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الاثنين، 25 نوفمبر 2019

My Honest Review of Being a DoorDash Delivery Driver

Want to make money with your car but prefer not to drive people around? Food delivery driving is a great option. The food delivery industry is booming as many people are willing to pay the extra money to use apps like DoorDash, Uber Eats, and GrubHub. This opens up a whole new way to make […]

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Mailbag: Questions About Overdrafts, Dishwashers, Coffee, Investment Books and More!

What’s inside? Here are the questions answered in today’s reader mailbag, boiled down to summaries of five or fewer words. Click on the number to jump straight down to the question.
1. Time to change career path?
2. Overdraft problem with bank
3. Ally Bank’s “buckets”
4. Tracking fuel data
5. Board games as holiday gifts
6. Earning is more important
7. Borrowing from TSP
8. Cleaning a dishwasher
9. Cold-brew coffee setup
10. Good beginning investment book
11. Finding time for self-care
12. Practical white elephant gifts

For readers in the United States, happy Thanksgiving week, and I hope you have someone to celebrate with this week.

For those outside the United States unfamiliar with the tradition, Thanksgiving is a holiday in the United States, held on the fourth Thursday of November, that often results in a four day weekend (Thursday through Sunday) for many workers. Many extended families and groups of friends get together for Thanksgiving to share a large traditional meal, usually involving turkey. Some families celebrate other late fall and early winter holidays early during those gatherings.

We’ll see some family and friends this week, eat some cranberries, share a few hugs and laughs, and hopefully avoid politics because arguing politics at a family event is basically never fun.

On with the questions.

Q1: Time to change career path?

I’m 31, partner is 29. I deeply regret what I chose to study in school as the parts of it I loved do not show up in work in this field at all from what I can tell. Classroom doesn’t translate. Quarterlife crisis, whatever. My partner is encouraging me to switch careers but she makes only $30K a year and I make about $46K. She does have insurance that would cover us.

Going from $76K a year to $30K is a stiff drop in income, one that I don’t know if we can afford and I feel guilty putting her through it. On the other hand, I do not want to work in this field for another 35 years.

Any insight as to what to do?
– Jenny

I know all about the “quarter-life crisis.” I was pretty disillusioned with my career at that point — I really loved the people and some aspects of the work, but other aspects were miserable — and when another door presented itself, I jumped. In that situation, I didn’t leap into school, but into writing for The Simple Dollar full time. This meant a significant reduction in income over the short term, but I had hope that it would eventually grow back to where we were and also cut a lot of costs. My wife had great insurance, better than I had at my job, so it didn’t really change our insurance situation.

My advice to you is to very, very carefully assess whether you can make ends meet on just her salary and, if you can, make the leap now rather than later. It really comes down to that calculation — can you make it work for a few years on just her income?

If you do this, give it your all so that you can get the maximum value out of your return to school. Don’t just study, but start building connections in your new field from day one. The value of college isn’t just found in the classroom.

Q2: Overdraft problem with bank

My job recently changed their entire payroll system. They told us all that our next paycheck might be delayed a few days due to the switchover and it was, most of our direct deposits arrived 3 days late. This shouldn’t have been a big deal, but it was because of [my bank]. I went in and told them about it and they said that I could pay my bills as normal and they would put a note on my account. During that three day period, I overdrafted twice and they charged $70 to my account. I went in and complained about it and they saw the note but said they “couldn’t do anything.” I escalated to a manager and the manager told me the same thing. Contacted corporate and basically just got run around a bunch. So mad!!! What can I do?
– Kelly

Aside from switching banks? Not much. If they were clear as to their overdraft fees and you overdrafted your account, then you owe the fees. They could waive them as a way to help retain you as a customer, but they have no obligation to do so.

If you don’t like how you’ve been treated, I would switch to a different bank. Open a new account at a new bank and start migrating everything over to the new bank from the old one. Only close out the old one when you’re sure all of your direct deposits and bill payments have been moved over to the new bank.

It would have been a good customer relations move for the bank to waive the overdraft fees, especially since you talked to them first, but that’s their business call.

Q3: Ally Bank’s “buckets”

What do you think of the “bucket” system Ally Bank is adding?
– Nathan

I wasn’t sure what Nathan meant until I found this press release from Ally Bank describing the system. In a nutshell, Ally is adding a feature to its online banking accounts that allows people to essentially create “buckets” for savings. You might have an “emergency fund” bucket and a “car savings” bucket and a “holiday savings” bucket, for example, and you can automatically transfer money into each one on a regular basis.

You could also use it for a form of budgeting by creating “buckets” for different expenditure types, though I think that would require a fair amount of online account watching. This would be like an online version of the classic “envelope” method of budgeting.

I think this makes having a lot of goals in the same savings account a lot easier, and I suspect this kind of feature will roll out to other banks in the future. Capital One 360 (formerly ING Direct) has had essentially this feature for a long time and I’ve found it very useful many times.

