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Managing your money can feel overwhelming when your accounts, budgets, and goals all live in different places. Monarch Money aims to fix that by bringing everything together in one clean, powerful dashboard. In this Monarch Money review, I’ll walk you through how the app helps you track spending, manage budgets, and stay on top of your goals. It does this all while giving you a clear, real-time picture of your financial life. I use Monarch […]

Many shoppers miss out on price protection refunds that return money when items drop in price after purchase. Tracking receipts and submitting claims within the policy window can turn routine spending into easy savings. Shutterstock Prices rarely stay still for long, especially during sales seasons, holiday promotions, and surprise flash deals. A shopper might buy a gadget on Monday and watch its price drop by Friday, which creates a frustrating feeling of missed savings. Many […]

Most of the physicians we work with have a 401(k) story that sounds the same. They start funding it the … Read more

Lavender, rosemary, and marigolds help reduce tick-friendly conditions while adding color, fragrance, and structure to your yard landscape. Unsplash A yard should feel like a place to relax, not a place where hidden pests wait in the grass. Ticks love shaded, damp, overgrown spaces, especially where tall weeds and dense ground cover create the perfect hiding spots. The good news is that certain plants can help make your outdoor space less inviting for these unwanted […]

Living on your own comes with new expenses, so you must prepare your finances ahead of time. Independence is a fantastic thing, but enjoying that new freedom can be more expensive than you think. Here is how to prepare your budget for moving out. The post How to Budget Moving Out for the First Time appeared first on The Budget Mom.

I’m still doing a some catching up with sharing budget updates. Thankfully, I keep our budget pretty well up-to-date in YNAB even if I’m slow to post the updates on my website. We’ve had some financial challenges recently (with more on the horizon) that have had me feeling stressed. Still, the thought of facing these challenges without a budget would make my stress level go through the roof. In good times and bad, I thankful […]

Jinesh has designed a free, comprehensive retirement planning tool for aspiring and early retirees. He describes its key features in this article. Please note: Freefincal is not associated with this tool in any way. It is published because we strongly believe that DIY investors’ efforts to help the community should be promoted.  Please exercise due… The post A Free Retirement Planning Simulation Dashboard appeared first on freefincal.

A 75/25 Risk Parity Portfolio A physician with a $3 million portfolio retired with a plan. Four percent annual withdrawal, broad index funds, a traditional 60/40 split vs a 75/25 risk parity portfolio. By 2009, the account was worth $800,000 […]

Divorce is more than a legal process—it’s a full life reset. Even when it’s the right decision, even when it’s amicable on both sides, it can leave you feeling untethered. The routines, assumptions, and plans you once relied on have dramatically changed—sometimes all at once. And in the middle of all of that, there’s a very real, very practical question underneath it all: What happens to my finances now? You might be sorting through paperwork, […]

It’s been a while since I’ve given just a general update on what we’ve got going on. And with some really big plans like moving to Asheville on the agenda, I thought it might be a good time to bring you up to speed. Besides our big move, we’ve got some fun international trips we’re working on getting on the books over the next couple of years that we’re already super-excited about! Just to make […]

A quick announcement for today: I just released the 2026 edition of Taxes Made Simple. It includes all the stuff that’s new for 2026 (and 2025), such as the $1,000 charitable donation deduction for non-itemizers, the senior deduction, the deductions for qualified tip income, qualified overtime income, and vehicle loan interest. If you think it would be helpful for you or a loved one, I’d encourage you to grab a copy. Or leave a review […]

The number that breaks retirement plans In the accumulation phase, the job is growth. In the withdrawal phase, the job is survivability. A big equity drawdown early in retirement does real damage. You sell stocks when they are down and […]

We spent 90% of January 2026 overseas, mostly in Thailand. Travel spiked 412% in one category, yet total expenses landed just $544 above our 12-month average. Here’s the full monthly expense breakdown, what alternative income covered it, and why the trailing average is the only number I trust. The post FIRE Trial — January 2026: A Month In Thailand And What It Did To Our Budget appeared first on Turtle Investor.