Be financially
sighted.
See what your money is really doing.
Seeing clearly how your money decisions shape your future.
FinSighted is a free toolkit to help you explore everyday choices and long-term plans. Run the numbers, uncover the impact, and choose what works for you.
Net Worth Tracker
Your single most important financial number. Assets minus liabilities, and how you compare to benchmarks for your age.
Why age matters: $100,000 net worth means very different things at 25 vs. 55. This calculator benchmarks your number against Fidelity's retirement savings guidelines and the Federal Reserve's Survey of Consumer Finances data.
Fidelity benchmarks (by salary multiple):
- By age 30 → 1× your salary saved
- By age 40 → 3× your salary
- By age 50 → 6× your salary
- By age 60 → 8× your salary
- By age 67 → 10× your salary
True Cost
Small, frequent purchases feel harmless. See what they're really worth over time if that money was invested instead.
Example: A $6 daily coffee seems trivial. But $6/day at 7% annual return over 30 years = over $220,000. That's the true cost.
This isn't about guilt, it's about making intentional choices. Maybe the coffee is worth it. Maybe it isn't. Now you know the real number.
How to use it: Enter the item cost, how often you buy it, your time horizon, and expected return. The calculator shows total spent, future value if invested, and the gap between the two.
50/30/20 Budget
Split your after-tax income into Needs (50%), Wants (30%), and Savings & Debt (20%).
How to use this tool: Enter your monthly take-home pay, then add your actual spending in each category. The tool shows how your real spending maps to the 50/30/20 targets, and flags where you're over or under.
Tip for beginners: Don't worry about hitting the percentages exactly. Use this as a starting point to spot where your money is going.
Credit Payoff
Understand the true cost of carrying a balance and find the fastest path to zero.
The three modes:
- Fixed Payment, you pick a set monthly amount and see when you'll be debt-free.
- Target Date, you pick a payoff date and see what monthly payment is required.
- Minimum Only, shows the painful reality of only paying the minimum (often just 2% of the balance).
Avalanche vs. Snowball
Avalanche pays highest-interest debts first. Snowball pays smallest-balance debts first.
- Avalanche, Attack the highest-APR debt first. Mathematically optimal, you pay less total interest. Best if you're motivated by numbers.
- Snowball, Attack the smallest balance first. You get quick wins and momentum. Best if you need motivation to stay on track.
Tip: The difference in total interest is often smaller than people expect. Stick with whichever keeps you motivated.
Car vs. No Car Cost Comparison
Own a vehicle or go car-free? Compare the true cost of driving against Uber, transit, and delivery over time.
The car-free alternative: Rideshare, public transit, and delivery services can replace most car trips, often at a fraction of the cost, especially in urban areas. The key is whether the savings outweigh the convenience trade-off.
What this calculator shows:
- True monthly and annual cost of each option
- 5-year total cost comparison
- How much you'd save (or spend extra) going car-free
- Break-even: how many Uber rides equal your car costs
Car Loan Calculator
Find your monthly payment, total interest, and the full cost of the loan before you sign.
Key inputs:
- Vehicle price, the negotiated sale price before taxes and fees.
- Down payment, more down = smaller loan = less interest.
- APR, your annual interest rate. Check your credit score first; even a 1% difference matters a lot over 5 to 6 years.
- Loan term, longer terms mean lower payments but much more total interest.
| Month | Payment | Interest | Principal | Balance |
|---|
Mortgage Payoff
Extra payments, bi-weekly schedule, lump sums, see exactly how much interest you save and how fast you can be debt-free.
1. Extra monthly payment, Adding even $100 to $200/mo to your principal can shave years off your mortgage and save tens of thousands in interest. Every extra dollar goes straight to principal, reducing the balance that interest is calculated on.
2. Bi-weekly payments, Instead of 12 monthly payments, you make 26 half-payments per year. That equals 13 full payments instead of 12, one extra payment per year. Over a 30-year mortgage, this alone typically saves 4 to 6 years and $30,000 to $50,000+ in interest.