Q4: Tracking fuel data

I have always tracked fuel efficiency in a notebook I keep in my glove box. I have columns for date, type of gas, gallons put in, and cost. I assume you do the same based on other posts. Do you use a notebook or an app for it? Haven’t found a good app.
– James

I used to use a notebook, but a few years ago I decided to try out a bunch of different apps and ended up sticking with Road Trip, and now that there’s so much data in it I just stick with it. It tracks everything I can think of and displays the data in a lot of useful ways. I don’t see a reason to even try other apps, honestly.

It has completely supplanted the “notebook in my glove box” strategy for recording that kind of data, and I also use it for recording other forms of maintenance and a few other car-related things.

Give it a shot. If you’re the type that records fuel mileage in a notebook (like I am), you’ll probably like it.

Q5: Board games as holiday gifts

I used to (secretly) love family game night when I was a teenager. We would eat pizza and then we’d set up a game on the table and play it and my dad would be trying to win every time and my mom would laugh at him being so competitive and we’d talk about the week. I’d be a typical “roll my eyes” teen but I really loved it. We used to play Acquire, Masterpiece and Scrabble the most.

I want to find a game or two to give to some families as gifts that would be good for family game nights. I was thinking of giving a “family game night” kit to some friends with kids around 10 years old with a game and a few coupons for pizza. But there are so many games at stores and I don’t know what to buy. Looking for a really good family game for $20-30 for this. I know you’re really into board games so I thought you’d have ideas.
– Amy

Acquire is still around, believe it or not. The current version has really nice 3D buildings to represent the corporations. However, the price usually floats between $30 to $40 on Amazon, though it goes on sale fairly frequently and gets down in your price range.

Ticket to Ride is an absolutely stellar family game that works well for three to five players and currently clocks in at $26.99 on Amazon. The board is a simplified map of the United States. Each player has a pile of trains in their color and is attempting to connect cities together in a connected route to complete the secret goals they have (like connecting Seattle to Houston).

Pandemic is usually in the $20-25 range on Amazon and it’s a really good family game, too. It’s cooperative, meaning the players work together to rid the world of four different diseases. The players are scientists and medics who travel around the board (a map of the world) curing diseases and providing medicine, then the diseases spread automatically using a deck of cards. It’s really clever.

We have a family game night at least once a week and play all kinds of things, so the trick for me here is to separate what things my family likes because everyone has clear tastes and quirks at this point from what would work well for a wide range of families. I think the above games would work well for a wide array of families.

Q6: Earning is more important

If you want to establish long-lasting financial success, earning more is more important than frugality, but you write mostly about frugality. No frugality can take you from making $30K a year to making $90K.
– Bryan

I agree with you, but there are a few issues with that from an advice-giving perspective.

One, people who are looking for financial advice are often struggling right now, and frugality has much more of an immediate impact than trying to improve one’s income. Income improvement is a long road — you can’t just walk into work tomorrow and triple your income. However, you can wake up tomorrow and start taking actions that reduce your spending load.

Two, frugality advice is way more broadly applicable than advice on earning more. Aside from a few general truisms like “work hard” and “build a lot of transferable skills” and “be a lifelong learner” and “think about what you’re doing from the long term perspective,” it’s hard to give advice on earning more money that’s useful to a wide range of people. The advice quickly becomes specific to your career path or business situation. Frugality strategies apply to wide swaths of people and can provide results to all of those people.

Three, frugality has a more direct path to results. If you do X, you will save money. Most career and business strategy advice is far from a guarantee because so much of it is reliant on other people. Mostly, it’s advice on how to put yourself in a position to be more likely to increase your income. In the end, it’s your boss’s decision to promote you and a customer’s decision to buy from you.

In the end, you’re correct that a tripled income is going to be more powerful for your finances than pretty much anything that can be said about frugality, but it’s much harder to give advice for career improvement that has the immediate impact that many people seek. I do write about career things fairly often, but I think both tools are needed and have a valuable role.

Q7: Borrowing from TSP

I have worked for [a branch of the federal government] for 11 years and have put money into my TSP since starting. I now have $122K in my account. One of my coworkers borrowed $50K from his TSP for a house down payment, combining with the $20K he had to put 20% down on a $350K house. Was this a good move? Trying to do the math on this. The loan itself seems great at 1.75% but then you’re losing money in your TSP for a while so it can’t grow.
– Marvin

You should not borrow from any retirement plan unless it is an absolute necessity, and a house down payment is nowhere near an absolute necessity. You will lose your shirt on this.

Let’s say, hypothetically, that your TSP is growing at an average of 10% a year. If you take $50,000 out of that, then you’re no longer getting that 10% growth and you’re paying 1.75% interest on that money. That’s effectively an 11.75% interest rate on that loan.

You are way better off getting PMI from your lender than you are borrowing money out of your TSP, particularly such a large amount. The additional 1% that the mortgage insurance costs on top of your interest rate is much less impactful than the effective 10%+ interest rate that you’re paying from a TSP loan. If you get a home mortgage at 4.5% and the PMI is another 1% until you get it down below 80% of your home value, a 5.5% loan is much, much, much better than a 1.75% loan that is causing you to miss out on 10%, 7% or even 5% growth in your TSP.

