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Choosing a financial planner isn’t just another decision on your list. It’s a relationship that can shape how you make financial decisions for years—sometimes decades—to come. The right fit can help you feel more clear, more confident, and more intentional with your money.  The wrong fit doesn’t always fail dramatically—but it can quietly lead to second-guessing, missed opportunities, or advice that never quite feels aligned. So if you’re at the point of choosing someone, it makes sense to […]

You’ve saved $60,000 for a down payment on a $400,000 house. The offer is accepted. Then the phone starts ringing: your lender needs another $10,000 at closing; your inspector found something in the attic; the HOA fee wasn’t listed in the listing; flood insurance is separate. The sticker price on a home is only the […] The post 15 hidden costs of buying a house that no one warns you about appeared first on Wealthysinglemommy.com.

The golden years aren’t looking quite so golden for millions of baby boomers. According to Federal Reserve data, fewer than half of all boomers have saved enough for retirement, and a troubling 43% of Americans between 55 and 64 had no retirement savings at all. Meanwhile, the Social Security Administration’s 2.8% Cost-of-Living Adjustment for 2026 was largely swallowed up by a jump in Medicare Part B premiums to $202.90 per month, effectively wiping out much of that raise for most retirees. The result? A generation that spent decades working hard and saving carefully is now getting creative and not out of choice, but out of necessity. Here are seven new frugal habits boomers are turning to in order to make retirement work. 1. Using Apps to Track Every Dollar Gone are the days of handwritten ledgers and paper budgets. Boomers are honing their tech skills and tapping into artificial intelligence to perfect frugal living in retirement. Boomers are turning to technology to record their expenses and budgets. You don’t need to balance a checkbook or keep track of receipts and expenses anymore.  Boomers can easily download free apps, connect them to their bank accounts, upload receipts, and see where their money is going. This shift toward tech-assisted budgeting represents a genuine attitude change for a generation that was slower to adopt digital tools. The payoff, however, is real: when every transaction is tracked automatically, it becomes nearly impossible to ignore where money is slipping away. 2. Hunting Down Hidden Subscription Costs Streaming services, cloud storage, premium memberships, fitness apps… they each seem harmless at $10 or $15 a month, but together they can drain hundreds of dollars a year without a retiree ever noticing. Financial advisors are now calling this the “silent drain.” Boomers who are staying ahead financially are performing monthly “subscription purges,” canceling any service not used in the last 30 days. They treat every $15-a-month charge as a $180-a-year investment decision, ensuring their money isn’t quietly leaking out of their accounts. In the time of subscription creep, most people have no idea what they actually spend on subscriptions every month. For retirees on fixed incomes, that kind of blind spot can be genuinely dangerous. 3. Buying Refurbished and Second-Hand Goods There was a time when buying used goods carried a stigma. It was something you did only if you had no other option. That perception is fading fast among boomers who have decided that financial pragmatism matters more than appearances. Many boomers are opening their minds to refurbished or used electronics, appliances, and furniture. People, in general, are moving towards vintage and used aesthetics, and boomers are jumping on the bandwagon to save money.  4. Negotiating Bills Like a Full-Time Job Loyalty, it turns out, rarely pays when it comes to service providers. Savvy retirees are learning that a 15-minute phone call can yield real savings, and they’re making those calls regularly. Boomers who stay ahead of inflation are now making it a habit to call their

  Taking a cross-country road trip was always one of my biggest travel goals. Back in 2013, a travel companion and I finally made it happen. We drove across the country, visited several cities, attended sporting events, explored local attractions, and created memories that I still talk about today. We had no idea how much…

Short of being an influencer or an undercover hotel evaluator, have you wondered how to score hotel accommodation without a cost? What does it take to get free hotel rooms? If you want to travel more while paying less, specifically for your hotel lodgings, you’ll be happy to know there are many legitimate ways.  Some involve maximizing the hotels’ own marketing and promotional offers; others range from opting for hospitality industry-related or media careers to […]

You sit down to finally look at all of it: every card, every loan, every balance you’ve been half-aware of for months. The total is bigger than you expected. You’ve made payments, but the numbers haven’t moved much. What you need isn’t more motivation. You need a plan that works with your actual income and debt load. That’s what this guide builds. To put this together, we reviewed CFPB consumer debt guidance, NFCC research on […]

