The Financially Free Blog
6 Benefits to Maximize Support for Your LGBTQ+ Employees
It’s Pride Month — a time of year when companies rightly celebrate their LGBTQ+ employees. However, many employers are missing out on ways that they could be supporting their queer and trans employees, especially when it comes to their benefits package. Pay equality is often viewed as the most important financial issue in the workplace, but employer-sponsored benefits can play a huge role in either leveling the playing field for LGBTQ+ employees or perpetuating inequality. Out-of-pocket medical expenses can have huge financial consequences for queer and trans employees.
How to Choose a High Yield Savings Account
Despite the economic challenges of rising inflation and the slipping stock market, a high yield savings account is the best place to store cash you might need in the next year. If you are ready to take the plunge and open your first high yield savings account, you are in luck! These days there are plenty of great options and interest rates are rising after two years of stagnation.
FDIC insurance is the fail-safe that would reimburse you in the unlikely event that your bank goes under. This guarantee should help you sleep soundly at night with your money in the bank, rather than under your mattress.
5 Ways to Recession-Proof Your Finances
After the last major economic downturn, hearing that the next recession might be around the corner (or already in our midst) can feel unsettling. Despite the buzz of impending recession fluttering across the media, the reality is that so many factors simultaneously influence the U.S. economy no one can truly predict its timing.
The mystery of the unknown — when the recession will hit, how long will it last, and if it’ll even reach our doorstep at the same magnitude as the Great Recession — can be problematic.
4 Reasons You Need A Financial Wellness Program
Increasingly, employers are realizing the importance of supporting their employees’ mental health and wellbeing, and financial health plays a huge role in that. Thirty-four percent of employees said that financial stress has severely impacted their mental health, according to the 2022 PwC Employee Financial Wellness Survey. That stress extends into the workplace: nearly one-fifth of employees said that financial stress greatly affected their productivity at work.
Employees’ desire for financial wellness programming and resources is also becoming more common.
5 Ways to Stretch Your Summer Travel Budget
After two years of canceled and modified vacation plans, many people are excited about the prospect of more “normal” summer travel. Of course, with average flight prices increasing sharply since the start of the year and record-high gas prices, you might be wondering how to get the most out of your summer vacation without breaking the bank.
Being flexible about the dates and times of your flights is one of the best ways to keep your airfare cost as low as possible. Google Flights date grid and price graph can help you easily identify the cheapest dates to fly.
What is the Best Way to Save for My Goals?
We all know the traditional banking model: one checking account and one savings account to cover all of your needs. Back when everyone received a physical paycheck and banking was done in person, this model made a lot of sense: who wants to run to the bank every week to move their money around? Not me! Fortunately, with the proliferation of online banking, it is easier than ever to manage multiple accounts. This has allowed people to bank in a way that makes sense for their lives, and as it turns out, having all of your money lumped together in one place is not necessarily the most effective strategy.
3 Changes to Medical Debt that Could Affect Your Credit Score
The three major credit bureaus — Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion — recently announced major changes to how they will report medical debt. These changes could have a wide-reaching impact and eliminate about 70% of the medical debt that appears on credit reports in the U.S. Credit scores impact the ability to access housing, own a car, and sometimes even gain employment. These changes will reduce the double penalization of many people who are underinsured or who have struggled to make ends meet.
So what’s changing?
How to Get Through the Post-Covid Wedding Surge Without Going Broke
I’ve done a lot of research on the subject and concluded that everyone has that year: the year of all the weddings. Like all of them. At the same damn time. For me, that meant six destination weddings for six people whose weddings I really, really wanted to attend, all of which required plane tickets and hotels for two people since I was married at the time. For a BFF that same year, there were 13 weddings (although if you ask me she got off easy because most of them were in Long Island, which apparently is a place that natives like to return to to proclaim their love for one another, unlike my New Jersey homeland).
What Is a Sinking Fund? And How to Set it Up
Imagine that you are on track with your budget for the month and feeling amazing about it — as you should be! But then you go for your $200 quarterly hair appointment or your $500 annual credit card fee hits, and suddenly, your budget is busted.
These types of expenses feel like surprises, but they aren’t — they are regular, predictable expenses that should be part of your budget. The problem is that we are so focused on monthly budgets that we don’t plan for expenses that occur annually, quarterly, or every few months.
401 k & Retirement: Types of Retirement Plans
I work with a lot of clients who are planning for retirement. Some are early in their careers and want to put best practices into place ASAP. Some are nearing, say, the 40 year mark, just starting to see retirement as a reality on the horizon, and want to make up for lost time. Others are on the brink of retirement and want a second set of eyes to help them feel confident that they’re going to be ok once they pull the trigger. Some have not saved for retirement and want to better understand what the future holds.