Q8: Cleaning a dishwasher

When I bought my dishwasher, the salespeople had me buy some kind of dishwashing cleaning solution that you were supposed to run in it once a month by running a normal empty load with just this stuff in it to clean it out. I understand that dishwashers need maintenance and cleaning, but is that solution necessary? I’ve read that many people just use vinegar for this. Does that work well?
– Craig

We’ve had a dishwasher for a decade now, never had any clogging problems, and the only thing we’ve ever cleaned it with is vinegar. What I usually do is put some vinegar in a spray bottle and spray it all around the interior of the dishwasher, then fill up the detergent well with vinegar and run a normal load.

Once in a while, I’ll go over the interior of the dishwasher with a toothbrush and toothpick to clear out any small holes that I see and to scrub away at any built-up debris. I usually use a baking soda paste for doing this, just baking soda with enough water added to make it kind of the consistency of toothpaste. Then I’ll run a normal cleaning load with vinegar as noted earlier.

That’s all I’ve ever done, and it seems to be fine. It was a cheaper dishwasher, which I now kind of regret, and I know what I’ll look for if we choose to replace it, but it works fine.

Q9: Cold-brew coffee setup

Could you walk me through, very carefully, step by step, how you make cold-brew coffee?
– Tom

Sure! It’s not too hard.

The only equipment I use is a cold brew coffee pitcher with a wire mesh filter, very much like this one, and a simple burr coffee grinder, like this one. You do not need the grinder if you just buy ground coffee, but even I with my undeveloped coffee-tasting taste buds can taste a real difference between making coffee with freshly ground beans. If you grind your coffee for cold brew, grind it on the coarsest setting possible on your grinder.

So, how much coffee and how much water? It really depends on how strong you want it, which depends on your ratio of coffee to water and how long you let it brew. There is no perfect answer here.

All I can tell you is what I do to produce a cup I like. I like it at a ratio of one part ground coffee to eight parts water by weight, which I will then cut with about 1 part almond milk or water to 2 parts coffee when I actually drink it. So, in practice, I actually weigh this all out with a small kitchen scale. 32 ounces of water weighs 946 grams, so for an 8:1 ratio, I need 118 grams of coffee grounds.

So, I measure out 118 grams of coffee grounds with my kitchen scale, put it in the cold brew maker, then add 32 ounces of water. I put the whole thing in the fridge for 24 hours (if I can’t get the timing exact, I end it a little early), then dump the coffee grounds into a compost bucket to put in our garden.

That’s enough for four 8 ounce cups of coffee, which I then cut with some almond milk (which I really like the taste of — it’s one of my splurges) and maybe a drop of honey and/or a bit of cocoa powder … or sometimes I’ll just drink it black, often cutting it with a bit of water because it’s strong for my taste.

If you like it cold, drink it cold. It’s a lot better than hot coffee cooled down, which always tastes really acidic and “off” to me, and you can easily heat it up in the microwave if you like it hot. It lasts pretty well in the fridge for a week or two, especially if you put it in a separate closed container.

You can “eyeball” the coffee grounds if you want, but you’d be surprised how much the coffee changes if you’re off by 10% – 20% in weight in terms of the grounds. It definitely won’t taste the same each time.

I like the taste of cold-brew coffee and I like that it doesn’t require constant new filters and it doesn’t require any expensive equipment. My math is that an 8-ounce cup of coffee straight black costs about $0.50 with this method when I’m using really good beans — cheaper if I’m using cheaper stuff, obviously. The coffee is really good, far better than I’d ever get for even a $2 – $3 cup anywhere else. It’s far cheaper than buying premade cold brew at the store, too.

That’s how I do it, but you should play around with it and find a method that gives you exactly what you want. Play with the coffee-to-water ratio, especially, and also how long the grounds sit in the water.

Q10: Good beginning investment book

I checked out some investing books from the library and they were over my head right off the bat. Can you suggest a couple of good beginning investment books that I can check out or request?
– Neal

My default suggestion is The Bogleheads’ Guide to Investing by Larimore, Lindauer and LeBoeuf. The first edition of that book was the one that really helped me get my head around the basics of investing while also presenting a coherent investing strategy that actually made a lot of sense to me.

Read it slow and think about each chapter. You don’t have to devour it in one sitting. It’s very readable and understandable, but there is a lot to think about — at least, there certainly was for me.

After reading that book, quite a few other investment books made sense to me, enough that I could decide whether the strategies those books were proposing were worthwhile.