3. One-time lump sum, A bonus, inheritance, or tax refund applied to principal has an outsized effect early in the loan when interest charges are highest.
How mortgage interest works: Each payment is split between interest and principal. Early on, most of your payment goes to interest. Extra principal payments permanently reduce the balance, so all future interest is calculated on a smaller number, the savings compound over time.
Important: Check your mortgage for prepayment penalties before making extra payments. Most modern mortgages have none, but some older loans do. Also confirm your lender applies extra payments to principal, not future payments.
Student Loan Payoff
Compare payoff plans and see exactly how much interest you save by paying a little extra each month.
The three plans compared:
- Standard, the default 10-year plan from your lender.
- Extended, stretched to 20 to 25 years; lower payments, much more interest.
- Aggressive, you set a higher monthly payment and see how fast you can eliminate the debt.
Rent vs. Buy
Find your break-even point and compare the true cost of each path over time.
How it works: If you rent, you invest the down payment and the monthly savings (when renting is cheaper) in the market. If you buy, you build equity through mortgage paydown and appreciation. The tool finds the break-even year, when buying finally pulls ahead.
Key factors that favor buying: long time horizon (7+ years), strong appreciation, low mortgage rate.
Key factors that favor renting: high home prices relative to rent, short stay, strong investment returns.
Tip: If your break-even is beyond how long you plan to stay, renting is likely the smarter financial move.
Home Affordability
How much house can you afford? Based on income, debts, down payment, and lender guidelines.
Front-End Ratio (Housing ratio): Your monthly housing payment (PITI: principal + interest + taxes + insurance) should be no more than 28% of gross monthly income. FHA allows up to 31%.
Debt-to-Income Ratio (DTI): Your total monthly debt payments (housing + car loans + student loans + credit cards) should stay under 36% to 43% of gross monthly income. Conventional lenders prefer under 36%; FHA allows up to 43%; some lenders go to 50% with strong compensating factors.
28/36 Rule: The classic guideline. Keep housing under 28% and total debt under 36% of gross income.
Down payment impact: Putting less than 20% down usually requires PMI (private mortgage insurance), which adds $50 to $200/mo to your payment. 20%+ avoids PMI entirely.
This calculator shows:
- Maximum home price by front-end and back-end ratio
- Estimated monthly payment breakdown (P&I, taxes, insurance, PMI)
- How your DTI compares to lender thresholds
College Savings Planner (529)
Project how much you need to save, whether you're on track, and how tax-free growth compounds over time.
How much do you need? College costs vary widely, from ~$12k/yr at community colleges to $85k+/yr at private universities. This calculator projects the total cost adjusted for college inflation (historically ~4 to 5%/yr), then shows whether your current savings pace will get you there.
Key inputs:
- Child's age, determines years until college and years to save
- College cost (today's $), use today's costs; the calculator inflates forward
- Current balance, what you've already saved
- Monthly contribution, what you plan to add each month
Job Offer Comparison
Go beyond base salary. Compare total compensation, true take-home, benefits, and real costs side by side.
What this calculator includes:
- Total compensation, base + bonus + 401k match + equity + employer benefits
- Take-home pay, after federal/state taxes and pre-tax deductions
- Benefits value, health insurance employer contribution, HSA, PTO value
- True costs, commute, relocation, and any pay-to-work expenses
- Break-even, if relocating, how long until the higher offer pays off the moving cost
| Component | Job A | Job B | Difference |
|---|
Life Insurance Calculator
Find out how much life insurance you actually need, and your coverage gap, using three proven methods.
DIME Method (most comprehensive):
- Debt, all debts except mortgage
- Income, annual income × years to replace
- Mortgage, remaining balance
- Education, college costs for each child
Human Life Value, your remaining earning potential: income × years until retirement, adjusted for what your family would actually need.
