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  1. This YouTube channel is dedicated to all things finance, from budgeting and saving to investing and retirement planning. Whether you're a beginner just starting to learn about personal finance or ...

  2. 15. Sept. 2011 · With the unnecessarily expensive car paid off and the higher salary, I was able to save more: $5000 into the retirement account, $3000 into an employee stock purchase plan, and $10000 in cash. Year 2 ‘Stash: $23,000 ($13k cash/shares, $10k retirement). Year 3: This was late 1999, and both the job and stock markets were on fire.

  3. 11. Jan. 2022 · Mr. Money Mustache January 11, 2022, 8:02 pm In general I think you’re right about the working poor and inflation, which is why I think minimum should be aggressively indexed to CPI and increase every single year.

  4. 6. Sept. 2022 · It’s Get Smart With Money Day! Let’s jump right to the real news here: There’s a Netflix documentary that just came out TODAY* called Get Smart With Money. Somehow old Mr. Money Mustache and several friends got lured into playing a role in making it. And I’m very happy with the results!

  5. With over 500 articles published as of 2020 and still going, this has become a huge blog. But some people allege that it’s a good one, and thus they want to read as many of those posts as they can. In the olden days, that meant going to the first post, and reading and navigating through the whole thing one link at a time.

  6. 29. Nov. 2018 · If you retire with $800,000 in investments, you will probably make it through your whole life without running out of money (a 5% withdrawal rate) If you start with a $1 million nest egg (a 4% withdrawal rate), you will very likely never run out of money. If you start with a $1.33 million chunk (a 3% withdrawal rate), it is overwhelmingly ...

  7. 24. Nov. 2023 · Mr. Money Mustache (@mrmoneymustache — Pete Adeney in real life) grew up in Canada in a family of mostly eccentric musicians. He graduated with a degree in computer engineering in the 1990s and worked in various tech companies before retiring at age 30. Pete, his wife, and their now eleven-year-old son live near Boulder, Colorado, and have not had real jobs since 2005.