Q11: Finding time for self-care

How do you, with all the writing you do, find time to be a decent husband and father and keep up a house and still find time for self-care? My husband and I are so dead at the end of most days that we simply fall in bed just to get up and run on the treadmill the next day. I feel like I am missing something.
– Amy

Well, here are some big things. Unless I’m watching a show that I’ve planned to watch with my family (basically, Friday movie nights or maybe one episode of a show on a weeknight with my wife after the kids go to bed), I don’t watch television, period. I have my cell phone set up so that I don’t look at it very much, either (I wrote about this last week, actually). I try to multitask as many things as I can when they don’t require active effort — like, for example, as I write this, there’s a meal in the slow cooker, a load of dishes in the dishwasher, a load of clothes in the washer and the Roomba is going upstairs. I put effort into making as many tasks as efficient as I can, as I noted recently — I’ll invest an hour to figure out the most efficient way to fold clothes, spend the next several sessions doing it more slowly to practice it, and then it’s eventually 25% faster than how I used to do it. I keep a to-do list with tasks tagged in various ways and follow them carefully. I also time block, which means that I have periods of time set aside for specific tasks and during those time blocks, that’s what I do. I also try to eat a healthy diet and get plenty of sleep — I’m far less productive if I’m awake 19 hours a day than if I’m awake 16 because “sleep-deprived Trent” is way way way less efficient at literally everything than “plenty-of-sleep Trent.”

This gives me enough breathing room to have time blocks for leisure and for “self-care,” which I presume is what you’re referring to for things like exercise and meditation. For me, genuine focused uninterrupted leisure is really a form of self-care, too. When I get time to play a game uninterrupted or to read a book for an hour or two uninterrupted, I genuinely feel better.

Something people sometimes ask me is whether I have time to “daydream” or let my mind wander or “zone out.” I honestly usually do that when walking, and I take a couple of walks a day. I’ll get into a steady pace and my mind will just wander from thing to thing and I usually come back with a lot of ideas and sometimes a solution to something that’s been bugging me.

For me, time management is a lot like frugality. It’s worth some effort to find ways to cut out the bad uses of my time, but like washing Ziploc bags, there comes a point where you’re wasting time trying to be more productive. For me, the litmus test is almost always “Will I be glad I did this a month from now?” I always regret wasted time. I don’t regret real leisure or self-care.

Q12: Practical white elephant gifts

Last year my family did kind of a “white elephant” gift exchange where everyone brings 4 small gifts under $10 each and everyone puts them in identical brown paper bags and sits them out on a table and then they get handed out randomly. When you opened one you could trade with the person to your left or right if you wanted. It gave everyone four little gifts to open and no one felt bad because they were all small items. Some of the stuff was pretty lame, though. I am trying to come up with good ideas for this year. We’re doing it the Saturday after Thanksgiving.
– Derek

With a white elephant exchange, it’s hard to get very personal with gifts because you don’t know for sure who will be opening them. Thus, you want something people will like, but something with actual broad appeal; for example, I’d skip specific entertainment items. Here are some ideas I have along those lines.

You will almost never miss with high-quality versions of common things people actually use (and consume). Buy some really nice homemade soaps. Get a bottle of a really good kind of hot sauce. A couple of bars of really good chocolate would hit the mark, or some other kind of candy. A bomber (a 22-ounce bottle) of a good craft beer usually clocks in around $10 and could be a hit. Seasoning and soup mixes can be a good idea, as can, say, $10 of beef jerky from a good butcher shop. A couple of containers of really good lip balm can hit the spot, as can some good hand cream (my wife can’t make it through the winter without Eucerin for her hands). The key to things like this is to do a bit of homework and figure out a quality version of that item that people will actually want. Look online for some highly regarded hot sauce and hit a specialty grocer to get some, or find some really well-regarded soap and order it online.

Another approach is to give out little useful tech items that everyone would use, like an inexpensive USB charger or even a good phone charging cable. I was surprised how in-demand those kinds of items were the last time I did an exchange like this. Everyone seems to always have a use for another one or their old one is frayed or something.

The easy answer is a $10 gift card to Starbucks or to the online Apple store or something like that. It might not get the wows, but people will likely use them.

I’m sure you can find four ideas out of that mix.

Got any questions? The best way to ask is to follow me on Facebook and ask questions directly there. I’ll attempt to answer them in a future mailbag (which, by way of full disclosure, may also get re-posted on other websites that pick up my blog). However, I do receive many, many questions per week, so I may not necessarily be able to answer yours.

The post Mailbag: Questions About Overdrafts, Dishwashers, Coffee, Investment Books and More! appeared first on The Simple Dollar.



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How the Shovler App Will Help You Make Money Shoveling Snow This Winter

Some people find shoveling snow a real pain — a job happily pawned off to any willing being.

On the other hand, what if you’re that willing being? You might be able to make some good money from a hearty dusting.

Even 50 Cent has shoveled snow.

And so has Daniel Miller, CEO of an app called Shovler.

It’s kind of like Uber — but for snow shoveling — and since its release in December 2016, more than 100,000 people have registered to become snow shovelers, according to Miller.

How Did the Shovler App Get Started?

Miller shoveled snow as a teenager and always thought it was the perfect gig: People are appreciative, you get a good workout in and it’s actually kind of fun.

