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Daily $7 coffee costs $2,520 annually and $100,800 over 40 years.
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Investing $100 monthly in a Roth IRA over 40 years could grow to $1M.
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38% of U.S. adults are willing to go into debt for dining out or entertainment.
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Have You read The New Report Shaking Up Retirement Plans? Americans are answering three questions and many are realizing they can retire earlier than expected.
“If you waste money on coffee, it’s like ‘peeing $1 million down the drain,’” says Suze Orman.
“You need to think about it as: You are peeing $1 million down the drain as you are drinking that coffee,” Orman says, as quoted by CNBC. “Do you really want to do that? No.”
Consider this.
Right now, the average cup of coffee can cost about $7. If you get coffee once or twice a week, it’s not too bad. But if you’re doing it every day – which many of us do- it’s costing you $210 a month, and $2,520 a year.
“It would be one thing if you had a cup of coffee once a week, maybe three times a month, but that’s not what you do. You go in every single day,” she added, as quoted by Yahoo Finance.
While $2,520 may not sound like a lot, if done over 40 years, it’s $100,800 for coffee.
Instead, according to Suze Orman, “$100 a month in a Roth IRA, over 40 years, is $1 million. So, you need to think about it as you are peeing $1 million down the drain after you are drinking that coffee. If you just simply used your money to purchase needs versus wants, you would find the money to invest in your retirement account.”
For those in a tough financial situation, one of the expenses you need to cut immediately is going out to eat, says Suze Orman.
“For you to have money, you have to learn to live below your means but within your needs. How do you do that? You do that by simply purchasing needs versus wants. What is a need? Need is food that you buy at a grocery store. What is a want? A want is going out to eat at a restaurant and doing it over and over again.”
Going out to eat contributes to massive credit card debt, too, which can weigh on you in retirement. Most people don’t realize how much money they spend by heading to the drive-through or going out to a fancy restaurant once in a while. Some of us, including me, stop by Dunkin every morning and spend about $20 on coffee and a hot bagel, which comes out to about $600 a month.
Also, according to Bankrate.com, “Americans say they’re willing to go into debt for the sake of experiences this year. Nearly 2 in 5 (38 percent) U.S. adults are willing to go into debt to travel, dine out, or see live entertainment, according to our Discretionary Spending Survey. The highest percentage of people would be willing to take on debt to travel, at 27 percent, followed by dining out (14 percent) and live entertainment (13 percent).”


