1Yr·

I always find it interesting to see how much people earn and can save.


I'd love to tell you!

current net salary / savings rate


for me it is:

2800 / 1500 (of which only 500 goes into the custody account)

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144 Comments

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Of course, nobody here goes home with less than 3000 net 🌚
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@Der_Dividenden_Monteur after student loan and alimony I come to 2300€ excl. bonuses 😅😅
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@Der_Dividenden_Monteur net after savings rate, right? 😉
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@Der_Dividenden_Monteur It's like the urinal - everyone has >20cm but in the end everyone goes into a cubicle and pees sitting down. But ok, I can't anyway if someone is standing next to me 😏
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@Der_Dividenden_Monteur so unfortunately I only earn €2,870 net
But 34 days of vacation and a 32.5-hour week
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@Der_Dividenden_Monteur Ha. Me as a waitress with 2300 € net. Sometimes less, depending on the night / late shift supplement. And we don't have a single public holiday off in the year. Savings rate of € 800 with a 3 account model. Savings quota is still divided between these. For further training, travel, unforeseen major events.
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@peacock at least bonuses - I don't know that from friends in the restaurant business. But I think that's good. 2.3k is on top of tips, I suppose?
@KevinC That's how it is... Thank God 🙏
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Educator with 2200 net... sad story 😂 Savings rate is currently still being tested...
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@Der_Dividenden_Monteur Low earner, minimum 10 000CHF everything else would be beneath dignity
View all 3 further answers
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899.81 current net salary and €135 fixed savings rate. At the end of the month there is usually something left over, which is additionally invested, but the amount varies each month. ☺️
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You're all single and don't have children, right?
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@GordonGekko83 and no other life xD
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@GordonGekko83 I already have a broom at home ;) But it also earns quite well
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@Absolem That's right! Millionaire in front of the TV and later bequeath everything to the church😆 At least you've done something for the "Almighty". The next Mercedes for the priest!
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@GordonGekko83 Living in Switzerland as a partner is even better. No children and half the rent 😜😂
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@GordonGekko83 you don't have to invest in everything and if you do, condoms protect just as well as an SL.
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@GordonGekko83 I usually think that too. I also have colleagues who can save €2000 a month. They all still live with mom, of course. 😅 Can also be quite nice and beautiful, but whether that's the fulfillment 🤷🏽‍♂️. Still, it's great if you have everything at your disposal, no question.
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2400/800 with wife and 3 children
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Cocaine and whores, German cars, Swiss watches🔥
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3000/700 and from next year 3200/1000. No children, no car, no alcohol, no smoking, no sauna club
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@Dirty30 completely kosher?! I praise you for that 👍😆
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@Dirty30 And what do you live for then? 🤔
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@Epi Drugs were not excluded 😂😂
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@LMHNK Nor was the Laufhaus excluded 🤝 only the sauna club
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@Epi Travel and festivals
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@Dirty30 Ditto, as long as the world is still big and beautiful and there are nice people with good music...
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@Epi That's exactly how it is 😎
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@Dirty30 and coke 🤨 ?
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In my view, there are too many views on what counts as saving. Keywords: Pension payments Private pension insurance Paying off privately used property "Saving" for vacations Savings plan for a nest egg, etc. Everyone feels they have a different definition.
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@KevinC yup, it's easy to talk past each other here. Some people are civil servants, others are employees and others are self-employed. The employee/civil servant would not count old-age provision in the SPS/earning a pension as saving. As a self-employed person, I would count a retirement savings account or real estate as saving, but not Rürup or voluntary pension contributions.
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@KevinC I'm absolutely with you. I invest very little € in the portfolio, but I pay off several loans for the house, have a Rürup, a Riester, etc. The bottom line is that I've achieved a mega return with my house and I'm diversifying my securities with the other two contracts.
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@devnerd_daddy I can understand your view. On the other hand, you also have to consider that it simply means a higher quality of life for you, but the assets are tied up in the house - possibly until the end of your life, so you have little of the potential increase in value. It's always a question of how you define it. Someone with a nice, paid-off, large apartment in Munich worth 1.5 million can certainly be described as wealthy. However, the person doesn't necessarily feel that way if living there is generally expensive and you don't have a huge income.
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@KevinC In general, I agree with you, in my particular case I bought below value at very good conditions 😄 The total repayment target is under 15 years, I already have 5. But as I said, this is my very specific case. I feel really sorry for all the people who built here 5 years ago for a horrendous amount of money.
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3900/1300 and feel like I'm living a lavish life here in the bubble and am an absolute low earner😂
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3000/ 2000 approx. and also everything in the depot that is possible.
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9900.-/4500.-
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@Richirichwhat yields EUR 9,900?
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@Richirich and what can you do for CHF 9,900? 😉
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@Makeyourfinancegreatagain 2 incomes,wife and me:-)
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Work part-time, net approx. 2000€ / savings rate 900€
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Trainee second year of apprenticeship as tax clerk 950€ net 500€ -> saving for car 100€-> Crypto 30-50€ -ETF, share Rest are fixed costs or simply to treat yourself to something.
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@Leb_Trader How much gross do you have as a SteFA? 🙈 Apparently you are exploited just like the Refa or NoFa 🙈
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@Staatsmann Actually got 1050€ gross was increased to 1200€ gross a month ago
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@Leb_Trader "Which federal state? Small office or larger tax consultancy firm?
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@Staatsmann yes that's true, it makes a lot of difference when you're young. i'm in nrw, medium-sized law firm, i'd say about 40 employees
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@Staatsmann But I have to say that nothing else is paid, no inflation premium or anything like that
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3200/1800. No children, 1 car. Rent shared.
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As I always earn different amounts as a fitter, it's difficult to say, anything between €3000 and €10,000 is possible, savings rate of €1500-3000
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You can take a look at the getquin 2023 census https://getqu.in/FPSIo3/
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I have a net salary of €4200. Of this, €3000 goes directly into the custody account. I live with my girlfriend and have no children.
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1900, 150 savings plan, but regular purchases of larger tranches.
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2500/ 750 🥹
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1Yr
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@AufziehenderDichterHebel Love goes out 🥰
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approx. 5000/900 2 children, married, pay off 2 houses, one of them rented (not including rental income) The way I see it, we spend too much money :D:D What do you all live on? :D
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3200 / 1000
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I was shocked to discover at the weekend that I put just under 45% of my net salary into the deposit in 2023. But that's probably because the second "mainstay" went pretty well. Edit: 3500/1600
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@Alpalaka please tell us more about your Standbein
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@Der_Dividenden_Monteur I already had two mainstays, now I've added a third ;)
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@Alpalaka Is there somewhere here at gq where you can see what you have paid in over a certain period of time? I haven't found anything yet, but it would be really interesting.
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@finanzperpetuum At a competitor, it is also stated in the YtD performance, but it is also planned that it can be broken down for each separate year
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@finanzperpetuum
https://feedback.getquin.com/b/feature-requests/investiertes-kapital-im-graphen-der-performance/ You can then also see how the invested capital changes and how much has been paid in.
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@Kundenservice I'm looking forward to it 👍🏼🙂
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12000/4000
4000/2500 running
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No rent?
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Income varies, but between 1.5k and 2k - but a part already comes from a passive income
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2700/1250 🫡
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@Therealjim with a rent that is pretty low or no rent, right?
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@Wettyx91 Rent, electricity, food, everything that goes with it. But I live in a shared apartment.
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That's bad, I also work for a tax consultant in NRW and get €100 a month to compensate for inflation. Unfortunately, the pay is usually not that great for what you do.
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