Plus: The pay ain’t too shabby.

Miller came up with the idea for Shovler in the winter of 2015 when his parents were hanging out in Florida and wanted a clear driveway upon returning home to New Jersey. A full-on plow service wasn’t necessary, and, other than that, they had a hard time finding someone.

“It just dawned on me that there are lots of people in similar situations, especially the elderly, that just want to hire a snow shoveler on demand for the days they need one or want to take a break from shoveling themselves,” Miller writes in an email.

He’d always seen those apps about solving what he calls “minor problems” — like delivering food a few blocks away. “But nobody has fixed this major logistical nightmare that people have every year,” he says.

For him, the app seemed obvious. Why hadn’t it been invented years ago?

How Much Money Can You Make Shoveling Snow?

Enter: Shovler.

Those who are in need of shoveling services enter their requests into the app. The registered shovelers get pinged when a job’s available nearby.

Pay is calculated by an algorithm that takes the depth of snow and the size of the property, as well as other factors, into consideration. In general, though, typical rates range from:

  • $30 to $40 for a car parked on a city street.
  • $35 to $75 for up to a two-car driveway that fits three cars in length, an average walkway and an average sidewalk in front of a house
  • 50 cents to $2 per square feet for a city sidewalk or small parking lots (for businesses)

The Shovler app takes 20% of each job, and the human shoveler gets the rest.

Miller says shovelers have made up to $200 per gig and “up to several thousand dollars during snow storms.” He says the app also hosts customers who tip generously, some tacking on a 50% tip (the average tip is $10 to $20).

“Shovelers love the app because they get paid by the job, not the hour,” Miller says. “That really gives them the ability to earn $50 in an hour if they are quick.”

Shovelers get paid after the user rates the job or within 13 hours — whichever is faster.

The app is available across the U.S. and in parts of Canada, but its most popular cities are Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Denver, Detroit, Milwaukee, Minneapolis and New York.

Signing up is easy — and a lot easier than awkwardly knocking on your neighbors’ doors or giving them a ring. So why not make some money off the most recent dumping of the devil’s dandruff?

Carson Kohler (carson@thepennyhoarder.com) is a staff writer at The Penny Hoarder.

This was originally published on The Penny Hoarder, which helps millions of readers worldwide earn and save money by sharing unique job opportunities, personal stories, freebies and more. The Inc. 5000 ranked The Penny Hoarder as the fastest-growing private media company in the U.S. in 2017.



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Your Kid Needs a Bank Account. Here Are 6 Good Ones

Do you remember how old you were when you had your first bank account?

Money management should start early for kids. Make trips to the bank with them — and make them a big deal — beginning at age 6. Help them open a savings account, and use that experience to introduce different money concepts, like how they’ll earn interest by leaving their money in the bank.

Good news: Many big-name banks offer accounts for kids, and lots of them are low- or no-fee.

How to Open a Bank Account for Someone Under 18

While a minor can have a bank account in their name, an adult must open the account. So a parent or guardian can open a joint checking or savings account with their child. 

Some accounts cater to young children, while others focus on teens. Different banks and states may also have rules about the age of a minor on an account, so you’ll want to do your due diligence.

For the most part, you can open accounts online or in person. Bank requirements will vary, but you typically need your child’s Social Security number, passport or birth certificate, in addition to your own identifying information.

What You Should Look for in a Bank Account for Kids

Before deciding on an account, you’ll want to consider the following:

  • Is there an initial deposit required?
  • Is there a monthly fee?
  • Is there a daily balance requirement?
  • Is there a service fee?
  • What is the interest rate for the savings account?
  • Are add-ons (checks, debit cards, etc.) available?

Other features may be important to you — say, the ability to transfer money into your child’s account as often as you want.

6 of the Best Bank Accounts for Kids

We stuck to checking and savings accounts at big banks with plenty of locations around the United States. Some accounts are known as UTMAs, which stands for Uniform Transfers to Minors Act. In these types of accounts, gifts of high value (money, real estate, etc.) “can be transferred to a custodian for the benefit of a minor,” according to the U.S. Social Security Administration, until the child becomes a legal adult. The savings are tax-free for the minor until they assume the account. But the assets are considered part of the custodian’s estate and are taxed accordingly.

Here are six accounts for those in the 17-and-under crowd.

1. Bank of America Child Savings Accounts

Bank of America offers two options for kids: a Minor Savings Account and a Custodial (UTMA) Savings Account.

With a Minor Savings Account, members under 18 have full access to their money and can set up automatic transfers. The account is FDIC insured.

In a Custodial Savings Account, minors do not have access to funds before they’re 18. However, automatic transfers can still be arranged and this account is also FDIC insured.

Minor Savings Account

Account ownership: Jointly owned by child and their parent or guardian

Minimum initial deposit: $25

Minimum daily balance: $0

Monthly service fee: No fee for a child under 18 (After they turn 18, the account is converted into a BoA Advantage Savings Account, where fees do apply.)

