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Frugal Articles of the Week

By Frugaling 3 Comments

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Reading Nook Photo

Every week I like to feature a few frugal articles that caught my eyes. Curl up in your favorite reading nook and enjoy. Hopefully these encourage you to live frugal lives!

Income Inequality vs. Wealth Inequality by Hamilton Nolan
After paying a $4,000+ tax bill this year and losing much of my net worth to self-employment taxes, it made me rethink the income versus wealth divide. Someone can make a lot of money one year, but have little in savings. Hamilton Nolan hit the nail on this article. He points out that the obsession with income inequality is nonsensical. Instead, we should be focusing on wealth inequality, and I tend to agree with him!

Minimalist Living: When a Lot Less Is More by Josh Sanburn
The Minimalists, Joshua Fields Millburn and Ryan Nicodemus, are on a roll. Seriously, they’re getting published everywhere these days and their audience is growing rapidly. They were recently interviewed by Time Magazine regarding their success. The Minimalists mentioned that they had only 52 visitors the first month they started their site in December 2010. In 2014, they supposedly had 2 million! What an impressive duo and important issues. Keep up the great work, guys!

‘There are so many ways to live’: Meet the man who quit his job to make an $8,000 van home by Michelle Stoffel Huffman
This guy is a vandwelling inspiration. He quit his job, decided to travel through Europe, and the kicker, he’s doing it all out of a camper van! He retrofitted it with a bed, cooking area, and even a little shower.

What We Appreciate Appreciates by Cait Flanders
Cait’s been blogging about personal finance for years now. She recently wrote a guest post for Joshua Becker at Becoming Minimalist. This article is all about the confluence of personal finance, minimalism, and dealing with debt — topics true to my heart. Well done, Cait! This is an awesome article.

Filed Under: Save Money Tagged With: Income Inequality, Minimalism, minimalist, vandwelling, wealth inequality

Living In A Van Down By The School

By Frugaling 4 Comments

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Living in a van down by the school. With the debt collector ready to pounce, maybe it's time to get proactive.

Update: Ken Ilgunas, a van dweller and featured in this article, recently published his experiences in a wonderful, detailed book called: Walden on Wheels: On The Open Road from Debt to Freedom.

Seemingly borne from Walden Pond, a new movement that converges minimalism with frugality is upon us. More and more students are choosing to live in cars, vans, and automobiles to skip the rent and save a boatload. In this era of debt and student loan worries, saving $400 to $700 per month looks plenty appetizing, but should you consider it?

“I am convinced, that if all men were to live as simply as I then did, thieving and robbery would be unknown. These take place only in communities where some have got more than is sufficient while others have not enough.”

-Henry David Thoreau

Over the years, I entertained the idea of moving into my car (or buying a van) to avoid the monthly punishment of the rent check. A variety of factors prevented me from ever going through with it. The biggest concern was for my safety. If somebody found out you were living in a van or saw what was inside, they may be tempted to rob the vehicle (whether you’re inside or not). On top of that, it can be legally questionable to park a vehicle and live out of it.

About a year ago, a college friend started sharing on Facebook about his recent decision to move into a van for his senior year. Now, he’s a week away from graduating and saying goodbye to the lifestyle. The crazier piece: He’s not alone (Read the Thor-eauvian van-dwelling experiment in NYTimes). This is a movement towards extreme debt reduction and an attempt to attack the status quo of poverty via education. 

With the debt collector ready to pounce, maybe it’s time to get proactive. College is only getting more expensive, as state budgets are being slashed and the students’ share of tuition becomes more burdensome. But before you go for it, here are five points to consider:

1. Big Savings

No doubt, this is the biggest reason to extricate yourself from the bounds of four walls. Utilities and pointless tchotchkes be gone! As mentioned earlier, this could save you anywhere from about 400 to 700 dollars per month (depending on where you live), plus electricity costs. Even cooking costs plummet, as your options for food diminish. Most van-dwellers have some sort of backpacking and camping experience. Knowing how to use a portable, backpacking stove or gas can is key to cooking warm meals. And while you can cook, most of it will likely be soup.  Get used to it. Most of the furniture we fill our homes with won’t fit. Selling the extras and/or avoiding the purchase can keep more money in your pocket.

Savings: $400+ per month.

2. Little Space

This would obviously depend on the “living quarters” that you choose. I can imagine campers being a relatively easy way to live, but many are choosing cheaper options. For about 1,000 to 2,000 dollars, students can buy a beat up, junker, passenger van. While they may not be reliable or start whenever you like, you can usually fit a bed, chair, food, and clothing inside.

Cost: $1,000-2,000 (one time).

3. Questionable Hygiene

Living in a van down by the school might suggest shower-free weeks and body-odor-ridden clothing, but that doesn’t necessarily have to happen. Campuses tend to have great recreational facilities that have showers. Usually, if you’re a student, you can just swipe your ID and you’re free to shower and prep for the day. Laundry facilities tend to dot the landscape of college towns, and as long as you can transport your laundry to one of them, you’re fine. By using public facilities for showering and cleaning, you’ll be saving money and being green, which would otherwise go to utilities.

Savings: ~$50-60 per month.

4. Mostly Safe

Living in an unguarded shelter is a daunting task, and seems to attract more men than women (perhaps for obvious reasons). In a way, a vehicle is no different from an apartment – someone could break into either one of them and rob you. But a vehicle is open to dangers from police, crooks, and environmental (flooding, storms, etc.) considerations that you generally avoid in formal housing.

Cost: Possibly your sanity.

5. Sometimes Connected

Being connected means far more than having Wi-Fi, Internet, and electricity. Fundamentally, it’s about human connection and the comforts of a social life. By choosing this lifestyle, it might preclude certain friendships and relationships from developing. It’s hard to invite guests over to your van for more than just the voyeuristic spectacle. As for mail, getting a P.O. box or choosing a friend’s address can work. Going to campus or the library can be your perfect way to study and surf the web, as well.

Cost: As low as $14 (for P.O. Box).

Filed Under: Minimalism, Save Money Tagged With: debt, Ken Ilgunas, Living in a van, Student Loans, vandwelling

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