detective work, Scuba! I mentioned this elsewhere but will update the article to make it clearer: eBikeKit ended up deciding to give me that kit for free at the last minute, because they knew it had good promotional value even though I would have gladly paid.

      Secondly, I wouldn’t have bought the kit if I weren’t writing about it for the blog. So I probably would have categorized it as a business expense anyway, as I do for other stuff like travel to MMM-related events or conferences.

      Reply
      • ScubaNewbie August 28, 2015, 9:38 am

        Thanks for taking the time to reply and clarify. Think it would be a good idea to update your eBike post as well to reflect that you were given a free bike. I’m sure it’s still an awesome product but only fair to disclose that sort of thing. But nice perk! WTG!

        As for the business expenses, it’s a tough one. I “get it” on the one hand but it feels like a slippery slope, especially with things you also enjoy on a personal level. I think its pretty clear cut with server or web development expenses but something you (I ASSume) use pretty regularly for personal use and didn’t just buy to try out, write review and then stuff in the garage or sell off?

        Plus there’s just the apples-to-apples thing. Let’s play devil advocate for a sec…how is this any difference than someone claiming they get to deduct their car from their personal expenses because they really only use it for commuting? You do so with your work van correct? After all, my family wouldn’t need two cars without the dual income jobs. Same with gas, suits or…whatever. I’m not saying you have to, they’re certainly private (just like your personal spending), but might be a nice complement to include a work-expenses total/breakdown. I think of the main purpose of these annual posts to provide a comparison and apply a few well-deserved face punches, right? That might be more relevant if we were comparing total inflow/outflow of cash, including eBikes used for both business and personal trips. Otherwise I feel like it becomes easy to assume the “nice to have” things others buy are simply off-budget in your annual spending as business-related. Just my two cents.

        Enjoy reading the blog posts! Thanks for helping me bring my ridiculous spending to slightly-less-so-but-still ridiculous :) Believe it or not I always thought I was frugal (and am compared to most Americans) … till I came here that is.

        Reply
  • Frisco-08 August 27, 2015, 9:50 am

    Wow, my wife and I recently found this blog and it’s inspired us. It’s amazing how far we have to go but this week we canceled cable and are trading in her lux car for a CRV. Even the longest journey starts with a single step.

    One question, my wife and I are both avid CrossFiters and need need to understand how your wife CrossFits for $330/year?!?!? Is she a coach there for a discount? Our gym is more in the $150/MONTH range (if you prepay!).

    Thanks for being so awesome!

    Reply
  • Andy G December 21, 2015, 8:18 am

    That’s a very inexpensive CrossFit gym you’re going to OR are you working out at home and those are your equipment costs?

    Reply
  • Mike graf January 3, 2016, 12:16 pm

    MMM, why don’t you use a car rental service instead of owning a car?

    I no longer own a car because I can rent one for like $10 an hour or $25 a day. If you’re only using 2 tanks of gas you probably are dwarfed by insurance depreciation, maintenance.

    Remember that cars age regardless of whether you drive it or not. Seals age and crack, rust forms, tires rubber goes bad on and on. So if you only drive 1000mi a year and expect your car to last 50yrs, sadly it may not happen.

    Reply
  • Eric January 29, 2016, 12:37 pm

    Your son’s music is awesome!

    Reply
  • Genus March 17, 2016, 7:08 pm

    Hi there:

    Not sure how I got here, but I’m glad I arrived! We too have reconfigured our lives and started homeschooling about 6 years ago, during which time I was laid off, bringing us down to 1 income in expensive A** NJ!

    No need to fear, we are doing quite well! No car notes, small, very small, almost gone mortgage, a daughter completing her 2nd year at community college (debt free), and searching for our homesite.

    We are healthy and with the layoff came 1-1/2 years of paid medical and dental. We will cross that bridge in May when COBRA kicks in or otherwise. We are not worried about it and it is what it is. All I know is from experience what you’re doing CAN BE DONE. We’ve accomplished more in the past 6 years, then the other 17 years we’ve been married.

    All that other crap about hair and nails and cosmetic crap, listen, who can best serve self? My daughters and I are natural hair wearers, and mine is locked (its a process and a place). And Black women spend A LOT OF MONEY ON HAIR . . .TRUST AND BELIEVE!! lol! Not us, we do each other. And hubby is bald, so that’s pretty simple.

    All that being said, that RION greenhouse I impulsely (is that a word) bought is serving its purpose and all is well. Keep on doing what yall doing and stay strong! PEACE.

    Reply
  • Arthur Clarke November 2, 2016, 2:30 pm

    I thought I would share a simple idea that I worked out many years ago that does a considerably better job of focusing the mind on opportunity cost. I had spent the first half-dozen years of full-time employment spending pretty much what I earned. I was making myself miserable telling myself the financial equivalent that I should eat less. Few people successfully lose weight, or saving money with constant nagging reminders. So, one night I sat down and first converted my take-home pay to a weekly number. Then I added up all of my committed expenses by converting those to a weekly number. By committed I mean things like rent, car insurance, homeowners insurance–anything I had committed to. I then subtracted this weekly equivalent expense from my weekly income. The net was spendable cash. This number I then wrote each week on the top of a 3×5 card. Any out of pocket expenditure, any expenditure not included in the committed expenses, was subtracted from this number no matter how small. I soon found that my goal was no longer an unfocused, thou shalt spend less but, rather, I found myself focused on how large a number I could end the week with. I never spent much time calculation the accumulating weekly residues. They would take care of themselves. My focus was on ending the week with a large number. This gave me quickly a rather keen sense of opportunity cost: spending money on something meant less money for tomorrow.

    This exercise predated smartphones by years. I’m sure one could jerry rig an app to do the job as well or better. Once you become comfortable with the process you will find your behavior changed in the direction that leads to saving, and once this becomes habitual you can relax the routine, but only after it becomes a well-engrained habit.

    You can also take a hard look at those committed costs: if you can reduce them you can begin the week with a larger number. But I think it is important to recognize that cutting these costs without facing the behavioral issue will likely simply mean that the savings will be shortly absorbed by more spending on other things.

    This worked for me many years ago. I would be curious to hear how useful readers find it.

    Reply

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