Custodial Savings Account

Account ownership: The parent or guardian acts as a custodian for the minor’s account

Minimum initial deposit: $100

Minimum daily balance: $500

Monthly service fee: $8/month if there’s no minimum daily balance of $500 (if there is, the fee is waived)

2. Chase High School Checking

Chase offers a checking account for kids in high school. While there aren’t many extras available — no overdraft protection or debit card options — this is a great, no-fee account for those just getting started. You can sign up for a general savings account, too.

Chase High School Checking

Account ownership: Jointly owned by child (13 to 17 years old) and their parent or guardian, and the account must be linked to their parent/guardian’s Chase account. At age 19, the account becomes a Chase Total Checking account.

Minimum initial deposit: $0

Minimum daily balance: N/A

Monthly service fee: $0

Additionally, if your minor is at least 17 and heading to college, Chase is offering a $100 bonus for opening a new Chase College Checking account. Your teen can redeem the offer online and they’ll receive the money after following a couple of easy steps. (Psst, mom and dad — this is another teachable moment for your teens since they have to be organized and follow the required steps to earn this money.)

3. PNC Bank “S” is for Savings Account

This PNC savings account is a UTMA account, and it aims to help children learn about finances through “Sesame Street.” The “Sesame Street”-themed learning center is an interactive experience for kids, who can learn about goal-setting; saving, sharing and spending; and even receive money tips from Elmo and gang. 

You can set up automated savings with this account, and it’s also no-fee after the initial deposit.

PNC Savings Account

Account ownership: The parent or guardian acts as a custodian for the minor’s account

Minimum initial deposit: $25

Minimum daily balance: $0

Monthly service fee: $0 if the account holder is under 18

4. Wells Fargo Way2Save Savings Account

The kids savings account offers free online transfers between Wells Fargo accounts and free online statements to help teach minors about money management.

Wells Fargo Way2Save

Account ownership: Joint ownership, “minor by” or UTMA/UGMA (Uniform Gifts to Minors Act)

Minimum initial deposit: $25

Minimum daily balance: $0

Monthly service fee: $0 for members under 18 (19 in Alabama)

5. TD Student Checking

TD Bank offers a checking account for those ages 17 through 23. Members can take advantage of instant-issue debit cards, and parents can order a TD Go Reloadable Prepaid Visa Card to help their student-age kids spend responsibly. 

TD also offers a number of online guides for personal finance education, from building your credit to using a budget worksheet.

TD Student Checking

Account ownership: Jointly owned by child and their parent or guardian

Minimum initial deposit: $0

Minimum daily balance: $0

Monthly service fee: $0 if you’re under 18

6. Capital One Kids Savings Account

This straightforward, no-fee account from Capital One offers a 1% APY. You can establish automatic savings plans and savings goals so your kids can watch their balance grow.

Capital One Kids Savings

Account ownership: Jointly owned by child and their parent or guardian

Minimum initial deposit: $0

Minimum daily balance: $0

Monthly service fee: $0

Bonus: Your Local Credit Union

It’s always worth checking out your local credit union to see what they offer for minors. They may be able to offer more personalized service, an account with a higher APY or other perks.

Why You Should Open a Bank Account for a Kid

It may be tempting to hold on to your children’s money for them in your own account or let them keep it in a piggy bank. But it’s a good idea to open up a bank account for them for several reasons. Opening a bank account can:

  1. Help kids learn the value of money, from saving to spending it.
  2. Help them understand compound interest and how it makes their money grow.
  3. Help them learn to delay instant gratification by saving toward a goal.

Opening an account is also a great way to teach, or reinforce, good budgeting habits

Kathleen Garvin (@itskgarvin) is a writer and editor whose work has appeared in U.S. News, Clark.com and Well Kept Wallet.

This was originally published on The Penny Hoarder, which helps millions of readers worldwide earn and save money by sharing unique job opportunities, personal stories, freebies and more. The Inc. 5000 ranked The Penny Hoarder as the fastest-growing private media company in the U.S. in 2017.



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What the party manifestos will mean for your money

What the party manifestos will mean for your money

The major political parties have unveiled their manifestos, but how will they affect your finances?

Stephen Little Mon, 11/25/2019 - 12:39
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All of the major political parties have now unveiled their manifestos.

Labour and the Liberal Democrats have both come in for criticism for promises that could cost the UK tens of billions of pounds a year.

Meanwhile, the Conservative manifesto, which promises to “get Brexit done” has instead played it safe with spending commitments.

We take a look at how they will affect your personal finances.

Income tax

Boris Johnson has ditched planned income tax cuts of £8 billion for Britain’s highest earners. The Conservatives had previously pledged to move the point at which someone becomes a higher rate taxpayer from £50,000 to £80,000.

The Conservative Party has said it will not raise the rate of income tax, VAT or national insurance if it wins the election. From next year the party says it will increase the national insurance threshold to £9,500 next year from £8,424. This could mean a saving of around £100 a year for 31 million workers.

