• Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Archives
  • Get Free Updates
  • Privacy Policy
  • Subscribe

Think Your Way to Wealth

Smart Financial Choices for Building Wealth

A personal finance blog focused on debt reduction, money saving tips, frugal living, and building wealth with smart money management.

Why Some College Students Manage Their Finances Better than Middle-Aged Adults

by RC on May 16, 2008

If you're new to "Think Your Way To Wealth", get free updates on debt reduction, saving money, and building wealth by subscribing to the RSS feed or via Email . Thanks for visiting!

ramen-noodles.jpg

Certainly there are many college students, who enamored by the offer of a “free” t-shirt or some other token gift, start digging themselves into debt by signing up for a credit card and using it without concern with how they are going to pay for their purchases. But there are also many college students who live quite “spartan”, living in a cheap apartment, with no car or credit cards, living off their earnings from working a part-time job and going to school. Many only spend cash, and when they run low , look for creative ways to feed and entertain themselves.

On the other hand, there are many recent college graduates who, upon graduating and getting a job, suddenly change the way they were living. This is understandable, as eating ramen noodles every day for a week gets old after a while. But why do many recent graduates suddenly move into a nicer apartment, sign up for credit cards to furnish it completely, buy a new car, start eating out lunch every day and going out for cocktails at an expensive trendy new club, and continue to do so for many years to come? Some people continue to live like this for most of their adult lives, racking up credit card debt for things they don’t need and can’t really afford.

Because they stopped living like college students!

I know this is the case, because I did it myself. For some reason, you start trying to live how you perceive an adult should, with all the trappings, toys, and expenses, even though you normally start out a relatively low salary right out of college. You may be tired of your 8 year-old car and are looking to impress your friends or new co-workers, or that 1 bedroom apartment in the cheap part of town no longer fits the perception you have in your head of how you should live as a young new professional.
Even if you are a medical doctor, right out of school you are not going to be making as much as a surgeon with 15 years of experience. So why try to live like one? The smarter way, to keep yourself out of debt and start building wealth at an early age is to continue to live like a college student, or at least make smart decisions with your money.

Some tips for living like a college student for recent grads or adults with lifestyle inflation:

  • Keep your old car as long as possible. Take care of it, and it can last you a very long time. If you don’t have a car, by a used one, don’t finance a new one for 5 + years.
  • Don’t move into a high priced apartment or saddle yourself with a condo or house note right away. Even better- move back home for a while. When you do buy a house, buy less than you can afford.
  • Don’t furnish your entire apartment with new furniture, art work for the walls, etc, or replace it every two years. Keep your old furniture as long as possible.
  • Don’t get caught up in the “young professional” hype- You don’t have to eat out everyday for lunch and dinner or go out for drinks 3 times a week after work.
  • Don’t try to impress people with things, or by throwing money around in social situations. It doesn’t really work and is not worth it anyway.
  • Max out your 401k or retirement plan. You didn’t have the money before, so you won’t miss it. if you start maxing out your 401k when you first start working, you will not have to worry about saving enough for retirement, I promise you.
  • Only replace things that really need to be replaced. No offense to Apple, but you don’t have to have the latest I-gadget, whether it is an ipod, iphone, or whatever the next one will be. Cheaper alternatives will work just fine.

I am in my mid-thirties, and it took me quite a few years to realize that my “perceived lifestyle” was a little to high for my salary early on. Now that I am making more money, I am finally getting to the point where I can pay for my past mistakes. However, it is all the more difficult for some, as many people have gotten married and started having children, like myself. If only I had lived like a college student a little while longer.
Now, where are those ramen noodles…..

Image by Hey joe….

Similar Posts:

  • 25 Smart Budget and Money Saving Tips for College Students
  • College Students and Credit Card Debt
  • 10 Great Ways For College Graduates to Start Off on the Right Track with Their Finances
  • What Does Retirement Mean to You and What Will Your Retirement Needs Be?

