How This Family Paid Off $100,000 of Debt in 26 Months | The Budget Mom (2024)

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How This Family Paid Off $100,000 of Debt in 26 Months | The Budget Mom (1)

Today, I am sharing the first story in the Debt Free Inspiration Series. This is a great debt payoff story from Nicole Rule from The Greatest Worth. Nicole is the mother of four amazing kids who successfully paid off $100,000 in debt in just 26 months (90% percent of it being student loan debt). Below is her remarkable story.

I’ve written my debt freedom story before. But, every time I sit down to write it again more comes out! Change always happens in an instant – a choice is made, and transformation occurs. Our moment was more than seven years ago. My second child was three months old, and I was just about to go back to work in a hospital as a full-time physical therapist.

The thing is, my baby was barely napping, had agreed to eat from a bottle only twice in her short life and would only sleep if she was nestled in her baby carrier against my chest. Needless to say, I was super anxious about having to return to work. But, I had ZERO options. We NEEDED my income to continue to make ends meet each month. It was simple math – our debt payments came to $1000 a month on our balance of $100,000! That didn’t even include our mortgage and utilities and other regular monthly bills.

We felt powerless and without options. I felt out of control. My superpower (which can also be my Kryptonite) is my ability to take action when a situation feels out of control to me. It was NOT OK with me to not have options.

I’ve never actually been the mama who loved being at home 24/7, but I would have liked to have some options! My goal was to choose when I worked. To work because I loved it and wanted to, not because we needed the income to make ends meet. It might seem like a subtle difference to you, but it felt huge at that moment! It's the difference between liberty and tyranny. With financial freedom comes all kinds of options. And, at this moment, I wanted options more than I wanted anything else. I wanted to be able to say to my boss, “I need three more months of maternity leave.” I wanted to not NEED my income. I wanted to be able to make choices that felt good for my family and me.

THE MOMENT THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING

It happened the day my husband, and I first calculated our Net Worth and looked at the negative number sitting squarely on the $100,000 debt load. I saw that if we didn’t change the way we were living we would find ourselves in this exact same situation in 10 years. And in 20 years.

I realized the many, many costs associated with the reality of that negative number. We wouldn't be able to help our kids jump boldly into life because we would still be drowning in our own debt 15 years later. I wouldn't be able to follow my dream to start a business as the financial risk was too great. Our dream house was far-fetched if not impossible. Travelling, adventures, abundant generosity…no way.

Feeling so upset and frustrated with our choices was the very thing I needed to push me forward into our debt free journey.

Awareness. It started with honest awareness for us.

TAKING ACTION

We created a budget. Sounds so simple, right? We started with an excel spreadsheet (I don’t think there were googles sheets at the time!) and have since moved to YNAB. Once we got really serious and started budgeting to the penny, using the zero-based budgeting method, everything changed! Because there’s no way to hide purchases anymore. Being so open and honest with each other was SUPER hard in the beginning, but I’m positive it has led us to have such a strong, healthy marriage now.

With some hard questions and thorough research, we decided that the best option for us was to hire a nanny for our children and start working 40-60 hours in the short term, so that in the long term I could be present for my kids.

We realized, in short, that we couldn't have it all, and we started living from those voluntary boundaries.

I moved to a full-time weekend job (FridaythroughMonday) AND worked Wednesdays, while Sam worked weekdays – we only needed a nanny M, W, and F.

It was a solution that met our financial goals – paying for childcare only three days per week – but it was hard for our family and hard for our marriage. We rarely had time together as a family, and we consciously chose to withdraw from communities and activities that were part of our life at the time.

Nothing was sacred, in the short-term. It was like a butcher shop for a while – hack, saw, cut. There were a lot of tears shed in those 26 months of working and scraping and sacrifice. We gave up pretty much any luxury you can think of during our debt payoff time:

  • ALL vacations (we didn't even go camping during this time)
  • Eating out
  • Lunch out after church (SO much easier than going home and cooking)
  • Church altogether (since I was working every Sunday)
  • Gym memberships
  • TV
  • Nights out with friends
  • Baby music classes (or extra baby extracurricular activities)
  • Anniversary celebrations
  • Birthday and Christmas gifts

We stayed home. A lot.It’s really not possible to sugar coat this. It was a REALLY, REALLY hard 26 months. But, we can do hard things.To get through it, time and again (usually after a good cry) I went back to ourbig picture vision and values for our life.I had to connect back to our “WHY.” If I didn’t, I pretty much wanted to quit every day!

