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Financial Independence through Real Estate investing, smart spending and personal finance, and stories that shaped our lives

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Additional Annual Income

January 9, 2025December 31, 2024mrsonedollarallowanceLeave a comment

Every year, I like to look back at ways we earned income outside of a W-2 or our rental properties. These things include interest earned, dividends paid, and bonuses received on credit cards.

CREDIT CARDS

We opened a new credit card to give ourselves a 0% interest loan when we purchased the hot tub. I’m a broken record on this, but I’ll keep pointing out the availability of this option. Yes, we made this purchase because we could pay for the item outright, but it would be nice to pay for the hot tub over time while letting our money earn more money in other accounts. A sign-on bonus for that credit card and the immediate high purchase led us to $489 earned for doing nothing expect spending money and opening that new card.

Outside of that credit card reward, we deposited almost $1,200 worth of rewards from other cards into our checking accounts. Then we have some cards that earn points instead of cash. These are kept in that credit card’s “bank” of points because they can be worth more if they’re used within the rewards portal (e.g., booking a hotel). Essentially, 100 points equates to a dollar, but it’s not always that because of the bonuses available. With that said: we earned 18,683 points between 3 cards and $73 on another card.

INTEREST & INVESTMENTS

We have two accounts that pay out dividends in December of each year. This year that totaled over $4k. Between two savings accounts, we earned $2,500 of interest payments.

Mr. ODA invests in Treasury bonds. Instead of withdrawing the money after each 4-6 week period, he rolls it over and the interest earned gets deposited into our account. That’s paid us $2k this year.

ODD JOBS & RANDOM INCOME

On top of the things I can project like interest earned and rewards, I also do a few odd jobs throughout the year. Between a part time substitute teacher position, doing surveys, and selling kids clothing and toys to second hand shops, I brought in another $1600. I use this concept as an ‘offset’ in my mind to cover gift giving throughout the year. Mr. ODA brought in nearly $1,000 doing mystery shopper activities for restaurants. Betting on games and doing fantasy football brought in another $700.

SUMMARY

So with minimal effort, we brought in about an additional $14,000 in the past year! That more than pays for our hot tub purchase. It more than pays for our Christmas gifts, and even birthday gifts paid for through the year.

When I consign, it takes several hours to prepare. But I do those items that way because I can earn more money with less stress. For consignment, I’m preparing my items, logging them, printing labels, and then dropping off. Once I drop off, all I do is watch my sales. If I try to sell these items on mom-to-mom type forums, then I have to manage each individual item, follow up on people who need to pay/pick up, and then set out my items and wait for them to actually follow through. It’s just a lot more mental energy even if it may be less physical hours of work.

Outside of the consignment effort and my very part-time job, everything else was fairly passive. We earned a lot of money just by buying other things. We earned a lot of money by just having a savings account with a decent yield. We earned a lot by Mr. ODA investing in Treasury bonds, which takes a few clicks every few months.

The first step should be to ensure your money that’s not in use is in a saving account and earning interest. After that, a credit card with rewards earned should be used. Teach yourself discipline to count your credit card swipes the same as swiping that debit card in your checking account. You’d be amazed at how much those small bits add up.

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May Financial Update

May 9, 2024June 3, 2024mrsonedollarallowanceLeave a comment

I don’t even know where to begin. Mr. ODA and I are looking at our accounts wondering where it all went wrong. Only, it didn’t really go “wrong,” and we have plenty of money, we just don’t want to move anymore money. For not really doing any frivolous spending, we spent a lot. The rental houses needed a lot of money, which equated to high credit card balances and extra payments towards that.

We had been sitting with insurance money in our savings account or our Treasury account. That insurance money was paid out to us last summer, and we’ve been saving it until the deck was rebuilt. The deck is nearly complete, with a balance of only $3,500. So that’s $41,500 that’s left our cash accounts in the last month or so.

We have our typical monthly expenses – preschool tuition, YMCA registration. Then add in buying a few summer clothes staples for the kids (honestly, I’ve literally made it this for without having to buy them clothes because of hand-me-downs and gifts received, so this is a huge blessing and win). Although, I will note that these purchases totaled under $100. We had a pickleball tournament, kids bowl free subscription, a dance recital to purchase tickets for, an eye exam, contacts ordering, swim lessons, etc. All of these add up quick. Not to mention the gigantic purchases that were on the credit card of new flooring in a rental, new patio furniture to replace the set that a tree fell on last July, and season passes to the ski resort for next year (although that cost less than last year’s passes). We booked concert and baseball tickets for a trip this summer, bought flights to NY for a wedding, booked an AirBnB and rental car for a trip, paid for a week of summer camp for two of the kids, paid $800+ for taxes (that this jurisdiction allows me to pay with a credit card!), and then just the regular day to day spending.

It’s been an exhausting few weeks while we manage rental turnover, arguing with our deck contractor to do the job right (waterproofing is either 0% or 100%… there’s no “good enough”), managing a nasty tenant, reading two books that have a deadline of next Wednesday, an allergic reaction by one kid to amoxicillin, and keeping 3 kids alive and to all activities while finishing out the school year. All that to say, I plan to dig in much deeper into first-third-of-the-year spending here soon.

Our cash and investment accounts are down almost $37k from last month. Our credit cards are actually lower than last month, but the balances are still higher than I like to see. But everything else went in the right direction, with our net worth even increasing by over $25k. Hopefully we’ll hit a spending lull over the next month now and get back into a groove of ‘normal’ again.

Monthly Financial Updateairbnb, appreciation, bills, credit cards, deck build, extra spending, financial update, investment properties, mortgages, net worth, paid, rental car, rental income, rental properties, rental turnover, retirement, savings, tenants, travel, treasury account

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