Coverage gap = recommended coverage − existing coverage − savings your family could use.
Tip: Term life insurance (10 to 30 year term) is almost always the right choice for income replacement. Whole life is much more expensive and rarely worth it for pure protection.
Compound Growth
See what patience and the market's long-run average can do for you.
Example: $10,000 invested at 7% annually becomes ~$76,000 in 30 years, without adding another dollar. Add $500/month and it becomes over $600,000.
How to use this tool: Enter a starting balance, a monthly contribution, an expected return rate, and a time horizon. Use the preset buttons to model common scenarios (S&P 500 average, conservative, HYSA).
Tip: The most powerful lever is time, not the return rate. Starting 10 years earlier often matters more than picking a slightly better investment.
Rental Analyzer
Is it actually a good deal? Run the numbers before you commit.
Key metrics explained:
- Cash flow, money left each month after all expenses. Aim for $200+ to have a buffer.
- Cap Rate, return on the property ignoring financing. 5 to 8% is typical in most markets.
- Cash-on-Cash Return, return on your actual cash invested. 8%+ is generally considered solid.
- 1% Rule, a quick screen: monthly rent should be ≥1% of purchase price. Hard to hit in expensive markets.
- Break-even occupancy, how full the unit needs to be to cover costs. Lower is safer.
Dollar-Cost Averaging
Invest a fixed amount on a regular schedule. See how consistency compares to lump-sum investing.
DCA vs. Lump Sum: Research shows lump-sum investing outperforms DCA about two-thirds of the time (because markets tend to go up). But DCA wins on psychology, it removes the anxiety of timing the market and keeps you consistently invested.
How to use this tool: Enter a starting lump sum (or 0), a regular contribution amount, your frequency, time horizon, and expected return. The tool shows your final balance and compares both approaches.
Tip: For most people, DCA through automatic contributions to a 401k or IRA is the most practical approach, it's lump-sum investing in disguise.
Portfolio Rebalancing
Enter your target allocation and current holdings. See exactly how far you've drifted and what trades bring you back on target.
That's what drift is, and it's the real reason rebalancing matters.
A concrete example: You have $100,000 and decide 60% stocks feels right because you could stomach losing $18,000 in a bad year (a 30% market drop on $60,000 in stocks). After a strong year, your stocks grow and now represent 80% of your portfolio without you doing anything. Now that same 30% market drop costs you $24,000. That is 33% more loss than you ever agreed to. Your risk level secretly increased while you were not looking.
You did not make a decision to take on more risk. The market made it for you.
Rebalancing undoes this by trimming what grew too large and adding to what lagged, restoring your original risk level. It also enforces a natural sell high, buy low discipline. You are selling the thing that just ran up and buying the thing that is cheaper.
Who this matters most for:
• Anyone within 10 years of retirement. A large unexpected loss is hard to recover from on a short timeline.
• Anyone with a deliberate stock and bond split they chose for a reason.
• Investors holding multiple asset classes that move differently.
Who it matters less for:
• Young investors 30 or more years from retirement invested 100% in stocks. You have time to recover from drawdowns and drift is less meaningful.
How often: Rebalance when any asset drifts more than 5% from target, or at minimum once a year. Monthly rebalancing is overkill and creates unnecessary taxes.
Tax tip: Rebalance inside your 401k or IRA first. No capital gains triggered. In taxable accounts, use new cash contributions to buy underweight assets before selling anything.
Example: if you have $90,000 in a total US stock market fund, $40,000 in an international fund, and $20,000 in bonds, enter those exact amounts. The calculator will compare them against your target % and show exactly what to buy or sell.
Dividend / DRIP
See how reinvesting dividends compounds your portfolio, and what it's worth without reinvestment.
The two growth engines:
- Price appreciation, the stock grows in value over time
- Dividend reinvestment, dividends buy more shares, which pay more dividends
Monthly contributions: Adding to your position regularly (like a 401k) dramatically accelerates DRIP compounding, each new purchase earns dividends that get reinvested.
