Budgeting and planning your finances is always challenging. You Need A Budget (YNAB) is one of the top budgeting tools out there. In this YNAB review, we’ll go into its excellent features that will make your financial goals easier to achieve. Read more to find out! Regardless if you are an intensive household budgeter, hands-off money manager, die-hard number cruncher, or super saver person, budgeting apps are your secret weapons. Having an app can be […]

Shoppers move past the entrance of a Costco Wholesale warehouse during afternoon hours. Navigating the warehouse club strategically means balancing the deep discounts on signature private-label goods against high-volume perishable items that might spoil before a smaller household can consume them. shutterstock Paying an upfront annual fee to shop at Costco requires a highly strategic approach to your family’s warehouse trips. It is incredibly easy to walk down the cavernous aisles and overspend on items […]

A display tray features premium, thick-cut raw steaks ready for preparation. Preparing and trimming your own steaks and roasts at home bypasses the added labor fees tacked onto pre-packaged supermarket meats, keeping your weekly grocery budget secure. pexels Purchasing meat at the traditional neighborhood grocery store is becoming an increasingly expensive part of the weekly routine. Prepackaged cuts of beef and chicken carry a heavy retail markup to cover the cost of store labor and […]

We reviewing budgeting app YNAB, sharing our experiences of it’s use of the envelope method and if it’s worth paying for. The post YNAB Budgeting app review appeared first on The Financial Wilderness.

Medicare’s Hospital Insurance trust fund continues to support inpatient care, but projections under current law highlight long-term financial pressure that may influence future budgeting decisions – Shutterstock Retirement planning often feels like balancing on shifting ground, especially when healthcare costs enter the picture. Medicare plays a central role in that balance, yet its funding structure rarely gets a close look until headlines raise questions. The latest projections from federal reports, including the CMS Office of […]

Buying a Second-Hand Car at Auction: What You Need to Know Buying a second-hand car can be one of the biggest purchases many consumers make, yet it is also one of the areas that causes the most confusion. Your rights vary depending on whether you buy from a dealer, a private seller or a vehicle auction. Understanding those differences before you buy could save you thousands of pounds and help you avoid expensive mistakes. In […]

Amazon Prime Day is back, and this year it showed up early. Instead of the usual July slot, Prime Day … Read more

You pull up your loan servicer accounts to make a plan, and the numbers do not match what you expected. Some loans have a fixed rate. Others seem to move every few months. One offers a hardship option. Another does not. Before you can build a real payoff strategy, you need to know exactly what kind of student loans you are dealing with, because federal and private student loans play by completely different rules. This […]

Flying doesn’t have to cost a fortune. Over the past two decades, budget airlines have changed the way people travel by offering lower fares than traditional carriers. While these airlines may charge extra for baggage, seat assignments, and other add-ons, they can still help travelers save hundreds of dollars on airfare. According to the…

For many people, financial planning fails not because they are irresponsible, but because the process quickly becomes exhausting. The spreadsheets become another source of stress. Budgeting apps send constant notifications. Advice online swings between unrealistic discipline and extreme optimization. Somewhere along the way, managing money begins to feel like a second job. That is one reason many people avoid looking closely at their finances at all. Some put off checking their accounts after an expensive […]

The Trustees of the Social Security and Medicare trust funds released their annual report this month. The big headline finding: “The Old-Age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) Trust Fund will be able to pay 100 percent of total scheduled benefits until the fourth quarter of 2032, one quarter earlier than projected last year. At that time, the fund’s reserves will become depleted and continuing program income will be sufficient to pay 78 percent of total scheduled […]

Goooood morning friends! Got another book to pass around to ya if you’re in the mood for some good financial reading?! 🙂 This one comes from long-time reader, and financial planner, Bill Hines, who’s always kind enough to give us free copies of his books as they come out. This latest one is an update to his original work by the same name, only pumped up a bit more and co-authored by a financial counselor friend of his, Grady Moshay. It’s called “Plan Your Money Path: A Guide to Create Your Own Financial Plan,” and we’ve got 3 copies to give away today! Here are the core concepts of it that AI gave to me which I really liked – straight to the point 😉 ****** Mathematical Confidence: Focuses on replacing vague financial goals with definitive data, giving you actionable paths to fund your future. Practical Tooling: Guides readers in utilizing robust, inexpensive financial software instead of simplistic online “dumbed-down” tools. Real-World Application: Takes you through the exact inputs, assumptions, and steps needed to model a successful financial strategy ****** That “robust, inexpensive financial software” it mentions? Pralana Online. I’ve never heard of it before (have you?) but Bill loves it! I’d be curious to hear your thoughts if you ever check it out… Another financial tool I’ve recently been told about is ProjectionLab. Mad Fientist just did another blog post around it and says it’s the most powerful financial planning tool he’s ever seen! I don’t really use any software these days personally, but I’ll admit I am tempted! At any rate, if you’re interested in a free copy of this book, tell us what *stage* of your finances you’re currently in and you’ll be entered to win 🙂 Are you in the beginning, data-collecting portion? The middle, cranking away – head down – and just getting the job done state? Or perhaps your towards the end of your accruing journey and now just dotting all your i’s and crossing all your t’s? Or maybe this is the first time you’ve ever landed on a money blog before and you’ve got no idea what the hell is going on??! Haha… I remember that part well… It was scary for a little bit, and then all of a sudden super exciting once things started clicking!! Which it eventually does, so you’ll be great! In either case, drop your answers in the comments below, or via email if you’re reading this in our newsletter, and you’ll be entered to win. We’ll randomly pick the winners at the end of the weekend – good luck! And big thanks to Bill for always keeping us in mind and sharing the wealth. I hope the new edition flies off the shelves, buddy!! Your friend, whose currently in his sabbatical phase of the journey, (I’m close enough to the end where I don’t have to worry about money as much, but too tired/lazy/unconcerned enough to wrap it all up, lol… The “details” part

It appears to be an overlooked part of retirement planning. While we should always invest within our risk tolerance level we should also match our investment portfolios to the retirement cash flow plan. The plan gives the marching orders for each account. If you create a portfolio to plan mismatch, you could increase the risk of depleting an account too soon. On the other side if you are too conservative where an account has the […]