Regardless of where you are, it’s probably time to start thinking about retirement savings.
Financial Literacy Month: Introduction to Investing
This is our fifth and final week in the series.
Once you have tackled budgeting, saving, debt, and retirement, you are ready to invest! We get a lot of questions about investing because it often feels mysterious and out of reach. The good news is that you only need to understand a few key concepts to get started. Investing is putting your money into something that you expect to increase in value, thereby creating a profit and earning you more money. At TFG, we think of investing as giving your money a workout.
Giving My Son His First Money Memory
My 5-year-old son saved up enough money for a Nintendo Switch this year. Weirdly enough, my first money memory is also of saving up enough money to buy a Nintendo system (a purple Gameboy at the time) with my own money. I saw the opportunity to give him his first money memory and I ran with it. So how did I talk him through saving up for it? He had received a gift card for Christmas and wanted to go spend it immediately. We walked through each aisle about 4-5 times. He picked up toys in each aisle, all of which he already had. Each time he picked up something I asked him the following questions.
Ask a Trainer: Is it a Good Idea to Use an FHA Loan to Buy Your First Property?
We’ve all seen the news: the last year of Covid-related upheaval has created quite the housing boom. As many people are able to work from home, many have also decided to relocate, moving out of small apartments or cramped cities to have more space and a place to call their own. As we tell our clients, buying a home takes a lot of financial preparation. You’ll need to figure out how much you can afford to pay for your mortgage each month and create savings accounts for your downpayment and a contingency fund.
Financial Literacy Month: Introduction to Retirement
This month, we’re bringing you bite-sized servings of financial literacy. Each week, we’ll introduce you to a core concept and map out a fun and easy daily action item. This is our fourth week in the series.
Thinking about retirement can be overwhelming. For starters, there are so many different types of accounts, terms, and tax implications. And we have to juggle saving for something that is 20, 30, or 40 years away with our short-term goals of paying off debt or saving up for a house.
Why You Should Still Apply for Jobs That You Aren't Qualified For (From A Confidence Perspective)
If you read, this Financial Gym article, then you already know why you should apply for a job you aren’t qualified for, in the eyes of a recruiter. Recruiters and hiring teams look for stand-out cover letters, unique answers to interview questions and interchangeable skills. These are all traits that are not specific to one field or dependent on your background. Meaning the hiring team thinks you can, and should, still apply for the job you aren’t technically qualified for on paper.
How to Buy and Sell a Home at the Same Time
Let’s set the context: you have already gone through the homebuying process once, and you probably learned a lot from that experience as a buyer. Now, you’re ready to buy a second home. But here is the kicker: you have to sell the home you’re currently living in to afford the home you want to buy. You may be wondering, can I do that at the same time? The answer is yes and it’s pretty straightforward (in theory) with complexity in the process (in practice). To start, you need to make sure everyone is on the same page.
Financial Literacy Month: Introduction to Debt
This month, we’re bringing you bite-sized servings of financial literacy. Each week, we’ll introduce you to a core concept and map out a fun and easy daily action item. This is our third week in the series.
Debt. Most of us have it in some form — credit cards, student loans, a car loan, a mortgage, an outstanding medical bill. Having debt is not a moral failing, but we can get so wrapped up in our feelings about having debt and how we got it that we get in our own way.
Ask a Trainer: Should I Refinance My Home?
Many homeowners have taken advantage of historically low interest rates over the past few years to refinance their mortgages. If you aren’t among them, the talk of rising interest rates might be prompting you to consider whether you should refinance now. Refinancing your mortgage can have major benefits such as lowering your monthly payment and reducing the amount of interest you pay in the long run. However, refinancing to a lower rate isn’t always the best financial decision.
Financial Literacy Month: Introduction to Saving
This month, we’re bringing you bite-sized servings of financial literacy. Each week, we’ll introduce you to a core concept and map out a fun and easy daily action item. This is our second week in the series.
Our topic for this week is saving! Saving might sound boring, but it is actually a secret superpower. Almost all financial goals involve saving, so mastering this skill will get you far. Saving is the act of setting aside any money that you earned and didn’t spend in a given month — ideally in a separate high yield savings account.
6 Things to Do Instead of Freaking Out About Inflation
Inflation is here and we are feeling it — at the grocery store, the car dealership, the gas pump, and in our housing costs. It is frustrating to shell out more cash for the same products, but there are a few actions you can take to ensure that you are keeping your finances on track when it feels like prices are out of control.
Inflation is a broad increase in the prices of goods and services across the economy that results in reduced purchasing power. In other words, you pay more money for the same groceries, cars, and haircuts.