| It's important to start saving first and buy property only after you have a sustainable nest egg. The extra liquidity from saving helps in all scenarios: if you need to find a new rental, if you need a down payment, if tragedy strikes and you need to support a loved one. If I had to list financial lessons for most Americans they would be: 1. Pay down high-interest debt. Nowadays that's 5%+. Anything above 10% is an emergency. 2. Save an emergency fund: 2-3 months living expenses. Put most of this in a high-yield savings account earning ~2% interest. 3. Look at retirement savings plans that are advantageous for your taxes. Tradtional IRAs, Roth IRAs and employer-match 401ks are a few places to start. Try to save at least 15-20% of your income this way. 4. Great job! Continue to build your emergency fund (to 4-6 months), pay down moderate-interest debt (3-5%), and contribute to retirement accounts. 5. Put extra cash in stock and bond index funds in a taxable account. You can use this money anytime but its value will fluctuate (hopefully growing long-term). 6. Saving for a house? Sock more money in that high-yield savings account to hit a 20% down payment for a home mortgage. 7. Now you're ready for OP's life lesson #1. Buy a house you can afford and keep saving. |