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Just wondering, is that comparable to your peer group?
Difficult to say. Looking at old school friends, friends from university and colleagues there are some who are considerably wealthier than I am either due to family money or very remunerative careers (mostly banking and finance). Some are more on the 'just getting by' level despite living very modest lifestyles. There's quite a wide spread. The main differentiator I imagine is that I lived at home for a long time during my 20s, built up a chunky deposit and then bought a house in the sticks, so there wasn't that much of a mortgage to pay off in the first place.
And how is the Porsche? Was it worth it? :)
It was. It was great fun, but it attracted a lot of unwelcome attention from the police and boy-racers, particularly the latter, so I sold it to my BiL and bought something rather more understated but faster. The Porsche was new to me, I should point out, not new new. I've never bought a new new car (although I have built some) and I doubt I ever will.
Just wondering, is that comparable to your peer group?
In our case, we are still saving up for a house and pension pot and we have nothing to complain about, but probably have to "wage slaves" until pension age and forget about buying a new car now and when house is paid off. And that is worse than my colleagues due to me losing a house due to negative equity and my partner having been laid off before twice.
But...where I live in Belfast, having a house in a decent area with a car that's not a banger is perfectly normal. 2 miles down and you are in poverty and FLEGS territory, half a mile up and it is KERCHING territory, but that is a tiny patch compared to the flegs/council houses/normal middle class (not England TV middle class) housing.
An expensive house and 2 cars, that's already for the definitely better off. My parents always had used cars and a 3 bed semi with converted garage in a cheaper area of The Netherlands.
TL:DR not complaining but just wondering. And how is the Porsche? Was it worth it? :)