Main MONEY Milestones To Accomplish in Your 20s!

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These are the 6 Main Cash Milestones you must accomplish in your 20s. This investing / private finance recommendation video is the …

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42 COMMENTS

  1. I would say for anyone considering college or not, of course financials are important but also college, especially being at a university for 4 years, allows you to gain connections, personal and professional, that you may never make outside of that space, which can be very valuable.

  2. it's the UK.. I make £1850 after pension contributions and Tax.
    My rent is £895 with bills included, and there's nowhere been listed lower for the 18mos I've lived here.
    I have no car payment, no debt, but fuel costs £300pcm because of my job … It's brutal out here

    Food is £60p/w from Aldi or Lidl
    My phone is £32pcm and is on contract for the foreseeable

    I put anything I can into savings but it's never more than £100pcm. My car insurance quote is £950 for the year, and is due in march …
    Help :')

  3. I’m 19 doing enterprise fiber optics and contributing 10% to my 401k. Currently have no debt.
    Investing as much as I can after budgeting for my expenses every month. A lot of my money is going to my Roth IRA and my HYSA. I still feel like i’m not doing enough to maximize my growth. Anybody got other tips?

  4. Welp I am 28 doubt I will hit these mile stone with 2 years remaining but let’s make a dent shall we. ( the debt is do able since I work for a nonprofit and it will be forgiven after 10 years I believe)

  5. I am 22 years old, I have zero debt to my name, I have $28,000 invested, a truck paid in cash, a camper paid in cash, and $3,000 cash in my account. I am graduating next year with a Construction degree from Texas A&M. What should I focus on achieving next to become financially free?

  6. If I have anyone ask me for financial advice, the instant number one response I always provide before anything else is to contribute enough to their 401K to get their company’s max match – it is the best return on investment relative to risk that exists.

  7. I have so much student debt and I am about to start working and get started paying it off. It’s gonna be $1,300 a month. I’m applying for jobs and I’m so scared😢

  8. In Australia our retirement fund, called a super, your employer automatically pays a set % extra of your weekly payment and you can contribute more ontop of that out of your own pre tax dollars, making it a good way to lower your tax bracket. Your contribution is taxed on entry at a very low rate and tax free out at retirement, many other benefits too which our own government is trynna change because they see how much tax dollars they are losing out on.

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