How My Net Worth Went from $-40,000 to $285,000 in Five Years
Published on - March 11th, 2008 (by J.D. Roth) This is a guest post from FrugalTrader, who blogs about personal finance from a Canadian perspective at Million Dollar Journey.
In 2003, my girlfriend (now wife) and I graduated from university with nearly $50,000 in debt. This debt was a combination of my wife’s $30,000 in student loans and her $20,000 new car loan. Since I learned fundamental saving habits at a very young age, I managed to graduate university debt-free with $10,000 in savings. Combined, however, we were $40,000 in the red (not including a new mortgage).
Over the past five years, our financial picture has changed drastically. Not only have we dug ourselves out of the hole, but we’ve grown our combined net worth to over $285,000.
How did we do it? We didn’t strike it rich in real estate, we didn’t luck into some crazy stock tip, and we don’t even have extremely high paying jobs (we started at $85,000 gross combined). Instead, we systematically controlled our spending so that our expenses were well below our income. We then took the savings and aggressively paid down our debts while at the same time investing for our retirement.
Here’s how we did it:
- We minimized our housing costs. We used my $10,000 in savings as a down payment and purchased an income property where we could live in one unit and rent out the other. The rental income from the other unit helped pay for most of our mortgage expense.
- We paid ourselves first. Upon graduation, we set up our bank accounts to transfer at least 10% of our take-home pay to a separate high interest rate savings account. As this account grew, it was separated into an emergency fund, lump-sum debt payments, and retirement lump-sum contributions. Any money left over in our regular account after paying bills (and discretionary spending) was used to either invest or pay down debt.
- We lived well below our means. We followed The Wealthy Barber philosophy of separating our wants and needs. This simply means that before you purchase something, you ask yourself a question: “Is this item a want or a need?”. We try to limit our purchases to “needs”. Following this rule saves us around 15-20% of our take-home pay.
- Any additional money was saved. As our combined salaries increased over the years, we’ve kept our lifestyle the same, which has resulted in greater savings. In addition, tax returns or any other “free” money is re-invested or saved. Lately, we’ve been saving up to 30% of our take-home pay.
- We aggressively paid down debt. We used our savings to pay down our student- and car-loan debt, while at the same time investing money in our retirement accounts. We paid off our student loan debt in late 2005, and completed the car payments in early 2007.
- We invested our savings for the long term. Along with maximizing our retirement contributions, we kept our eyes open for investment opportunities. In 2005, we came by a great deal on a single-family home, and picked it up at a steep discount relative to other homes in the area. We still earn rental income on this home.
Using these six steps, we have turned our financial situation around. We currently have no student or consumer debt, and have grown our net worth to over $285,000. My wife and I now aim to have $1 million in net worth by the time we reach the age of 35 (we’re 28 now). Whether your goal is to get out of debt, obtain passive income, or to achieve great wealth, the key is to set your goals, create a plan and stick with it.
For those of you who follow my blog, you know that we have recently upgraded our lifestyle with a new house. Even so, we kept our mortgage expense fairly low relative to our income by putting a large down payment on the home. Other than that, we still pay ourselves first and invest aggressively.
Photograph by jenn_jenn.
This article is about Real-Life
SEARCH FOR RECENT ARTICLES





[...] Rich Slowly has a guest post on how one of our fellow bloggers’s net worth went from $-40,000 to $285,000 in five short [...]
loading....
5 years ago there were 4 couples — each had the same combined income and had identical debt burdens. They all followed the same gameplan of living within their means and playing the property market.
One earner in couple A is struck down with an illness, temporarily halving the income. Debts start to mount, and they’re forced to downsize property, as debts rack up. Soon they cannot even pay for health insurance, worsening injury leads to permanent job loss and an eventual spiral downward into bankruptcy.
Couple B have a child and decide they have to move house to a better neighbourhood that has good schools. But so is every double income couple with children and there are not enough houses in good schooling districts. They can either rent, or must do an interest only mortgage. They choose the latter but then later find themselves in debt when interests rates rise. The housing bubble then bursts and they’re forced to foreclose anyway. They must look for a better schooling district for their kid as the wave of foreclosures is causing crime to rise in their neighborhood.
Couple C buys a house with the intentions of renting out a room to help pay for the mortgage which they know they won’t be able to afford on their own (i.e. buy-to-let mortgage). Unfortunately everyone has the same idea and soon there is a glut in rental property, so they’re forced to lower rents to ensure they have a paying tenant. Interest rates rise in the booming economy but rental income is not keeping pace with interest payments. Soon the couple finds themselves in debt as recession looms, threatening their own salary and/or the wage levels of potential tenants.
5 years later Couple D are well on their way to becoming millionaires and owning 3 properties. They want to tell everyone how easy it is to do what they did so post it on their blog. Everyone reading it says this is good advice, since it worked for them so it must work for anyone who tries it — that is, anyone who has managed to write about their own success 5 years later on a blog. (If couples A, B, or C have blogs, people don’t seem to be linking to them for some unknown reason.)
And now we know there is no excuse for not being rich, since the economic conditions of the next 5 years will be exactly like those of the previous 5… no?
loading....