Most physicians plan well for their own financial future. Retirement accounts are maxed. Investment positions are building. There’s at least a working picture of what financial independence looks like. What most of us haven’t planned for is the financial weight of our parents aging. Not in the abstract sense. In the specific, arriving-faster-than-you-expected sense. The cost of care. The coordination burden. The slow financial drain that doesn’t feel like a crisis on any given Tuesday […]

Summer travel costs can rise fast once hotel rates, restaurant meals, gas, and attraction tickets start piling up. Many families want a break without coming home to a credit card bill that feels like a second vacation. The good news is that affordable summer travel still exists if you plan carefully and focus on simple … Read more

Hey everyone! I hope you’re enjoying the beautiful spring weather. It’s been a while since I posted an update. To be completely honest, blogging became much more difficult once I stopped posting every single week. There are always so many things to do around the house, and writing is much harder when I don’t stick to a strict schedule. Anyway, I promised to update my withdrawal plan, so here it is. This plan isn’t set in stone. We’ll constantly modify it to minimize taxes and respond to unforeseen circumstances. We will likely withdraw more in some years to cover “lumpy” expenses, like buying a new car. Life is full of surprises, and we’ll have to adapt as needed. Our early retirement withdrawal plan is flexible. Right now, we have almost $1 million combined in our taxable brokerage account and Treasury bonds. However, we also have changing family circumstances to navigate. Our parents are getting older and need more assistance. Because of this, we plan to move to California to be closer to Mrs. RB40’s family when our son finishes high school in 2029. As you’ll see below, this move is a massive factor in our financial timeline. (For context, I am 52.5 years old right now.) The Timeline: 2026 to 2049+ 2026 to 2028: The Early Years & Simplifying Real Estate 2026 is our first year of full retirement. Our active income will be minimal—probably around $5,000 from blogging and minor side gigs. Fortunately, Mrs. RB40 has a small pension of about $10,000 annually. More importantly, her retirement plan includes group health insurance coverage. We pay the same premium amount as we did when she was working, and it’s deducted directly from her pension. This is huge. Not having to worry about the ACA marketplace or healthcare costs gives us a lot of breathing room. Estimated Annual Expenses: ~$75,000 Active Income + Pension: ~$15,000 Passive Income (Dividends/Interest): ~$20,000 The Gap: We need to cover a shortfall of about $40,000. The Solution: Since we are moving to California in a few years, I am winding down our Portland rental real estate. We recently put our rental condo on the market. Once sold, it should generate roughly $150,000 after fees and taxes. This cash pool, combined with our other income streams, will fund the next 2 to 3 years of living expenses. Our Housing Adjustments: Currently, we live in a duplex and rent out the upstairs unit. However, I’ve asked our tenant to move out in 2027. RB40Jr is a teenager now and needs more space. One bathroom doesn’t cut it anymore. Mrs. RB40 also wants more room since she is home full-time. We will use the next few years to live comfortably in the whole property while fixing it up to get it ready for sale. It’s a big win that we resisted upsizing for 15 years. Most families expand their housing when they have kids. Note on a lumpy expense: I may purchase a new car

Most estate planning conversations begin with questions about transferring wealth efficiently. Families want to know who inherits retirement accounts, whether a trust is necessary, how to avoid probate, and whether estate taxes will become a problem. Those are all legitimate concerns, but they are rarely what causes the greatest stress when a crisis actually unfolds.  The breakdowns that destabilize families are usually operational. A surviving spouse suddenly cannot access accounts. Bills stop getting paid because everything […]

Looking to revitalize your hair without breaking the bank? DIY hair oils are a fantastic way to nourish your locks naturally, and the best part is, you can whip them up at home with budget-friendly ingredients! In this guide, we’ve rounded up 10 easy and effective recipes that cater to various hair types, so you can customize your own blend and enjoy salon-quality results right in your kitchen. ezstandalone.cmd.push(function () { ezstandalone.showAds(609); }); Rosemary Infused […]

How one woman saved $30,000, quit her job, and traveled the world for a year (then never stopped). Quitting your job to travel the world sounds unrealistic to many people. Maybe even irresponsible. But…for long-term traveler and creator Kesi Irvin from Kesi To and Fro, taking a career break to see the world felt necessary. […] The post How To Plan a Round the World Trip Step-by-Step with Kesi Irvin  appeared first on The Thought […]