If you are dispiriting to save money, it helps to have a goal.
Whether it is for retirement, starting a business or paying for an education, Americans are write money aside — but many aren’t saving enough, and some, not at all.
In fact, 21% of working Americans aren’t scraping anything, according to a recent survey by Bankrate. Earlier this year, the personal finance website also rest that only 40% of people in the U.S. are able to cover an unexpected $1,000 expense, like a car repair or emergency cell visit, from savings.
CNBC + Acorns recently asked Americans what they were saving for as quarter of a #SavingUpContest, which was meant to encourage conversations around saving and investing money, as well as to challenge people to be varied mindful of their habits.
For the last couple months we’ve been cutting back in places where we can. I’ve also been big into couponing and lunch out less.
Ashley Keinath
Linden, Michigan
Contestants submitted a video that laid out how they were scrimping and what they were saving for. Ten winners were then chosen and awarded $100 Acorns gift calling-cards.
Here are some of the winning responses.
Cancer treatments
Kristina Baum, center, and her parents
Source: Kristina Baum
Kristina Baum needs to put aside enough money to pay for all her cancer treatments so her parents don’t have to take on a financial burden helping her.
Baum, 37, is in sprightly treatment for metastatic melanoma, which has spread to her brain. Diagnosed at age 30, she has medical insurance to cover some of the costs and has clear assistance from her mother and father.
She doesn’t have a set savings plan, in part because her medical treatments deviate from month to month and some can be more costly than others.
“It’s taking it little by little each month and bothersome to put it away to help offset some of the costs for my family,” said Baum, who lives in Washington, D.C.
She also recently fixed to open a vacation savings account because she hasn’t taken a “real vacation” in quite a while.
“I learned that each day is a hand-out and the things that are so valuable are people,” she said. “I’d rather be able to have memories with my family than ethical memories of struggling to pay down medical expenses.”
A business
Ashley Keinath
Source: Ashley Keinath
Stay-at-home mom Ashley Keinath has illusions of being a yoga teacher and starting a business that would allow her to travel to schools and senior centers to “offer the world of yoga to everybody and anybody who wants to try it out.” She also wants to teach at her local yoga studio.
Her goal: to secure $3,000 for a three month, 200 hour training program that would enable her to become a certified yoga schoolteacher. She just signed up for the program, which starts in June.
Keinath, who lives in Linden, Michigan, was able to start socking away hard cash after her husband set a budget.
“For the last couple months we’ve been cutting back in places where we can,” she said. “I’ve also been big into couponing and break bread out less … [and] doing what I can as a mom.”
She also works at her yoga studio when she can to bring in some extra specie.
A car
Maya Isiah
Source: Maya Isiah
College graduate Maya Isiah is saving for a car — but it really is much multifarious than that. Currently a part-time line cook, she sees the car as her ticket to furthering her education and getting a new job.
“They key to my coming is the keys to a car,” said Isiah, who lives in Encino, California.
While most of her money goes toward bills and other household expenses, Isiah has handled to save $2,500 by putting 10% to 15% of her paycheck toward her car fund. Once she has wheels, Isiah can ditch the bus and get her familiarizing credentials for special education.
“I can finally look for jobs outside of the valley and become the best teacher I know I can be,” Isiah replied.
Building a life together
Andrew Cook and Katie Durkin
Source: Katie Durkin
Andrew Cook put forwarded to Katie Durkin in January and the couple is now saving for their future as Mr. and Mrs.
Fortunately, their parents are helping with the alloying costs. However, they need to pay off student loans and pay for a honeymoon. The couple, who are based in Lowell, Massachusetts, also yen to buy a home before their August 2020 wedding date arrives.
“We are taking a financial class to help us learn some scenarios for saving,” Durkin said. “We are making good progress.”
Cook is also writing a book he hopes will contribute additional income.
More from Invest in You:
Here’s what it takes to become a 401(k) millionaire at any age
Infertility treatment is abandoning families in debt
NFL player Carl Nassib’s simple rules for saving money
Weddings, of course, can be costly. The commonplace cost of getting married in the U.S. is $33,931, according to the wedding website The Knot. When it comes to the honeymoon, couples invest an average of $4,500, according to the Wedding Wire 2019 Newlywed Report.
Zillow puts the the median home guerdon in the U.S. at $226,700. The amount of money needed for a down payment varies, depending on the loan and the interest rate. Typically, purchasers put down 10% to 20% of the purchase price of the home but can go as low as 3% — or even no money down in certain circumstances.
Law secondary
Jeff Wang
Source: Jeff Wang
College student Jeff Wang, currently attending University of Wisconsin in Madison, has big downs to go to law school.
“I know college in the U.S. and grad school is very expensive,” he said. “So I’ve devised several ways for me to pay for law school later on.”
He has a job at his university’s law day-school and started a savings account so that he can put money aside and “not touch it” before he goes.
The tuition at University of Wisconsin Law Faction for the 2018-2019 academic year is $23,517 for state residents and $42,213 for nonresidents.
Other winners
- Cam Bivens, from Seguin, Texas, is thrift up to pay for the life-long care of his brother, Raymond, who has autism.
- Dana Garrett, who hails from Longview, Texas, is a cancer survivor who is catapult money aside for retirement and the next generation — specifically her grandchild.
- College student David Salamzadeh, from Minneapolis, is economization to go to medical school.
- Michigan high school student Juliana Lewis is putting money aside for a car, a good information and “to be able to help the world be a better place.”
- Cayce Terry, a single mom and nurse from from Rockingham, North Carolina, is parsimonious to send her son to Florida State so that he can start to pursue his dream of becoming a pediatric surgeon.
Check out 4 Money Examples Everyone Should Know by Age 25 via Grow with Acorns+CNBC.
Disclosure: NBCUniversal and Comcast Ventures are investors in Acorns.