It says its “ultimate ambition” is to ensure that the first £12,500 people earn is completely tax free.

The Labour Party plans to increase tax for the highest earners while the majority will see no change.

It plans to tax people earning over £80,000 on 45% of earnings, while those earning above £125,000 will pay tax at a rate of 50%.

The party’s manifesto pledges a freeze on national insurance for everyone.

The Labour Party has also pledged to reverse inheritance tax cuts bought in under previous Conservative governments.

The Lib Dems have said they will add 1p to income tax to help fund the NHS and and social care.

Pensions

The Labour Party has pledged to pay back £58 million to women born in the 1950s hit by changes to the state pension age.

Individual payouts to women could be as high as £31,300. Nearly four million women have been affected by the government’s decision to raise the state pension age from 60 to 66.

Campaign groups such as BackTo60 and Women Against State Pension Inequality (Waspi) argue that many women born in the 1950s were not sufficiently warned of the changes and have suffered financial hardship as a result.

The Liberal Democrats have also pledged to compensate women born in the 1950s over state pension increases.

Labour has also promised to freeze the state pension age at 66 and not raise it in the future.

All three major political parties have pledged to keep the triple lock. This will guarantee that the new state pension increases by either 2.5%, average wage growth or inflation.

The Conservatives have also pledged to review the pension tax of low paid workers.

Those who earn between £10,000 and £12,500 - mainly women - have been missing out on pension tax relief depending how their employer has set up their pension scheme.

No mention was made about pension age changes was made, suggesting the current timetable to raise the state pension age will go ahead as planned.

Capital gains tax

The Labour manifesto has outlined plans to increase the amount of tax paid on capital gains (CGT) and dividend payments.

For workers currently earning more than £12,000, basic-rate income taxpayers pay lower CGT rates of 10% on gains from most assets and 18% on residential property, while higher-rate taxpayers pay 20% and 28% respectively.

As for dividends, currently investors receive a £2,000 dividend tax allowance before any tax is paid. Once that is used up, the rate of tax you pay depends on your income tax band.

Dividends are taxed at a lower rate than for earned income, with the basic rate of 7.5%, higher rate of 32.5%, and additional rate of 38.1% kicking in above the £150,000 income level.

Those separate dividend tax brackets will be abolished, with both dividends and capital gains instead taxed in line with the broader income tax brackets of 20%, 40%, 45% and 50%.

CGT will also likely see an increase under the Lib Dems, with the manifesto committing to ending the current separate CGT-free allowance and taxing capital gains and income through a single allowance.

Social care

With social care costs skyrocketing, there is a lot of pressure on each party to offer solutions. Labour’s is to create a National Care Service for England, intended to provide free personal care for older people.

At the same time, the party has committed to implement a care cap of £100,000 payable by individuals for so-called “catastrophic costs” and an unspecified lifetime cap on personal costs.

The Liberal Democrats have promised to invest and extra £35 billion in health and social care over the next five years.

The party says it plans to raise £7 billion for the NHS and social care funded through a 1p on income tax in England which will be ring-fenced.

Despite the current crisis in social care, the Conservative manifesto failed to provide any concrete proposals.

The party says it will provide £1 billion of extra funding a year for social care, as well as a commitment to seek cross-party consensus for long-term reform. It also promised to introduce a system which means no one will have to sell their home to fund long-term care, but details of this were vague.

Housing

Labour has proposed a radical shake-up of the housing system with plans to deliver a new social housing programme of more than one million homes a decade.

The party says it will build 100,000 council homes and 50,000 affordable social homes each year.

There will also be a levy on overseas companies buying housing, while giving local people ‘first dibs’ on new homes built in their area.

Runaway rents will capped with inflation, and cities will be given powers to cap rents further.

It has also pledged to bring in a new national levy on second homes used as holiday homes to help deal with the homelessness crisis.

The Conservative Party says it will bring forward a social housing white paper to “set out further measures to empower tenants and support the continued supply of social homes”.

It will also commit to renewing the Affordable Homes Programme, in order to support the delivery of hundreds of thousands of affordable homes.

The Liberal Democrats have pledged to build 300,000 new homes by 2024, including 100,000 social homes. The party also revealed measures for tackling empty properties, including powers for local authorities to increase council tax by up to 500% on second homes.

Childcare

Labour has pledged to provide 30 hours of free childcare to all pre-school children within five years of coming to power.

It says it will also work to extend childcare provision for one-year-olds and that childcare provision accommodates the working patterns of all parents.

The Lib Dems have also promised to provide 35 hours of free childcare once babies turns nine-months-old.

Currently, childcare is free for all three to four-year-olds with both parents working for 15 hours a week for 38 weeks of the year.

The Conservative Party says it will establish a new £1 billion fund to help create more high quality, affordable childcare, including before and after school and during the school holidays.



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This Company is Looking for Clinical Trial Participants (And Will Pay up to $12,000)

Some of the links in this post are from our sponsors. We provide you with accurate, reliable information. Learn more about how we make money and select our advertising partners.

