Money Dates
"You are not an average person, so don't make average financial decisions." Most financial advice is written for the middle. It assumes median incomes, median choices, and median ambitions. But what happens when you're not median? Some of the most widely repeated rules in personal finance don't apply to everyone, and breaking them, intentionally, might just be the smartest move you make. Our hosts, Natalie and Dan Slagle, walk through five commonly espoused finance “rules” worth reconsidering. Starting a business is too risky? Not if you've done the market research and built a financial runway. Donor-advised funds are only for the ultra-wealthy? Natalie argues you can open one for as little as $2,000 to $5,000, and the real barrier is a matter of perception rather than of access. Every kid needs a Roth IRA before leaving home? The custodial Roth IRA strategy (capped at $7,000 per year in earned income for 2024 and 2025) can be legitimate, but manufactured employment for a two-year-old is neither honest nor audit-proof. Renting is throwing money away? In a world where a 2016 mortgage of $1,500 a month now looks like a relic, renting can anchor a perfectly sound long-term financial plan. And don't touch your portfolio before retirement? People are dying with wealth unspent, and research on the "retirement spending smile" suggests retirees may have as few as 10 to 15 genuinely active years after age 60. Spend intentionally, and spend while you can. Rules are built for averages. Your situation isn't average. The goal isn't to break rules recklessly. It's to know your own numbers well enough to know when the rules don't fit. Key Topics: * Why Generic Financial Rules Fail High Earners (01:26) * Rule 1: Starting a Business Is Too Risky (04:01) * Rule 2: Donor-Advised Funds Are Only for the Ultra-Wealthy (11:33) * Rule 3: Every Kid Should Have a Roth IRA Before Leaving Home (15:28) * Rule 4: Renting Is Throwing Money Away (23:00) * Rule 5: Don't Touch Your Portfolio Before Retirement (27:50) * What All Five Rules Have in Common (34:25) Resources: * Money Dates Episode: Homeownership vs. Renting: The Good, the Bad, and the Budget https://www.fyoozfinancial.com/podcasts/homeownership-vs-renting-the-good-the-bad-and-the-budget [https://www.fyoozfinancial.com/podcasts/homeownership-vs-renting-the-good-the-bad-and-the-budget] * Fyooz Financial Blog Post: Charitable Giving in 2025: 3 Smart, Tax-Efficient Strategies to Maximize Your Impact https://fyoozfinancial.com/moneymatters-blog/charitable-giving-in-2025-3-smart-tax-efficient-strategies-to-maximize-your-impact [https://fyoozfinancial.com/moneymatters-blog/charitable-giving-in-2025-3-smart-tax-efficient-strategies-to-maximize-your-impact] Schedule a Free Consultation: Go to https://www.fyoozfinancial.com [https://www.fyoozfinancial.com] and click the button in the upper right-hand corner Join our newsletter to stay up to date on the latest financial resources: https://www.fyoozfinancial.com/signup [https://www.fyoozfinancial.com/signup] Natalie Slagle, CFP® and Dan Slagle, CFP® are the founding partners and lead financial planners at Fyooz Financial Planning [https://www.fyoozfinancial.com/] https://www.fyoozfinancial.com/ [https://www.fyoozfinancial.com/] — an independent firm dedicated to helping high-earning couples in their 30s and 40s confidently navigate the complexities of managing money together. At Fyooz, they specialize in turning financial stress into strategy, guiding couples through everything from cash flow and investing to aligning money with shared goals. Disclaimer: For updated disclosures, please visit https://www.fyoozfinancial.com/ [https://www.fyoozfinancial.com/]
32 episodios
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