Todd Kunsman: I went from living paycheck-to-paycheck to saving 6 figures in 5 years

Only a few years ago, I found myself living paycheck to paycheck.

Much of which was my own fault and included what I call my “financial denial.” I knew what was going on and that something needed to change, but I just tried to ignore the problem and hoped it would go away.

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Yet, people living paycheck-to-paycheck in the U.S. is quite common. Fifty-nine percent of U.S. adults said they live paycheck-to-paycheck, according to a survey from Charles Schwab.

And it’s not just low earners who live paycheck-to-paycheck either. Middle class and upper-middle-class adults also can find themselves barely squeaking by.

This can be a result of wages not keeping up with inflation, high costs of living, debt, lack of financial literacy, allowing lifestyle creep to take control or a combination.

I found myself being a part of this kind of statistic.

However, in the last few years, I escaped living paycheck-to-paycheck, became completely debt-free and saved more than $100,000 without a six-figure salary.

How I escaped living paycheck-to-paycheck

In mid-2014, I was living paycheck-to-paycheck for more than a year and was really getting tired of it.

I still had close to $50,000 in debt (student loan, car and credit card), stayed in an apartment that I could barely afford, had less than $1,000 in savings, and was stuck in a mediocre career, making less than $40,000 per year.

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Much of what happened was a result of my own choices and my pride getting in the way. It’s hard to be independent for a few years and admit internally that you messed up.

But the bright side was I had a roof over my head, a job with health benefits, a company with a 401k (although I wasn’t contributing much, nor did I really understand it), and was physically healthy. But I still found myself a bit unhappy and wanting to make changes.

Shaped My Mindset

I had the wrong view of money. I was thinking just as a consumer instead of an investor. My approach to finances never focused on how money could work for me, I was focused on just working for money.

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I had to get frustrated with my situation, then get motivated to actually make changes.

Without that, you’ll have a hard time making improvements. To me, an important first step to fixing your finances (or anything in life really), is to be in the right mindset.

Started Reading about Money

I was a big reader as a kid, but into adulthood, I lost interest.

Since my education never included finances (other than the very basics taught by my parents), learning about money was going to be on me.