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How I paid off $100,000 in student loans while making $28,000 to $45,000 a year

In October 2011, I spurred to New York to pursue my dream of becoming a writer. I’d graduated from Boston University in 2008 with $85,000 in critic loan debt. Although I’d made some payments, by the time I moved I was closer to $90,000 in the hole due to mounting property.

I juggled multiple jobs to make ends meet: catering at a Tribeca wine shop, babysitting Park Avenue kids, copywriting billboard ads, and of advance, writing every article an editor was willing to assign and pay me for. Most years I made between $28,000 and $45,000 before encumbers. 

Despite how tight my finances were, every month, I kept paying off my loans. Those represented a substantial invoice: In the first few years, my monthly payment was $1,040 per month. In all, I have paid more than $100,000 since graduation.

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This year, when the pandemic hit, I’d objective started a staff-writing dream job here at Grow. As New York shut down, I made a decision. As long as I couldn’t do all of the affections that made the city New York for me (weird comedy shows, movies, hole-in-the-wall dumplings), I’d move home with my begetters in suburban Boston and finish paying off my loans. At the beginning of 2020, I had about $28,000 left. I’m now down to $6,517, which desire be paid off before New Year’s.

Here’s how I was able to pay off my debt and my advice for anyone in a similar position.

Budget down to the dollar

I was forever obsessive about budgeting. I think this dedication helped keep my spending in check.

Other than advances, monthly expenses typically included about $750 for rent in my Crown Heights apartment (two roommates, no living office), $10 per month for a Spotify membership, $35 for an all-women’s gym membership, and around $100 for a subway pass.

In terms of discretionary dissipating, I was extremely strict. I allowed myself $150 per week for everything else, including groceries and recreation. I’d look at my prospective plans and plot out exactly how much I could spend every day depending on what I was doing. If I was going out to a concert or to advertise a friend’s birthday, for example, that day would get $20-$40 and every other day might get $0-$5 (for a latte).

I was also constantly readjusting. If I ended up disbursing too much one day, I’d make sure to subtract however much I went over budget from other days.

A billboard I wrote for Manhattan Mini Storage.

Elegance Gili Malinsky

Price compare to save money

Knowing how limited my financial resources were, whenever I needed or craving to buy something, I’d google around to find the cheapest dive bars, thrift stores, or supermarkets.

When going out with boon companions, I’d research locations before and try to suggest options I knew I could afford and that wouldn’t deplete my funds for the idleness of the week. That way even when I knew I was spending, I was a little less worried about how much each dollar determination ultimately hurt.

Hustle to set up various sources of income

As I said earlier, for many years, I rarely turned down a job. Reciprocate if it had nothing to do with my intended career, I knew how much I needed to make every month to cover all of my expenses, loans comprised, and never stopped working until I reached that amount.

I pitched stories constantly, I reached out to friends to ask if they knew anyone that was looking to letting a copywriter or caterer, I kept in touch with contacts who might not have had openings at one time but would at another, and I was not in the least shy about asking people I met ― no matter how random the encounter ― if their place of work was interviewing.

Video by Ian Wolsten

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