Share and Enjoy:
  • StumbleUpon
  • Tipd
  • del.icio.us
  • Reddit
  • Digg
  • E-mail this story to a friend!
  • Google
  • TwitThis
  • Yahoo! Buzz

Tagged as: , frugal living, lifestyle inflation, Smart spending

{ 3 trackbacks }

Link roundup: Crazy weather edition | Mighty Bargain Hunter
May 19, 2008 at 3:39 am
The 140th Carnival of Debt Reduction: Circus Day Edition | Prime Time Money
May 19, 2008 at 6:34 am
Book Review: A Million Bucks by 30 by Alan Corey | Think Your Way to Wealth
July 19, 2008 at 10:32 am

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

Rachel @ Master Your Card May 16, 2008 at 6:59 am

I think that one of the main things that influences spending is your peers. While a student, you are surrounded by other students all who are likely to have little money and so you all live similar lifestyles. Once you start work you start mixing with people with more money as you may work with people who are paid more than you or they may have spouses who earn a lot. I think that this is when you are likely to start spending money and getting yourself into trouble, especially if you are paying off the student loan as well.

RC May 17, 2008 at 6:41 am

@ Rachel:
I would totally agree with you. I know for a time after i was out of school, i would spend more or less money depending on what friends i was with- either ones who were spending money b/c they had jobs(more) or ones who were still in school (less). Good point.

Leave a Comment

ING DIRECT HSBC Ebates
  • Recent Posts

    • Details of the Car Allowance Rebate System (C.A.R.S.) or Cash for Clunkers Program- And Will it Really Help?
    • Save Money on Car Repairs- Tips for Finding A Good Independent Auto Mechanic
    • 12 Ways To Save Money in The Bathroom
    • Weekly Personal Finance Links- Hurricane Season Begins Edition
    • List of Tax Free Holidays by State for 2009
  • Blogroll

    • Bible Money Matters
    • Bripblap
    • Consumerism Commentary
    • Free From Broke
    • Frugal Dad
    • Gather Little By Little
    • Get Rich Slowly
    • Greatnexus-Personal Finance
    • Lazy Man and Money
    • Mighty Bargain Hunter
    • MoneyNing
    • Moolanomy
    • Mrs. Micah
    • MSN Smart Spending Blog
    • No Credit Needed
    • Prime Time Money
    • Saving To Invest
    • Single Guy Money
    • The Digerati Life
    • The Simple Dollar
  • Search Think Your Way To Wealth

  • Follow Me On Twitter!

  • NetworkedBlogs
    Blog:
    Think Your Way To Wealth
    Topics:
    personal finance, frugal living, debt reduction
     
    Follow my blog
  • Get Equifax Credit Watch
  • Get $50 Cash Back from Discover!
  • Think Your Way to Wealth - Blogged Directory of Finance BlogsBlog Directory
  • Get Free Updates!

    Free Updates via RSS
    Subscribe via RSS

    Free Updates via Email

    Enter your email address:

    Delivered by FeedBurner


  • Most Popular Posts

    • 30 Ways To Save on Your Grocery Shopping and Food Bill
    • 11 Ways To Market Yourself at Work to Increase Your Salary
    • How to Develop a Frugal Mindset
    • Should I Stop Contributing to My 401k to Pay Off Debt?
    • When Will I Get My Economic Stimulus Rebate Check from the IRS?
    • Top Ten Ways To Aggravate Your Spouse or Significant Other With Your Frugality
    • Are I Bonds A Good Investment Option Now?
    • 15 Ways for Teens to Make Money this Summer
    • Lower Your Medical Bills Through Negotiation, Cost Comparison, and Haggling
    • Can I Actually Buy a TV Made in the USA?
  • Categories

    • bonds
    • Books
    • Budgeting
    • Building Wealth
    • Career
    • Cars/Auto
    • Cooking/Eating
    • credit cards
    • Debt Reduction
    • do it yourself
    • Earning More Money
    • Economy
    • entrepreneurship
    • frugal living
    • gardening
    • General
    • Giveaways
    • Goals
    • Health
    • Holidays
    • Humor
    • Investing
    • Kids and Money
    • money management
    • Money Saving Tips
    • Negotiating
    • Productivity/Organization
    • Psychology
    • Real Estate
    • Relationships and Money
    • Resources
    • Retirement
    • Roundups
    • saving for college
    • Saving Money
    • Spending Money Wisely
    • Taxes
    • Travel
  • pfblogs.org logo

    Personal  Blogs - Blog Catalog Blog Directory A World of Personal Finance Bloggers
    Join My Community at MyBloglog!
  • Money Hackers Network
  • Need Money? Join Lending Club!
Copyright 2008-2009, Think Your Way To Wealth

Get smart with the Thesis WordPress Theme from DIYthemes.