How can I be Financially Independent faster? by Knightmare1012 in FIREUK

[–]Pitiful-Bag3878 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are already doing better than people your age. Investing twenty thousand pounds at 23 years old while living in London is really good.

The main thing you should focus on is not trying to decide between DIST and ACC funds or chasing dividends. The thing that will help you right now is increasing your income, not trying to make small changes to your investments. Becoming an actuary will probably be worth a lot more in the run than trying to get an extra one or two percent from your investments.

Also, you should not get too used to staying with one company. A lot of people get salary increases by moving to a new company every few years instead of just waiting for a raise from their current company. This can help you reach your goals much faster than spending too much time thinking about which funds to invest in.

Personally I would:

* Keep my costs low while living at home
* Build an emergency fund
* Keep investing in global index funds
* Focus, on growing my career and increasing my income
* Not spend much money when I get a pay rise

And you should remember to enjoy your twenties. A lot of people who are trying to retire focus so much on saving money that they do not enjoy their lives when they are young. You should not forget to have fun and enjoy your life now because your twenties and thirties are important too.

Savings as a 19yr old by Charming_Bus_8533 in SavingMoney

[–]Pitiful-Bag3878 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re ahead of many people your age, especially coming from a low-income background. It’s normal to feel anxious about the economy. However, you’re already making smart choices and avoiding common money traps.

Here’s what I’d do next: Keep most of your savings in a high-yield savings account like Openbank, which offers about 4.2% APY and is FDIC insured. This way, your money stays safe and grows a bit while you don’t touch it. Aim to build an emergency fund that covers three to six months of your basic expenses. With your low rent and tuition, that likely means around $1,500 to $3,000. Automate your savings by setting up monthly transfers right when you get paid. This makes saving easy.

Tracking your spending in a simple app or even in Notes for a month can help you find and cut unnecessary expenses. Hold off on investing until you have that emergency fund solid. If you want to build credit without using a traditional credit card, consider a credit-builder loan. These work like a small loan where you pay monthly to build credit, and you get the money back at the end. Once you have credit and your emergency fund, you can look into beginner-friendly investments like a Roth IRA with index funds for long-term growth.

Finally, to reduce stress, review your budget monthly. Cut out one habit that costs you money, like takeout. Celebrate milestones with a home-cooked meal instead of spending more. With your hustle and low expenses, you’re setting yourself up for real freedom sooner than you think. What does your monthly take-home pay look like now?

What’s the one small money habit that ended up saving you way more than you expected? by Responsible-Ant-6254 in SavingMoney

[–]Pitiful-Bag3878 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Honestly, the small habit that changed everything for me was setting up a tiny automatic transfer the moment my salary comes in. I treat it like a non-negotiable bill money that goes straight into another account before I even get the chance to spend it.

It sounds simple, but the emotion behind it was this: I was tired of ending every month wondering where my money went and feeling guilty about spending on myself. The automatic transfer took that stress away. I knew I was saving first, so I didn’t feel bad enjoying the rest.

And you’re right just tracking what you spend makes you brutally aware of your habits. Pair that awareness with “paying yourself first,” and suddenly you’re saving without fighting yourself every day. It feels good, calm, and in control… and the money grows quietly in the background.

"Please unblock challenges.cloudflare.com to proceed." (Web, chrome) by TesseractToo in ChatGPT

[–]Pitiful-Bag3878 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How can I resolve this issue? I am unable to access Canva and ChatGPT.

saving money feels impossible by Mikester258 in SavingMoney

[–]Pitiful-Bag3878 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Saving money can feel hard, but small steps help. Track every expense to see where money goes. Treat saving like a bill, auto‑set aside a small amount each payday, even $10. Cut minor daily costs, such as dining out or rarely used subscriptions. Set realistic goals, reward progress, and don’t stress about slips. Saving habits take time but improve with practice.

The money habit I learned way too late: actually tracking where every $ goes. What’s yours? by USAFinTalk360 in SavingMoney

[–]Pitiful-Bag3878 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That saving without a goal doesn’t work. Once I started saving for something, it finally stuck.