Taxes: In taxable accounts, dividends are taxed each year even if reinvested (qualified dividends taxed at 0/15/20%; ordinary dividends at income rates). In a Roth IRA or 401k, DRIP is fully tax-free until withdrawal.
Dividend growth stocks vs. high yield: A stock with a 2% yield growing 8%/year often beats a static 6% yield over 15+ years.
Capital Gains Tax
See your federal and state tax bill, net proceeds, and whether holding longer changes the outcome.
Short-term vs. Long-term:
- Short-term (held <1 year), taxed as ordinary income, same as your salary. Can be 22 to 37%+.
- Long-term (held ≥1 year), taxed at preferential rates: 0%, 15%, or 20% depending on your income. Much better.
How to use this tool: Enter what you paid (cost basis), what you're selling for, how long you've held it, and your tax situation. The tool shows your net proceeds after all taxes.
Tip: Waiting just a few weeks to cross the 1-year mark can dramatically cut your tax bill.
Mortgage vs. Invest
Pay off your mortgage early or invest the extra cash? Compare both paths.
How the tool works: Both paths start with the same extra monthly amount. The mortgage path reduces your loan balance faster, saving on interest. The investing path grows that same money in the market. The tool compares ending wealth under both scenarios.
When paying off mortgage wins: High mortgage rate (6%+), you value peace of mind, near retirement.
When investing wins: Low mortgage rate, long time horizon, comfortable with market risk, mortgage interest is tax-deductible for you.
Tip: At today's rates (6 to 7%+), paying down the mortgage is often hard to beat on a risk-adjusted basis.
FIRE Number
How much do you need to retire? Based on the 4% safe withdrawal rule.
The 4% Rule: Research (the "Trinity Study") found that a retiree withdrawing 4% of their portfolio per year has historically not run out of money over 30 years. So if you spend $50,000/year, you need $1.25M saved ($50k ÷ 0.04).
FIRE variants:
- Lean FIRE, minimal lifestyle, smaller target (~$625k).
- Regular FIRE, comfortable retirement (~$1.25M).
- Fat FIRE, generous lifestyle ($2.5M+).
- Barista FIRE, semi-retired with part-time income to reduce withdrawals.
Monte Carlo Simulation
Run 1,000 market scenarios against your retirement plan. See your real probability of success, not just the rosy straight-line projection.
What Monte Carlo does: Instead of one rosy scenario, this simulator runs 1,000 different market simulations using your inputs as the average, with random year-to-year variation (standard deviation). Each simulation represents a different possible future. The result is a probability: in what % of simulated futures does your money last through retirement?
Sequence of returns risk: The biggest retirement risk. A market crash in your first years of retirement, when your portfolio is largest and you start withdrawing, can permanently impair your nest egg. Monte Carlo captures this; straight-line projections don't.
What "success" means: A simulation succeeds if your portfolio never hits $0 before your end age. The success rate is the % of 1,000 simulations that succeed.
Interpreting results:
- 90%+ success: Very strong plan. You could probably spend more.
- 75 to 90%: Good. Minor adjustments could strengthen it.
- 60 to 75%: Moderate risk. Consider spending less or working longer.
- Below 60%: Significant risk of running out of money.
401k / IRA Optimizer
See how much you save in taxes by contributing to retirement accounts.
The two main account types:
- Traditional 401k, contributions are pre-tax. You pay taxes when you withdraw in retirement.
- Roth IRA, contributions are after-tax. All growth is completely tax-free in retirement.
2025 limits: 401k: $23,500 / Roth IRA: $7,000.
Tip: Priority order: 401k up to match → max Roth IRA → max 401k → taxable brokerage.
Roth Conversion
Pay taxes now to get tax-free growth later. This calculator shows whether that trade-off makes sense for you.
When does it make sense?
- Your tax bracket now is lower than it will be in retirement.