Taking part in a clinical research study is a great way to help find treatments for common illnesses… 

…and, we’re not going to lie, it’s also a great way to potentially earn some extra money. 

Wait! Before your imagination runs wild, know that clinical trials really aren’t that scary. You just have to find legit opportunities that are worth your time.

We suggest starting with a contract research organization called Parexel, which has been around since 1982. It conducts clinical trials in Baltimore, Los Angeles and London — and it’s willing to pay you up to $12,000 per study.

Sooo… Tell Me More About These Trials

These research organizations spend years testing new medications and devices in hopes of treating common illnesses.

After all that research, they move to the next step — these clinical trials — so the Food and Drug Administration will give its stamp of approval. It’s the last stop before something is offered to the public.

And that’s where you can help. You don’t necessarily have to have an illness, either; Parexel is looking for healthy participants, as well. The first phases of Parexel studies typically focus on healthy volunteers, and these studies tend to pay more.  

Here’s how to get started:

  1. Go to Parexel’s website, and scroll through its available studies in Baltimore, Los Angeles and London.
  2. Take note of each study’s dates, requirements and compensation.
  3. If you find a match, apply for the study online by filling out some basic information.

If you don’t find a match? Join Parexel’s mailing list, and it’ll email you when new trials become available.

Are There Any Major Requirements?

Hop over to Parexel’s list of available studies. It outlines any specific requirements upfront so you won’t waste your time. For example, one study, available at the time of writing this article, simply needed healthy volunteers who don’t smoke. Others will be more specific — like those with arthritis or non-childbearing women.

As a general rule of thumb, Parexel is looking for participants who:

  • Are ages 18 to 55.
  • Live anywhere in the U.S. and can travel to Baltimore, Los Angeles and London.
  • Generally have a body mass index (BMI) of 32 or less. (You can calculate your BMI on Parexel’s site.) For healthy volunteers, Parexel is looking for people in overall good health, who are not diagnosed with any major medical conditions and don’t consistently require prescription medications. 

Some trials will require you to stay on site for up to 20 nights (those pay more), and others simply require you to stop in for flexible tests and screenings. Generally, you’ll get paid per visit — with Parexel, the average is $300 to $350.

So if you’re looking for some extra money and want to help find treatments to common diseases, sign up for a clinical research study.

Carson Kohler (carson@thepennyhoarder.com) is a staff writer at The Penny Hoarder.

This was originally published on The Penny Hoarder, which helps millions of readers worldwide earn and save money by sharing unique job opportunities, personal stories, freebies and more. The Inc. 5000 ranked The Penny Hoarder as the fastest-growing private media company in the U.S. in 2017.



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200,000 parents face a smaller state pension because the wrong person is claiming child benefit

200,000 parents face a smaller state pension because the wrong person is claiming child benefit

Thousands of women could see their pensions reduced because child credits are in the name of their spouse

Stephen Little Sat, 11/23/2019 - 08:00
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Thousands of women could see their state pension reduced in retirement because their claim for child benefit is in the name of their partner.

A Freedom of Information (FOI) request put in by Royal London to HM Revenue and Customs has revealed that around 200,000 couples are making the wrong choice about who claims child benefit, potentially costing them thousands of pounds.

To qualify for the full state pension, you need a total of 35 qualifying years of national insurance contributions or credits (NICs).

However, as women are still more likely to take time out from work to raise children or become carers, they are at greater risk of having gaps in their NICs.

Parents with children under the age of 12 claiming child benefit will get NICs. As a result, in the years they are not employed and looking after their children their state pension record will not suffer.

A year of NICs builds up the same amount of state pension as a year in paid work paying NI contributions. 

Given that 35 years of contributions are needed for a full state pension, just one year of credits can be worth 1/35 of a pension – this is roughly £250 per year on the pension at retirement or £5,000 over a typical 20-year retirement.

The credit will only go to one parent, usually the lower earner or one that is not working. This is because the higher earner will most likely be in paid work and therefore already paying NICs so does not need the credit.

The FOI shows that in around 200,000 couples there is a non-earner - or very low earner - who could benefit from a credit but is not doing so because the child benefit is in the name of their spouse.

Steve Webb, director of policy at Royal London, says: “It is quite right that parents who are looking after children get protection for their state pension record if they are out of paid work.  But this protection only works if the ‘right’ parent claims child benefit.

“It is very worrying that in around 200,000 families one partner is potentially missing out on the state pension protection that is rightfully theirs.”

How you can claim

The good news that this problem can be easily fixed by completing a form, even if you want to back date the claim.

This CF411a form can be downloaded here.

Royal London warns that parents who are not aware of this could find their state pension reduced by hundreds or even thousands of pounds a year in retirement if they do not take action.

Mr Webb says: “Whilst this can be fixed by filling in the relevant form, many people will be unaware of this. HM Revenue and Customs should do much more to alert people who might be affected in order to make sure that many thousands of parents do not end up being penalised in retirement.”



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