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> Spend (a lot) less than you make. At 500k/year anywhere in the US, you should easily be saving 200k / year.

$500k/year sounds like a lot, but that's enough that taxes are going to take a large bite. Only the biggest stars can get their income deferred beyond their career. Because of the nature of the job, you're going to have larger housing costs: when you get traded, you need to find somewhere to live quickly and you might be on the hook for the old lease for some time; depending on the league, off-season training may happen in a different part of the country than the regular season, so you might need housing there too... Moving costs probably add up, because trades are immediate.

If you're only in the league for 5 years, chances are you're spending some time in the minors and you're typically not earning at your headling contract rate then... Also, a lot of the headline rates include bonuses for winning the championship which statistically few teams and players do.

There's also the problem that yes, these people need financial advice because they don't always have financial skills, but they also have trouble picking financial advisers because they don't always have financial skills.

Also, young people of all income levels get themselves into trouble with finance; higher income probably makes it easier.

I certainly agree that $500k/year for 5 years should leave you well off after, but it's not that surprising that it often doesn't.



I think we’re mostly agreeing, but I feel this is a little misleading:

> $500k/year sounds like a lot, but that's enough that taxes are going to take a large bite.

It seems to imply that taxes are going to make the $500k income life surprisingly hard, but let’s do the math. In California, with $500k income, your effective taxation rate is 41%, looking here: https://smartasset.com/taxes/california-tax-calculator#M0SXJ.... So you’re going to take home about $300k after tax!! I think that’s still _so much money_. I would struggle to spend that even if I tried to. Ya, the taxes are higher. But it’s not that big of an issue, once you’re making a ton of money it just doesn’t hurt much. That’s why graduated tax rates are tolerable to begin with, imo.


$300k net and you want them to save $200k. $100k net goes a long way, but they're probably renting at least two places, a lot of eating away from home (much of which I'm sure gets covered by the team, but probably not all of it) a lot of excess transportation. Excess tax prep cause of all the working in multiple jurisdictions, etc. Things will add up; thankfully I have all the coordination of a newspaper so I don't have to deal with the accounting problems ;p


Idk, maybe I’m out of touch, i still think 100k for loving expenses is more than enough. A nice apartment in Mountainview is like $3500-$4000/month. If you have to rent two apartments, presumably you’re not renting both in such an expensive area. I’d think housing can be covered by 60k/year pretty comfortably.




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