4 simple financial tips for young families



Often young families are very busy with their career and raising children that they can neglect a few simple things that can make a big difference over the long term.  I've put together a list of 4 tips for young families to implement which allows them to continue to get on with their busy lives knowing they are helping to set themselves up long term.

Tip 1 - Make sure your mortgage interest rate is low


A small difference in interest rate can make a huge difference. Don't just think you're too busy to worry about finding a deal that is 0.5% cheaper. You're stealing (or more so the bank is stealing) a large amount of money from your future self. If you are paying minimum repayments on a $300,000 mortgage at 5% and refinance to a 4.5% interest rate and keep paying the same repayments, you are a staggering $17,428 better off after 10 years.

This only applies to those who have a mortgage and not those who are renting. That's ok to be renting, but remember the alternative is paying off a house. You need to be making use of your cheaper living arrangements and saving/investing the surplus, it can't be spent. See the next tip.

Tip 2 - Budget to create a surplus


It is such a weird phenomenon that you can have someone earning $50,000 per annum and someone earning $100,000 and both spend everything they earn and both think there is nothing in the budget that they can do without. The reality is we can meet out basic human needs with much much less and everything else is desired spending. I'm not suggesting that everyone should be living on bread, dripping and living in a 3 bedroom shack with 4 other families but acknowledge that there are a lot of things in your budget that you are choosing to spend for today's lifestyle which is stealing from your future lifestyle. Just try to see what you can do with out and use the extra money to pay additional repayments into your mortgage, or into your savings/investment if you are renting. Once you are in the habit of trying to maximise your surplus each week, fortnight or month, you'll start to enjoy finding ways to maximise your surplus income. In that same example above of the person who has refinanced to a 4.5% mortgage, if they now also pay an additional $200/month into the mortgage, they have made an additional $24,000 in repayments over 10 years plus that has saved themselves $6,239 in interest on their mortgage. So just those 2 things alone put them almost $50,000 in front after 10 years.

Tip 3 - Check your superannuation


It really doesn't make much sense at all for young people to be in the balanced fund with roughly 30% in defensive assets (cash and fixed interest). They have such a long investment time horizon, they can withstand the volatility of the share market. A 1 or 2% better return over your working life can make an absolutely massive difference to your final superannuation balance.  Next time we get a major market crash, think of it as a good thing, your regular superannuation contributions are now buying low/cheap. You could even try tighten the belt and ask your employer to salary sacrifice so you buy even more during the next major downturn. To give you an example, a $50,000 balance with $5,000 per annum being invested would be worth $167,440 after 10 years with a 7% return. If that was a 9% return, it would be $26,893 more. Plus if you invested some extra during a major downturn, that could be even better. With compounding interest, the additional 2% return over 10 or 20 years after that starts making an absolutely massive difference.

Tip 4 - Ensure your personal insurances are sufficient


When people buy a new car, say it's worth $15,000, they don't even bare the thought of driving it out of the dealership without insurance because if that got written off, that $15,000 loss would be devastating. And then think, how much do you earn each and every year?  I can tell you, you will be able to withstand losing a $15,000 car a lot easier than going without your income for 1 year, let alone many years, or forever. Income protection is a must and if you have a family, death cover is also a must. I know we don't like to think about it but there are people dying prematurely every day from car crashes to medical conditions to even suicide (ABS states that there is almost 7 deaths per day from suicide in Australia and men account for 60% of them). Nothing will derail your family's financial position quicker than injury, illness or death.


My name is Glenn Hilber and I am the owner and Senior Financial Adviser at Precision Wealth Management. You can contact me on 1300 200 012 or glenn@precisionwm.com.au


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