- You have years of growth ahead, more time = more tax-free compounding.
- You can pay the tax bill from outside funds (not from the converted amount itself).
- You want to reduce future Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs).
- You expect to be in a lower bracket in retirement.
- You'd need to withdraw the money soon.
- You'd have to pay the taxes from the converted amount, that shrinks the benefit significantly.
401k Early Withdrawal
See exactly how much you'd net after taxes and penalties, and what that money would have been worth if left invested.
The hidden cost, opportunity cost: Beyond the immediate taxes, that money loses decades of compound growth. $20,000 left invested at 7% for 20 years would have grown to over $77,000. That's the real price of an early withdrawal.
Penalty exceptions: The 10% penalty is waived in certain situations, permanent disability, unreimbursed medical expenses over 7.5% of income, separation from service at age 55+, or setting up a SEPP (Rule 72t) payment schedule.
Alternatives to consider first:
- 401k loan, borrow up to 50% or $50,000; you repay yourself with interest.
- Roth IRA contributions, your contributions (not earnings) can be withdrawn anytime, tax and penalty free.
- Emergency fund or HELOC, often far cheaper than the penalty.
Pension vs. Lump Sum
Take the monthly check for life, or the big payout now? Model both paths and find your break-even age.
Monthly pension pros:
- Guaranteed income, you can't outlive it
- No investment risk, the employer bears it
- Often includes survivor benefit for spouse
- More control, invest it how you want
- Can leave remainder to heirs
- If you die early, family keeps the money
- Potentially higher returns if well-invested
Key risk: Taking the lump sum means you carry the investment and longevity risk. If you live to 95 and earn poor returns, the pension would have been far better.
Survivor benefit: Many pensions offer a reduced payment to keep covering a surviving spouse. Factor this in if applicable.
Medicare / Healthcare
Estimate your total healthcare costs in retirement, often the most under-planned expense.
Medicare parts:
- Part A (Hospital), Free for most people (paid via payroll taxes). Covers inpatient hospital, skilled nursing, hospice.
- Part B (Medical), Covers doctor visits, outpatient services, preventive care. Standard 2025 premium: $185/mo. Higher earners pay more (IRMAA surcharge).
- Part C (Medicare Advantage), Private plans that bundle A+B (and often D). Often $0 extra premium but narrower networks.
- Part D (Prescription Drugs), Standalone drug coverage. Avg ~$40/mo; varies widely by plan and drugs.
- Medigap / Supplement, Covers gaps in Original Medicare (deductibles, co-pays). Adds $100 to $300+/mo but reduces unpredictable costs.
Before Medicare (under 65): If you retire early, you need bridge coverage, COBRA (expensive, max 18 months), ACA marketplace plan, or spouse coverage.
Long-term care: Medicare does NOT cover custodial long-term care (assisted living, home health aide). Average nursing home costs $90,000 to $110,000/year. This is a separate planning consideration.
Social Security Break-Even
Claim early and get more checks, or wait and get bigger ones. Find the age where waiting finally wins.
Break-even age is when the higher monthly payments from waiting finally surpass the total you'd have collected by claiming early. If you live past that age, waiting wins. If not, early claiming wins.
Key ages:
- 62, Earliest possible. Benefit reduced ~30% from FRA.
- 67, Full Retirement Age for those born 1960+. 100% of your benefit.
- 70, Maximum benefit. 8% increase per year past FRA.
- Before FRA: Yes, but SS withholds $1 for every $2 you earn above $22,320/yr (2025). You get those withheld benefits back later as a credit, but it complicates cash flow.
- At FRA and beyond: Work as much as you want. Zero earnings penalty.
Find your numbers: Create a free account at ssa.gov/myaccount to see your personalized benefit estimates at 62, 67, and 70 based on your actual earnings record.
What this doesn't model: spousal benefits, taxes on SS income, or complex household strategies. For those, consult a financial advisor or ssa.gov.