THE JOURNEY WASN'T ALWAYS EASY

We struggled for a long time with the feelings of lack and deprivation when we first started out on our debt payoff journey. It felt like we were missing out on everything! We were always saying things like “we can’t go out with you because we’re broke” OR “It’s not fair that we have all this student loan debt and so and so doesn’t” OR “I wish WE could go on that amazing vacation.”

It was a really dark time for me because I was leaning into FOMO and comparison instead of into the truth of who I was. It wasn’t until we defined our Values + Vision and started working on our money mindset that our journey shifted. We began to see money as a tool to get us living authentically and without anxiety and fear. And something that can be used any way we chose. In short, we stopped being victims and started owning our journey. And budgeting became a tool to get us closer to our dreams. It became fun and beautiful!

How This Family Paid Off $100,000 of Debt in 26 Months | The Budget Mom (2)

THE CRUCIAL LESSON I LEARNED FROM MY DEBT PAYOFF JOURNEY

Don’t compare your life and your journey to others.

It’s crucial to find your own way. Especially with money. The best way to do that was through awareness and doing the deep work of defining your Values + Vision.

THE THINGS THAT HELPED ME THE MOST

ONE: I decided that hiding from my finances was not serving me or my future plans anymore! So, I chose awareness and the work involved in becoming aware of complacency and ease. Because, let’s be honest, this work is real and it is work. Don’t get me wrong, it’s SUPER fulfilling, but it’s work in the beginning!

TWO: I changed my money mindset. I talk about this ALL. THE. TIME. This step is often overlooked, and doing so sets folks up for burnout. What we say to ourselves about money in our life drives how we’ll interact with and approach money. It's important to know your money stories – the things you believe about money – and see if they are true or just baggage, or even wounds, from your past. See if those money stories are serving you in your quest to pay off debt, or become financially literate or to make a budget. Whatever your goal is, it’s crucial to stop and really question those things we’ve always told ourselves about money. Things like “I’m just not a money person.” Or, “I’m terrible at budgeting.” It's essential to change that negative self-talk into: “I haven’t spent much time learning about money. I’ve tried to make a budget before, and it didn’t work. I’ll try again and in a new way to encourage success. I am sure I can do this if I keep at it!” See how different that feels? When I shifted my money mindset towards a motto of money is abundant and beautiful and then created money affirmations to follow, I realized that anything was possible for me financially.

THREE: I defined my Vision and Values for my life and our family’s life. I’ve written our Values down and ended up framing them so that my husband and I and our kids see them every day to be reminded of why we make the financial decisions we make. Why we funnel more money towards vacations and away from buying toys every week! Like I said earlier, once we figured out how to do this process, it changed our debt free journey from one of torture and feelings of deprivation into one of liberation and hope!

THE REASON WE NEVER GAVE UP

Our “why” has always been to have options; to be able to make choices and take risks based on what we want for our lives, not on what we need to survive.

When I finally started listening to myself and my dreams, there became no other option but to change our financial habits, skills, patterns, and stories. Because, let’s be real, every dream we have has some sort of financial component to it. If I could figure out my money, I could figure out ALL my dreams!

OUR NEXT STEPS

It took us 26 months of strict budgeting and hard core sacrifice to pay off that $100,000! We are now four years post debt freedom and are working towards paying off our mortgage early so we can have even more freedom in the future!

I’m spending a lot of time and effort into building Greatest Worth – which is a place for women to find that living beautiful lives and managing their finances are NOT mutually exclusive! I truly believe that managing personal finances bring all sorts of beauty into our lives! This business is my heart and soul and feels like a message that is crucial in today’s world.

And, my husband and I are working to pay off our mortgage in the next five years. We’ve always had a dream to take a few epic road trips (North Carolina to Alaska anyone?!) and to travel overseas with our kids. These are part of our overall family vision that actually feels possible now that the debt is gone!

MY BEST PIECE OF ADVICE

Always define your Values + Vision. Your Vision is The Big Reason that you’ve decided to go on your own debt-free journey and it's the only thing that can sustain and fuel you during the hard times. It will keep you from succumbing to comparisons and to social mediaenvy. It will keep you and your partner together and focused. It will give you something to explain to your kids for whyyou’re changing your spending habits. It will be a topic of conversation for your friends who come over for tea after the kids’ bedtime because you refuse to spend money on co*cktails while you work towards your goal. It will be your North Star. The Vision that you can see so clearly will become a reality if you truly go all in. You got this!

