sin_free_for_00_days,

1/3 median home price for area of employment.

1984,
@1984@lemmy.today avatar

I’m happy with my salary.

neidu2, (edited )

I actually like my job, and the salary is enough for me and the rest of my household to live off of while making down-payments on the house and the car. Now, if only I was a happy person…

Fal,
@Fal@yiffit.net avatar

Hey this sounds like me

PonyOfWar,

Something like 100k€ would enable me to do all the traveling I want to do and simultaneously save up enough money for a comfortable early retirement. Currently I’m focussing more on having a job that isn’t soul-crushingly stressful and full of overtime though.

solitaire, (edited )
@solitaire@infosec.pub avatar

I reckon I’d have severely diminishing returns past 6 figures, and I would (and do) trade income for less hours with a better work environment well before that.

SymbioteSynapse,

$150k/year. Enough to afford the house I’m in and still have enough left to not have to worry about being short on any recurring bills. Note: I’m in California. Most other states and id be fine at 90-100k.

Kiernian,

Happy as in “all absolutely necessary for survival bills are getting paid on time, all outstanding debts are getting paid down regularly, and I can afford to eat at a restaurant slightly above fast food grade once a month or so?”

$308,740/yr for the first year would do it.

After that I could probably look at halving the salary and live, if not comfortably, at least without constant worry.

Maybe start putting something away so I can retire before I hit 70.

Happiness doesn’t come from money, but it sure would reduce stress.

schnurrito,

I am fine with my current salary. None of the problems I have are due to having too little money. It is more that I have hardly any time to spend that money and live a fairly lonely life. None of that would be fixed by a higher salary, which is why I have little motivation to try to get promoted.

CaptainSpaceman,

Money buys time friend

intensely_human,

Not if it’s a salary

CaptainSpaceman,

What?

Notyou,

I would suggest volunteering at animal shelters on your days off might help with the fairly lonely life. The one by me let’s you check out dogs to go to the beach with and return.

Usernameblankface,
@Usernameblankface@lemmy.world avatar

Might be worth a job change to get better hours and similar or slightly lower income.

Porokoro,

If I live in 90% of the US, something like $150k would buy me a very comfortable life. If I was in the major cities, I would say $300k would be enough for me to not worry about finances.

Kecessa, (edited )

90% of the US is emptiness and small towns/villages where you would have no need for 150k/year…

key,
@key@lemmy.keychat.org avatar

It’s not like rural areas are back in a pre-currency feudal era. You still have costs. 150k is very comfortable but you can easily spend it living out in the country, especially if you want to bootstrap a homestead, hobby farm, or just generally make good use of land.

Kecessa,

Yeah but you don’t need 150k/year to be comfortable in 90% of the US when the people living there are making half of that as a couple.

Lemvi,

For me, other factors are much more important than the salary.

A tedious job with unpleasant colleagues would never make me happy, no matter how high the salary. On the other hand, if I had a job that was fun and had nice colleagues, I would be happy with a salary that only covered the essentials.

Also, I would rather have a salary that only covers the essentials for 30 hours a week than a salary twice as high for 60 hours a week. What good is money if I can never spend it?

There are more factors that are more important to me than the salary. How much physical labor is involved in the job? Do I have to work at night? Do I work shifts or do I have flexible working hours? Does the employer offer a pension plan? Are there any other benefits? Where would I have to work, close to friends and family or far away? …

Yeah, there really isn’t just one threshold value that would make me happy. More is better of course, but there are too many other factors.

Though it’s probably worth mentioning that I don’t have any children and don’t plan on having any.

Tja,

I’m already in the area of diminishing returns, where none of my daily problems are really money related. To have any significant impact I’d probably have to double my salary, so I could afford exotic cars and stuff like that.

betterdeadthanreddit,

A question like this could be an intro to a shady MLM pitch. Break the ice, get the conversation going and gain a sense of the range of numbers to make up for earnings examples.

RisingSwell,

I earn enough, I’d rather just halve my hours.

_edge,

And, did that work out for you?

hissingmeerkat,

Universal basic income and universal healthcare so I (and everybody else) don’t have to worry about a job, being able to work, retirement, disability, and employers will have to offer meaning, increased quality of life, and actual respect to attract employees.

Gradually_Adjusting,
@Gradually_Adjusting@lemmy.world avatar

These social safety nets would be a huge win for worker’s rights too. If you can tell a job to go fuck itself on the spot, they can’t operate without treating people right.

_edge,

No amount will make me happy.

Once your basic needs are met, the equation becomes: Salary = Expenses + Savings. So, the questions becomes, how much savings makes you happy?

If you are happy to work in your job until “retirement age”, a small savings rate will do, in theory; that is if the salary is adjusted for cost-of-living and tax.

Are you happy working this job for the rest of your life? Full time (whatever that means in your work culture)?

scrubbles,
@scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech avatar

Yes, I’m lucky enough to have a good salary, but I can tell people there is no top limit. Once you have your needs met then you’re exactly right, it’s about retirement planning and savings, and there could always be more. The fact is that the only true money amount that will make someone happy is the amount that allows them not to work anymore

Brainsploosh,

Enough to cover my living expenses, working expenses, retirement fund, savings, etc. at about 8-12 hours of work/week.

Brainsploosh,

For varying levels of retirement and savings, this is what non-agricultural humans have done for most of the history of our species.

intensely_human,

Time travel has truly revolutionized our understanding of pre-civilized human culture.

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