[...] millionaires and owning 3 properties. They want to tell everyone how easy it is to do what they did so post it on their blog. Everyone reading it says this is good advice, since it worked for them so it must work for anyone [...]
loading....
I’ll agree with that. Setting goals is the best thing you can do to help yourself out financially.
Anyone who saves and invest money can become a millionaire. It is that easy.
loading....
Wonderful post! I wrote an article that is not identical but in the same genre. It’s titled Six Steps…to financially surviving a recession.
Your story is inspiring. The comment from AJC was amazing! $30,000 debt to $7 million in the positive!
loading....
[...] Like I’ve written before, Stuffitis is a term I learned from listening to Dave Ramsey’s Radio Show. Stuffitis is the condition that we all fall in from time to time, where we lose focus. We start paying more attention to material things that we would like to have or are working towards, than our financial goals and the sacrifices we must make to achieve them. So the question is, How do we avoid Stuffitis? Read along as we look at a few tips on how to stay on the right track to living beneath your means and ultimately, winning with money! [...]
loading....
Sorry, you’re an idiot to marry a girl with 50K of debt. Ok, 30K of student loans isn’t terrible if she studied a marketable major at a top school but she also took out a 20K car loan right out of college. That was stupid.
I don’t know why you’re giving out advice. This is the blind leading the blind.
loading....
[...] April 9, 2008 by cheaplikeme On another blog recently, a guest blogger posted about How My Net Worth Went from $-40,000 to $285,000 in Five Years. [...]
loading....
I just wanted to answer a question asked numerous comments back – #79
Minimum Wage said that he was having trouble figuring out how if monthly costs were on average higher for renters, why are people saying that renters can’t afford to buy?
Well, when you go to finally buy that house, you will find that you often need to have a large down payment, and that is outside most people’s means. Also there are closing costs which come out to thousands of dollars more, taxes, association fees, moving fees, initiation fees, all kinds of stuff. So the actual cost of owning a house is a lot more than the monthly mortgage payment, and it takes most people years to save for these initial costs. For example, I just rented for a year at $600/month and saved $10K to put towards a down payment. My husband did the same (we live apart). We used this $20K plus our tax refund of $4K to cover the down payment plus closing costs. And now we are about to purchase a lovely condo. Renting while saving worked out terrifically for us.
loading....
Hmm I went from a negative net worth of about $200,000 (school loans, medical debt, etc.- NO consumer speng debt) to a negative net worth of about 150,000 in three years and it is NOT fun. Denial is what it is all about. One income, one kid. No internet at home, no cable TV, no cell phone, 1990 car, 1997 computer (thank god for the work one) no vacations that cost money, no eatting out, no new clothes (except for kid as kids grow). Housing and utilites eats up 1/2 of my take home pay right now. I am living at the low end of the housing market of where we live.
Lesson number one – don’t get cancer
Lesson number two – don’t get cancer as a grad student because student health insurance sucks
Lesson number three – don’t be a grad student in your 40′s and graduate in your 50′s because if I had never gone to grad chool I’d be ahead financially now
Lesson number four – don’t read articles like the one I am commenting on because it is too depressing.
loading....
[...] the big name bloggers like Problogger, JohnChow, TheSimpleDollar, and GetRichSlowly started out small. People didn’t just automatically find them. They worked at [...]
loading....
[...] How my net worth went from -$40,000 to $285,000 in five years (by FrugalTrader from Million Dollar Journey): “We didn’t strike it rich in real estate, we didn’t luck into some crazy stock tip, and we don’t even have extremely high paying jobs. Instead, we systematically controlled our spending so that our expenses were well below our income. We then took the savings and aggressively paid down our debts while at the same time investing for our retirement.” [...]
loading....
Some of the earlier comments, alluding to differing attitudes of the “rich” and “poor”, reminded me of the following quote:
“Those of us who have been poor are driven by a need for security that no one from a middle-class or wealthy family can ever understand.” – Dean R. Koontz, from his Introduction to “The Nightrunners” by Joe R. Lansdale.
I’m not sure that I’ve gotten it entirely correct (haven’t actually seen that paperback for years), but you get the sentiment.
Which always leads ME to wonder: how much of financial “success” has to do with sheer “attitude”? Assuming that things will always “work out” in some way, instead of “worrying” so much about every red cent?
loading....
This was helpful as a guide for me.
loading....
When we(my wife, our daughter and I) first landed in Canada Oct-2004, our networth was about $25K. Today it is about $650K and we are really proud about the transformation.
Thanks,
Raj
loading....
For those of you still following this thread, we recently crossed the $500k net worth mark and paid off our mortgage in 2010!
Here is our 2010 Net Worth Summary.
loading....
This is BS! So their total savings of Net Worth over the course of 5 years was $325,000 ($285,000 + $40,000). That is $325,000 that they have saved with an $85K salary? So they probably brought home 68-70K after taxes… that would equate to 4.77 years. Yeah right!!! What did they eat? buy any clothes? I DON’T BUY IT!!!! for all of those of you that do.
loading....