Maximum credit limit according to economic journalist Frank Lehmann

  • Erstellt am 2016-05-24 09:45:31

Steffen80

2016-05-24 20:09:23
  • #1


And you think someone with a few hundred thousand a year doesn't move anything?

I can't and won't go into detail... but my company also moves absolutely nothing on the net
 

toxicmolotof

2016-05-24 20:17:01
  • #2


And I am referring to your statement.

We (2 adults, 2 children) have a net household income of 2,600 euros including transfer payments and a loan installment of just under 1,100 euros, which corresponds to roughly 42%.

In your opinion, this is an absolute no-go. I say it is relatively much, I would not deny that, but easily manageable.
 

Sascha aus H

2016-05-24 20:23:25
  • #3
Wow...you have my respect. I can't imagine how that should work, just the daycare costs would almost eat up the rest for us, but I guess the regional differences also play a big role here.
 

toxicmolotof

2016-05-24 20:28:23
  • #4
Those who do not have a high salary usually do not pay high daycare fees either. In our case, it is 76 euros from the age of 3, the second child is even free as long as the first one still attends daycare.

And the rest fits as well.
 

Steffen80

2016-05-24 20:31:46
  • #5


Yes.. I also take my hat off to that. It would not be my lifestyle model. I would set the priorities differently there.. but certainly not pay off real estate. But to each their own..
 

Sebastian79

2016-05-24 20:35:31
  • #6
That is why these calculators and *****comparisons are only approximate values and not laws. It always depends on the individual life situation - you can compare it as little as one house to another. With the WIKRL, it all becomes even more difficult - I believe we would not have been able to build like this now.
 
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