this post was submitted on 25 Jun 2025
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A Boring Dystopia

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[–] tburkhol@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Well, then I can say that $40k is definitely "comfortable." That's $1500 rent, $300/month food, another $200 gas/elec/internet, a thousand left over for odds & ends and another couple hundred saved.

Pretty much my budget in a MCOL major metro.

[–] ChexMax@lemmy.world 8 points 1 day ago (1 children)

What about taxes? Health Insurance? Car insurance or transportation budget. You can live comfortably on $10 a day for food?? $3.30 a meal? That eats up the rest of that $1300 a month and leaves nothing for entertainment, savings, gifts or dating. Nothing left for meeting that health insurance deductible so you still can't go to the doctor. Survivable? Absolutely! Doesn't sound comfortable to me though.

[–] tburkhol@lemmy.world 4 points 1 day ago

Don't really have taxes at that income level. In the US, ACA pays full insurancne premium (currently, that will change if the billionaire tax cut passes), and 'wellness checkups' are $0 out-of-pocket by law. Most of my dinner recipes are around $2.50/serving at 900 calories. I'm able to walk most places I go, but car insurance is $100/month. Don't feel like dating, raising kids, or making big vacations. I average something around $7-800/month on 'entertainment' like video games & hobby materials, which leaves $300-400 savings. $350/month is 10%, which is around 2x the US average savings rate (https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/PSAVERT). Savings for emergencies like insurance deductible and for retirement.

But that's my point: my housing probably isn't everyone's idea of 'comfortable,' my diet is pretty carb-heavy and probably not everyone's idea of 'comfortable.' I like it, though. It feels comfortable to me; I don't consciously restrict any of my spending - all the numbers I've given you are post hoc analysis. I've been doing it for a decade.

I don't dispute people feeling like they need $150k to live comfortably. Lots of people want kids. Lots of people want to take a nice vacation time-to-time. There's a massive propaganda machine out there trying to convince everyone that they need just a little more than they have right now to feel good about themselves, and I believe that propaganda starts wearing thin by the time you get to $150k, $200k. They've got to live their life; I can only live mine.

[–] Archangel1313@lemmy.ca 5 points 1 day ago (1 children)

You don't have kids? Plan to retire? Have an emergency savings amount? No credit card debt? Car loans? Student loans?

I probably should have been more clear when I said "minimum basic requirements". I wasn't talking "survival"...I was talking about "comfort". The point at which you are no longer living paycheck-to-paycheck.

I was also assuming household income...not individual...so I should have been more specific there, as well.

I make about twice what you calculated, and my bank account is consistently at zero after all my household expenses are covered. That's for my family...not just me. I have no emergency savings, which means if anything in my life breaks down, I go into debt just to pay for repairs...and it takes months to finish paying it off. That's not "comfortable". It's eternally stressful, since emergencies like that usually come up more often than I can pay off the last one.

My point, though, was that it's all quantifiable. Even the differences between individual circumstances can be calculated. Everyone can look at their life and "know" the number that would get them into that "comfort zone".

[–] tburkhol@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago

That's what I said: "Comfortable" depends on feelings. Once you know what feels comfortable, then you can quantify.