Single, Childless (No Cat) Lady Finances
How did I, a single woman with no kids or partner, become financially secure enough to quit my job without something else lined up? It took luck, time, and intention. Let’s talk about it.?
Luck
I’ll start by saying I wasn’t lucky enough to be born into generational wealth, and I’m no nepo-baby. Until I was about eight years old, my parents were searching-through-the-couch-cushions-for-milk-money, let’s-go-eat-at-Abuela’s-because-we-have-no-food broke. Eventually my parents’ situation improved, but when college came around, my dad told me he wasn’t going to change his lifestyle to pay for my college. They expected me to figure things out, and I’ve been financially on my own since college graduation.
Now, let’s talk about how I was lucky. I had:?
A note on earnings
My median annual earnings since I started working is $161,500, with a low of $14,500 and a high of $248,500. I debated categorizing my high income as luck, but I decided not to. My earnings have enabled me to save a lot. However, there are plenty of high income people who are not as financially successful as I am. Getting, keeping, and excelling at those roles was hard work and took skill. It wasn’t luck.
Time
In June 2008, I started my first full-time job. As a Teach For America corps member, I began teaching high school English in the Rio Grande Valley, a rural community on the Texas-Mexico border. My salary was modest, but the cost of living was low. Many of my fellow TFAers saved significant nest eggs during their two years in the Valley. I did not. I lived paycheck-to-paycheck. My only savings was a mandatory bi-weekly paycheck contribution to my Teacher Retirement System account. I was just thrilled to have a paycheck.
In June 2011, I started my first business job, and my financial life changed. With a stroke of a pen and a move to Atlanta, I tripled my earnings. I went from almost maxed out credit cards to having more money than I knew what to do with. My net worth was around $3,000, just that mandatory retirement money and a small emergency fund.
At first, I just enjoyed not checking my bank account for every purchase. I still didn’t think about saving, but my employer was making annual contributions to my retirement account. Over time, I slowly changed some money habits: I started paying off my credit card every month and building up an emergency fund.?
In February 2014, I bought my first house and became more serious about my finances. I put more money into my emergency fund, and I started reading personal finance books. My net worth was $120,000, 80% of it in my employer-funded retirement account.
In March 2015, I opened my first investment account. By August, I had a job offer from Amazon. My last day was December 4th, ensuring I got my end of year bonus and a fully vested retirement account. My net worth was $300,000, 85% of it in employer-funded retirement and home equity.?
领英推荐
In August 2023, I started working Jay Zigmont, PhD, CFP? from Childfree Wealth to streamline my finances and navigate being a childfree, single business owner. At the end of the year, my net worth was $875,000.
In October 2024, I quit Amazon. My net worth is just north of $1,000,000. It took 13 years.
Intention
I want to balance two truths in this section.
First, I was really lucky: I landed multiple job where my employers compensated me well and, in the case of one employer, gave me a giant head start on retirement, and I benefited from an exceptional housing market, buying and selling at just the right times to make a big profit.
Second, I didn’t become a millionaire on luck alone.?
Since 2015, I’ve saved and/or invested around 30% of my salary each year to grow my net worth. Here are the actions I took that helped me do that:
Don’t Forget Fun?
You might read this and think I was depriving myself or not having any fun. That’s not the case. I’ve had a lot of fun along the way. I went on wonderful trips. I ate delicious meals (even some Michelin starred ones). I have a beautiful home that I love. I’ve supported causes I care about. I’ve never cut my spending to the bone because I knew that deprivation would not create the life I wanted. I spend on the things that matter to me and save on the things that don’t.
So that’s how I, a single, childfree lady with no cat, was able to quit my job without another one lined up.
Article illustration by Storyset (https://storyset.com/people).
Global Communications and Content Strategist
1 个月Love that you're sharing this. It's so helpful to talk about what enables these decisions and finances overall. I just did the same thing this month, thanks in part to many of the things you mentioned (buying a house for far less than a banker would approve a loan for, employer retirement). My husband's Amazon(AWS) salary certainly helps, too. We have kids, which complicates things, but have been FIRE planning. If quitting sets retirement back a year in that plan, it's worth it to get back to a career I love.
Growth & Scale | Go-To-Market | Strategy & Ops | Maximizes people, revenue, and partnerships for innovative, mission-driven companies. Sustainability Leader & Advisory Board member, x-AWS, NetSuite
1 个月This is such a terrific post. I’m also a single (never married, no kids, no cats, two dogs), ex-AWSer (left in 2022, also a BR), and have benefitted similarly over time from both good fortune and grueling work. I can’t remember the last time I read such a transparent post that will truly help a lot of those who are single females in the business world trying to get to financial freedom. Thank you for your honesty!!! And good luck on your new journey after leaving the chains of corp America!!
Ex-Amazon people manager. Currently studying software development. Ukraine supporter. LGBTQ+ person.
1 个月Excellent read! Thanks for sharing ??
Great post , good tips . Congratulations .
Financial organization for people who live value driven lives | Holistic Financial Professional | Forever coach and educator
1 个月I loved reading this! Thank you for sharing. I appreciate how you included the "luck" and also owned the hard work. I resonate a lot with different aspect of your story, especially starting as a teacher and not being a cat lady!