Paycheck Calculator
See exactly what comes out of your paycheck, federal tax, state tax, Social Security, Medicare, and pre-tax deductions.
What gets taken out:
- Federal income tax, based on your bracket and W-4 withholding elections.
- State income tax, varies by state (0% in TX, FL, WA, NV, SD, WY, AK / ~5 to 13% in high-tax states).
- Social Security, 6.2% on wages up to $176,100 (2025 wage base).
- Medicare, 1.45% on all wages, plus 0.9% additional for income over $200k.
- Pre-tax deductions, 401k, health insurance, HSA contributions reduce your taxable income before federal/state tax is calculated.
W-4 Optimizer
Find the exact withholding settings to break even at tax time, no surprise bill, no interest-free loan to the IRS.
The 2020 W-4 redesign: The IRS redesigned the W-4 in 2020. It no longer uses "allowances." Instead it uses:
- Step 2: Multiple jobs or spouse works checkbox
- Step 3: Child tax credit and dependent credits (reduces withholding)
- Step 4a: Other income not from jobs (adds withholding)
- Step 4b: Deductions worksheet (reduces withholding if itemizing)
- Step 4c: Extra withholding per paycheck
Safe harbor rule: To avoid underpayment penalties, your withholding must cover either 100% of last year's tax bill or 90% of this year's, whichever is less. We flag this automatically.
When to update your W-4: Marriage, divorce, new child, second job, side income, major deduction changes, or any year you got a surprise bill or unusually large refund.
RMD Calculator
Required Minimum Distributions, how much you must withdraw each year, the tax hit, and how your account depletes over time.
When do RMDs start?
- Born 1951 to 1959: Age 73
- Born 1960 or later: Age 75
- Roth IRAs: No RMDs required (Roth 401ks also exempt since 2024)
Penalty for missing an RMD: 25% of the amount you should have withdrawn (reduced to 10% if corrected within 2 years).
Tip: RMDs are added to your ordinary income, a large account balance can push you into a higher bracket. Roth conversions before RMD age can reduce future RMDs significantly.
Market Snapshot
Key economic indicators updated live. Understanding these numbers helps put every financial decision in context.
Finance Cheatsheet
Quick references for the numbers that matter most.
| 3% (HYSA) | 24 years |
| 7% (S&P avg) | ~10 years |
| 10% | 7.2 years |
| 18% (credit card) | 4 years |
| Excellent | Below 20% | Easy approval |
| Good | 20%-35% | Most loans OK |
| Caution | 36%-43% | Mortgage limit |
| High | 44%-50% | Limited options |
| Critical | Above 50% | Most decline |
| Poor | 300-579 |
| Fair | 580-669 |
| Good | 670-739 |
| Very Good | 740-799 |
| Exceptional | 800-850 |
APY includes compounding, used for savings.
| Single, stable job | 3 months |
| Dual income, kids | 4 to 5 months |
| Self-employed | 6 to 9 months |
| Single income, kids | 6 to 9 months |
| Variable income | 9 to 12 months |
| 401k / 403b | $23,500 |
| Catch-up age 50 to 59, 64+ | $31,000 |
| Catch-up age 60 to 63 | $34,750 |
| Traditional / Roth IRA | $7,000 |
| IRA catch-up (50+) | $8,000 |
| HSA (self-only) | $4,300 |
| HSA (family) | $8,550 |
| $0 to $11,925 | 10% |
| $11,926 to $48,475 | 12% |
| $48,476 to $103,350 | 22% |
| $103,351 to $197,300 | 24% |
| $197,301 to $250,525 | 32% |
| $250,526 to $626,350 | 35% |
| Over $626,350 | 37% |
Crypto Glossary
Plain-English definitions for every crypto and blockchain term. No hype, no jargon.
Finance Glossary
Plain-English definitions for every term you'll encounter across the calculators. No jargon.
