What is the minimum amount of money you need right now to set your life in order?
In actual cash? a bit over 13 mil
In Capital? well over 6m.
This is assuming the average age of a /biz/ dweller is only 22
>>1593294
20k for college loans
50 billion to make sure I'm set
>>1593294
20 million is a good amount to make sure I never have to work again. Of course I'd have to pay 40% of it directly to the government. I will never make 20 million before taxes.
define "in order"
To get my house : 600k
to cover living expenses : 40-50k /yr (actually could get by with 20-30k /yr fairly easy, 10k if I'm stringent)
This works out to 1-1.6M in kangaroo dollars
>>1593294
$2,500,000 AUD
I'm 20, no debts.
Actually 0.
My life is in order.
But additional 100k would become a even nicer nest egg until I stop working.
>>1593294
375k should be enough. Pay off student loans, credit card debt, buy some shit, boost checking and put 300k in index funds.
200k
>>1593294
300 bucks for a shotgun and a single shell
150k
that would pay off all debts and give cussion for emergencies.
10K to invest in Bitcoin, which will be 1 million in 10 years, which I have already invested, so 0.
>>1593294
50k€, that will pay university and food and rent for 6 years.
Then I would already finished my degrees and have a great job
100k tax free and I'll be set
>>1593446
I hope this is bait
>>1593462
Is this how you cope?
>>1593294
Minimum? $30K to pay off my business debt and close the business. Then I can be like everybody else; have a CURRENT_DECADE car again, a flat screen TV, and eat out occasionally. I'm so tired of feeling poor because I can't have or do anything that normal people do.
To get really set? $200K. Pays off the business, pays off my house, and funds the stupid project that I started the stupid business to fund.
>>1593296
Explain your figures? Why do you need this much to start?
>>1593469
How'd you like buying at 1500 bagholder?
3k to finish paying off my dental bills and move to where my business partner is.
>>1593522
I'm a canadafag, and in my area new houses are opening up for 600k. Another 100k to furnish it properly, and get a car. Property tax in that area is ~4k a year, food prices in Canada are fucked right now, so I can expect a grocery bill of 8k/yr minimum. Car insurance for me right now is ~358 a month, and the cheapest home insurance quote I could get was 0.7k a year. Electrical/hydro in our area is fucking gay too, my current is ~400/2month. 79/month for gas right now, too. Considering I'm only 23, 13 mil sound like a nice safe number. Being set means living comfortably, going out bi-weekly for dinner minimum, and going out for fun every so often too. Plus vidya.
>>1593294
Enough money to pay off student debts, then average middle class wages. I dont care about money.
currently have ~11k saved so
>120k for nice condo
>20k for nice car
>how ever much it is for food and random expenses
My plans set me at 13k
I can then comfortably wage slave and enjoy my slow life
>>1593294
That depends what you mean by "set your life in order", doesn't it?
I need a certain amount to pay off all my debt, a different amount to buy a house, a third amount to amount to have an ideal 6 month to year long buffer for shit hitting the fan, and a completely different fourth amount to be set for life and able to quit working.
>>1593294
100k$ minimum-decenet new car+small apartment in decent urban area.
>>1593294
£150K to buy a livable house
>>1593294
So I'm 22, I already have house, car and 15 k saved, how much do I need more? I'm willing to work for the rest of my life, I've been wondering how to maximise my situation
Weird question, "set your life in order"
I feel like I'm already pretty much in order, so zero.
But to really live lavishly, I'd need at least 10M.
>>1593294
120K.
10K for moving expenses.
50K expense for rent/utilities/ect while also raising my sister and providing for my parent for a year
10K for college loans
15K for my dream meme business, trademark & copyright expenses mainly.
>10K toward better work equipment
10K emergency fund.
5K for a new car.
10K for gas/insurance for a year.