How This Family Paid Off $100,000 of Debt in 26 Months | The Budget Mom (3)

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How This Family Paid Off $100,000 of Debt in 26 Months | The Budget Mom (2024)

FAQs

How much debt is too much for a family? ›

Debt-to-Income Ratio

It is expressed as a percentage. You should shoot for 35% or less (more on this shortly). Recurring monthly debt is bills you must pay every month, like mortgage or rent, car payment, credit cards, student loan and monthly debt bill.

How to budget money and pay off debt? ›

Try the 50/30/20 rule as a simple budgeting framework. Allow up to 50% of your income for needs, including debt minimums. Leave 30% of your income for wants. Commit 20% of your income to savings and debt repayment beyond minimums.

How to get control of family spending? ›

Managing a Family Budget
  1. Make a list of your family's financial goals. ...
  2. Track your monthly spending. ...
  3. Create a budget that feels right. ...
  4. Discuss needs vs. ...
  5. Get everyone on board.

What is the average debt of a family? ›

The average debt in America is $104,215 across mortgages, auto loans, student loans, and credit cards. Debt peaks between ages 40 and 49 among consumers with excellent credit scores. The largest percentages of the average consumer debt balance are mortgages.

What is an unhealthy amount of debt? ›

Key takeaways

Debt-to-income ratio is your monthly debt obligations compared to your gross monthly income (before taxes), expressed as a percentage. A good debt-to-income ratio is less than or equal to 36%. Any debt-to-income ratio above 43% is considered to be too much debt.

How to pay off 100k in debt fast? ›

How To Eliminate $100,000 of Debt
  1. Recognize You Have a Big Problem on Your Hands. ...
  2. Make a Plan. ...
  3. List Out All Your Debts. ...
  4. Create a Hard Budget. ...
  5. Focus On Paying Off Debts With the Highest Interest Rates First. ...
  6. Don't Skimp On an Emergency Fund. ...
  7. Get a Personal Loan To Consolidate Debt. ...
  8. Consider Debt Resolution (Settlement)
Feb 15, 2024

How to pay off $50,000 in debt in 2 years? ›

Tips for Paying Off $50,000 in Credit Card Debt
  1. Pay More Than the Minimum. ...
  2. Focus on High-Interest Debt First. ...
  3. Pay Off the Card With the Lowest Balance First. ...
  4. Review Your Expenses. ...
  5. Use Extra Cash to Pay Down Your Debt. ...
  6. Home Equity Loan. ...
  7. Personal Loan. ...
  8. Balance Transfer.
Jun 13, 2023

What is the 50 20 30 rule? ›

The 50-30-20 rule recommends putting 50% of your money toward needs, 30% toward wants, and 20% toward savings.

What is the average household budget? ›

A single person household spends an average of $4,337 on monthly expenses. Married couples without kids spend an average of $7,111 on monthly expenses. A family of four spends an average of $7,875–9,168 on monthly expenses (depending on kids' ages).

What is a good budget for a family of 5? ›

The latest data show average monthly expenses ranged from $3,693 for one person to $8,068 for a family of five or more. Try the 50/30/20 model for your own spending. Hal M. Bundrick is a former NerdWallet personal finance writer.

How many months does it usually take for your budget to start working as a budget should? ›

It usually takes around three months to get comfortable with budgeting, no matter your income. So, keep going. You really can do this. But we'll be honest: It's way easier to budget well when you've got a budgeting tool.

How much household debt is ok? ›

Each household should spend no more than 36% of their income on debt overall.

How much is considered excessive debt? ›

If you have a DTI ratio higher than 43%, you probably are carrying too much debt because you are less likely to qualify for a mortgage loan. So if your monthly debt payment is $2,250 with a gross monthly income of $5,000, your DTI ratio would be 45%, which indicates you have a relatively high amount of debt.

Is 20k in debt a lot? ›

High-interest credit card debt can devastate even the most thought-out financial plan. U.S. consumers carry $6,501 in credit card debt on average, according to Experian data, but if your balance is much higher—say, $20,000 or beyond—you may feel hopeless.

Is 10k debt a lot? ›

There's no specific definition of “a lot of debt” — $10,000 might be a high amount of debt to one person, for example, but a very manageable debt for someone else. Calculating your debt-to-income (DTI) ratio gives you a rough idea.

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