Stock Market Terms
The essential vocabulary for reading earnings reports and market news.
| Expense ratio | Typically 0.03% to 0.25% |
| Min. investment | Price of 1 share |
| Tax efficiency | High (low turnover) |
| Expense ratio | 0.01% to 1%+ (active) |
| Min. investment | Often $0 to $3,000 |
| Trading | End of day only |
| Expense ratio | As low as 0.01% |
| Strategy | Buy & hold the whole index |
| Best for | Long-term, low-cost growth |
| Under 5% | Low, normal activity |
| 5 to 15% | Elevated, watch closely |
| Over 20% | High, squeeze risk |
| Mega-cap | $200B+ |
| Large-cap | $10B to $200B |
| Mid-cap | $2B to $10B |
| Small-cap | $300M to $2B |
| Micro-cap | Under $300M |
| Near 52-wk high | Momentum / possible resistance |
| Near 52-wk low | Possible value or falling knife |
Standard vs. Itemized Deduction
Find out which deduction method saves you more money, and by how much.
Tax Bracket Calculator
See exactly which bracket you're in, your marginal vs. effective rate, and how much you pay at each level.
Example: Single filer, $80,000 income (2025):
- First $11,925 taxed at 10% = $1,192
- Next $36,550 taxed at 12% = $4,386
- Remaining $31,525 taxed at 22% = $6,935
- Total: $12,513 → Effective rate: 15.6%
Your effective rate is what you actually pay as a percentage of income, always lower than your bracket.
Inflation Calculator
What is a dollar from the past worth today, or what will today's dollars be worth in the future?
CPI (Consumer Price Index) is the most common measure. The US long-run average inflation rate is ~3.1%/yr. The Fed targets 2%/yr.
Two modes:
- Past → Today: What is $X from [year] worth in today's dollars?
- Today → Future: What will today's $X be worth in [year] at a given inflation rate?
Teaching Kids About Money
Age-appropriate strategies to help parents teach kids about saving, spending, and building good financial habits.
| Save | 40 to 50% |
| Spend | 30 to 40% |
| Give | 10 to 20% |
| Fixed | Set weekly amount regardless of chores |
| Teaches budgeting, not tied to work | |
| Earned | Paid per chore or task completed |
| Teaches work → reward connection | |
| Hybrid | Base allowance + bonus for extra tasks |
| Best of both, most recommended |
| Need | Food, shelter, clothing, school supplies |
| Want | Toys, games, candy, extra screen time |
| Trick | “I need the latest iPhone” = want! |
| Age 13 to 14 | Joint savings account, learn to read statements |
| Age 15 to 16 | Teen checking + debit card with limits |
| Age 17+ | Budget app, track income vs. spending |
| APR | 20 to 29% is typical for first cards |
| Min. payment | Mostly interest, barely touches balance |
| Grace period | Pay in full = no interest charged |
| Credit score | Builds with on-time payments, low usage |
| Utilization | Keep below 30% of limit, under 10% is ideal |
| Rule | Save at least 20% of every paycheck |
| Rule | Don't lifestyle-inflate with each raise |
| Tax tip | Under ~$14,600? May owe $0 federal tax |
| Tax tip | File a return anyway to build tax history |
| Car ($3,000) | $250/mo for 12 months |
| Laptop ($1,200) | $150/mo for 8 months |
| Trip ($800) | $100/mo for 8 months |
| 529 Plan | Tax-free growth for education expenses |
| You control it • Penalty for non-education use | |
| UTMA/UGMA | Custodial account, any use |
| Kiddie tax: first $1,300 tax-free, next $1,300 at child's rate, above $2,600 at parent's rate • Transfers to child at 18 to 21 • Counts in FAFSA | |
| Roth IRA | Tax-free growth, requires earned income |
| Best for teens with a job • Withdrawals flexible |
| Benefit | Builds credit history from a young age |
| Benefit | Inherits your card's age & payment history |
| Caution | Your late payments hurt their score too |
| Caution | Some issuers don't report authorized users |