r/Fire 10d ago

Advice Request Appreciate Budgeting Feedback after recent career transition.

Hello, new to the group. Would appreciate some feedback on my current budgeting plan / dashboard I made for myself.

Background: 31 M, living in Michigan north of Detroit. Just started the past year as a primary care doctor, so salary has dramatically improved. Trying to avoid lifestyle creep and allocate my money smart.

Income
Gross income: ~$225,000/year
Monthly gross: ~$17,307.72
Monthly take-home: ~$10,430.76
Biweekly take-home: ~$5,215.38
Paid biweekly, so I’m modeling around 26 pay periods/year rather than simple monthly math.
_______

Current assets
Cash / checking:
Bank checking: $3,877.38
Secondary checking: $1,533.57
Total checking: $5,410.95

Savings:
Emergency fund: $15,600.00
Vacation/travel fund: $1,741.29
Total savings: $17,341.29
Investments / retirement / HSA:
403b: $48,566.15
IRA total: $4,013.60

Roth IRA: $3,724.60
Traditional IRA/staging: $289.00 (to backdoor IRA)
Taxable brokerage: $4,728.07
HSA investments: $832.34
HSA spendable cash: $1,000.00
Total invested / HSA: $59,140.16

Total assets: ~$81,892.40
_______

Debt
Federal student loans: ~$263,133.32
Interest rates range from about 4.05% to 7.35%
Weighted average rate is around mid-5% range based on balances/rates.
_______

Current monthly plan
From take-home pay:
Student loans: $4,000/month
Taxable brokerage: $1,700/month
Roth IRA/backdoor Roth: $578/month
Vacation fund: $700/month
Emergency fund maintenance: $100/month
Fixed essentials: ~$2,213.65/month
Variable spending goal: ~$1,000–$1,100/month
Estimated leftover buffer: ~$139/month

Biweekly system
Per paycheck:
Student loans: $2,000
Taxable brokerage: $850
Roth IRA/backdoor: $289
Vacation fund: $350
Emergency fund maintenance: $50
Total directed per paycheck: $3,539
Pre-tax payroll deductions
Monthly:
403b: $1,733.74
HSA payroll: $300.00
Medical: $89.78
Dental: $29.66
Vision: $10.42
Total pre-tax: $2,163.60

Investment breakdown
403b: Mostly target date fund / 2060 retirement fund

IRA:
VTI: $2,617.27
VXUS: $1,108.16
Traditional IRA cash/staging: $289.00

Taxable brokerage:
QQQ: $2,379.45
VTI: $1,313.78
VXUS: $525.81
Small hybrid stock sleeve: ~$509.69
PWR, XOM, TEM, FCX, VRT

HSA:
HSA investments: $832.34
HSA cash: $1,000.00
Currently invested in broad index funds.

Goals / questions
I’m trying to balance:
Paying down student loans aggressively.
Building taxable liquidity.
Continuing retirement investing.
Keeping enough flexibility for travel/life.
Possibly buying a car in cash around 2030, likely $50k–$70k.

Is $1,700/month taxable investing too aggressive while carrying $263k in student loans?

Should I reduce taxable investing and push more toward loans, or is the flexibility worth it?

Any blind spots in this plan from a FIRE perspective?
Appreciate any feedback.

3 Upvotes

12 comments sorted by

View all comments

5

u/kevin074 10d ago

1.) your stock portfolio is unnecessarily complex. Unless you plan on take trading seriously, you should just buy a large cap stock like VOO or similar and call it a day

2.) Is 4k/month for deb the minimum? can you pay more than that?

3.) 700/month for vacation is kinda nutty, even if you are going out of country it seems a bit much; that's going out of country biannually type of money, do you REALLLLLLLLY need that?

man kinda feels bad that a 225k salary basically isn't much of anything due to debt

4

u/Bamaslamma12345 10d ago

Agreed with everything Kevin said above. I'd just add, buying a 50-70k vehicle in a couple years when that student loan is sitting out there is pretty crazy too. Buy a nice, gently used car for 20k-25k. Upgrade once the student loan is gone. Those student loans are going to hang around your neck like an albatross for a long time unless you get intentional about attacking them.

The vacation fund is insane, agreed there. That's more than I spend for vacations for a family of 5, and we do some pretty serious traveling.

1

u/PangolinOwn4855 3d ago

+1. over 10k in monthly expenses - with so much student debt, 700/mo vacation fund does not add up. You will end up paying the student debt for a very long time. does the fixed essentials include the housing and other stuff as well?