Sunday, December 31, 2017

Ways and Means: 2017 Recap

Woohoo, my favorite post to write all year because it captures everything that I did the whole year…in money! Unlike other years, my ass was here in San Diego for most of the time, excepting a weekend in Oakland, a brief jaunt to Joshua Tree, two two-week trips to New York, and literally one trip to Los Angeles for New Year’s Eve weekend. Needless to say, that’s the least traveling I’ve done in years. Should have saved a lot of money right? Well, yes and no. Yes I saved a lot of money but no because all that saved money — plus more — went toward outfitting a house. How much does it cost to go from zero house belongings to (almost) full house belongings? I’ll tell you in another post. For now, let’s look at 2017, the fiscal year in review.

As always, below is my month-to-month variable expenses, and let’s just say that it started off swimmingly. I basically did nothing for the first two-and-a-half months of the year and came under budget in January, February, and March, which is a trifecta I don’t think I’ve ever achieved. I even cockily slashed my budget way down after January, thinking that I was doing a great job. By Apr-Jun though, my spending ways were back, and I slowly crept up in both over-budget percentage and actual numbers, all the way to a filthy November which cost me almost triple what January was, for some reason. I did finish up nicely thought, with a December, coming in at 92% on budget, but that was mostly due to being away for two weeks. And vacation, as we all know, goes under the annual "vacation" tab. Write it off!

  • Jan: $1,100
  • Feb: $950
  • Mar: $1,050
  • Apr: $1,450
  • May: $1,500
  • Jun: $1,600
  • Jul: $1,900
  • Aug: $2,050
  • Sep: $2,300
  • Oct: $2,250
  • Nov: $3,200
  • Dec: $1,550

The big four category breakdown goes like this:

  • ๐Ÿœ Food: $11,600
  • ๐Ÿ•น Shopping: $5,400
  • ๐ŸŽก Play: $3,700
  • ๐Ÿš— Transportation: $3,400

As you can see, compared to last year, everything was way lower, excluding food, which remained about the same. On the year I spent about $42,650 including fixed, variable, and annual expenses. That’s almost exactly the same as last year. So again, I was living about a $55k lifestyle. However, I was living basically rent free from January through June, as we were remodeling the new/old house, so if I take into account what would have been the normal estimated fixed expenses for those months, including the mortgage/rent, it would be more like $55,250 and then a $72k lifestyle. Guess who needs to change everything when the house fully kicks in?!? Is it time to write a book?!

The goal of “tags” is to flag down everything you’d want to take a look at the end of the year, and to that effect I added quite a few detailed tags this year — inspired by Ameer’s “Mexican food” tracking tag. I wanted to see how much I spent on boba, on cigarettes, on popcorn, on karaoke, etc. With those numbers now in hand, I present you with the shocking numbers...

I spent about a thousand dollars on movies, $500 for various “events” (which include concerts, dance shows, plays, anything that requires a pre-bought ticket), a spiffy $775 on karaoke for the year, and most shockingly — although not that shocking really — about a thousand dollars on boba. Yes, boba! Compared to $400 for cigarettes on the year, let’s just say that it’s clear what my real addiction is. Also, I recategorized popcorn to category “play” under its own tag ๐Ÿฟ, since I consider popcorn to be part of the movie going process, and that totaled $250 for the year. In comparison, I spent a piddly $180 on drinks for the year.

As for shopping, I bought a PS4 this year, plus controllers and games, and then add in various iOS and board games I bought and we were looking at a $800 bill for “games” this year. Probably $100 of that probably went to Riot to feed my League of Legends addiction. For a game that I spent probably hundreds of hours on, this was the sweetest ROI of all.

Let’s see, what else... I spent $975 on clothing or clothing-related items, $450 on forty or so books, $425 on whatever comes under “beauty” (haircuts and contacts mostly), and I actually went to the doctor this year, to the tune of two visits each at $75. Car expenses came out to $150 for DMV registration, but that doesn’t account for car insurance.

Oh, subscriptions. I finally cancelled my Citibike Pass after years of not even living in New York, signed up for and then cancelled a rarely used Marvel Unlimited account, and am still subscribed to the usual assortment of URL and hosting services for web life, a couple of iOS subscriptions, NBA League Pass, Spotify, Netflix, and Stitcher. Biggest adds were subscriptions for 1Password (a lifesaver), YouTube Red, and recurring charges for the new camera monitoring set-up in my house. That all came out to about $110 a month. The saddest thing is that MoviePass never got back to me and with the huge price drop, I never even got my MoviePass to work out. So much for customer loyalty!


And let’s tackle the huge food category, which I smartly separated out this year into dining, dining shared, grocery, and snacks. A full 32% of my entire variable budget was spent on food, of which 22% of that was spent paying for myself and others. I’d been wondering how much I spend on just my food versus when I eat out with others and here was the answer: about two-thirds. It’s a small price to pay for good company and shared plates. Add in snacks and groceries and we have food all the way up to 46% of my variable money spent. Even with a healthy diet of Soylent, most of my money went to food, as per usual. Can we just, like, not eat already?

Travel wise, again, I didn’t go too many places and so we’re looking at a total of $1,800 on flights, $625 on hotels, and that encompasses a weekend wedding in Oakland ($450), a few days in Joshua Tree ($175), ten days in New York ($1,175) and another two weeks there ($1,750). Oh wait, flights is super high because I bought a ticket to Taipei for $600 that doesn’t deliver until January 2018. And somehow taxis cost me $975 for the year, which I’d guess is trip related, and public transportation was a piddly $75 in total. Let's hope that number goes up next year as it means I'll be scooting around in foreign subways.

Also, an unexpected expense was a new passport and visas for my upcoming Asia jaunt. Apparently you can’t just add new pages to your passport anymore so a new passport, two visas, and finally getting on the Global Entry program set me back $1,450. Such is the price of escape right? Oh and most importantly I racked up 64,500 reward points on my Chase card — remember my newfound obsession with reward cards right around this time last year? — and am now armed with almost one "get out of jail free" card to anywhere. Whew!

As always, if you want to start a budget club of your very own, here's the open template, and if you need help customizing it, do tell!

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