The quick story: I was married when I started trucking. Not now.
Anyways, yes, trying to cut expenses at home can definitely help. And if you're solo, unmarried/in a relationship, it would probably be best to claim residence at a relative's house and cut off living expenses almost entirely (phone and food). Save up some cash and get yourself into position before plunking down money for accommodations.
How to save?
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by hannafarms, Mar 16, 2014.
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exhausted379 Thanks this.
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Not an OO yet but I've been saving 5cent a mile per paid mile every week toward a truck maintenance fund as a company driver. I have enough for a truck from my military tours but want to start about 30-35k in the bank the day my trucks loaded the first time. Discipline helps even the short weeks I go home I still deduct that 5 cents. Not having a lot of bills help too, my biggest bill is $1600 a month toward retirement and that's manageable. Not trying to rush being an OO
Calspring Thanks this. -
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In '07, I went to the local Int'l dealer to look/see what they had. I drove off the lot in a brand new Eagle Cat/13 speed for $1970, which was my first month's payment. Technically, it was a lease, but with a $1 dollar buyout at the end and I owned it. (60 mo). I needed premium credit which I had 850 FICO. Then First month for insurance/2290, I think I was rolling with $3000 out of pocket. Monthly payment is much better than weekly, because, monthly=48 weeks VS 52 weeks making weekly payments. As mentioned above, lose the home expenses, be single and manage your money well. Mortgage, wife, kids, car payment .ouch.
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As for cuting home expenses,my place is total electric. So turn off all breakers except heat pump. Will cut bill by 25% or more. Search for electric vampires,you would be surprised what TVs,phones,etc. use when not in use.
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Also, if your residual value (buy back amount) is below a certain level, they can rule that the transaction wasn't a lease at all, but it was a purchase, which changes your tax liability completely. -
Max out your 401k & IRA contributions. You'll save an extra 20-30% just from the taxes you will be deferring. When you're ready to start your business, you can roll them over into it without a tax penalty (when done correctly). That's $23,000/year right there, probably more if invested wisely.
On top of that, use a spreadsheet, quicken, mint, whatever to keep track of everything you spend. You will then probably see multiple areas where you're spending $25/week on things you wouldn't pay $1,000/year for. Pay off all debt financed at over 5%.
If you still have problems reigning in your spending, give yourself a weekly allowance in cash and don't exceed it.blairandgretchen and lovesthedrive Thank this.
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