How to Live on Commission Only Income?

by Chauncy Williams

If your family gets any part of its income from freelance work, consulting, or a small business challenges. Even if you earn a salary, you’re increasingly likely to find a share of your income doled out in performance-related awards, which you must re-earn each year, rather than raises. More than 90% of companies now offer some variable pay structure. Earning a living without prenegotiated pay doesn’t have to be a struggle, however. You just need a way to make good use of the good times, to cushion yourself against the bad and to prepare yourself for the future. These measures will help you manage the uncertainty.

Step1

Set a “salary and live on it” If you earn $100,000 one year and $150,000 the next, it’s hard to gauge how much you can afford to spend. One way to smooth your cash flow is to come up with a monthly budget you can stay under, no matter what you earn. To figure out your number, pull out tax returns for the past five years, find your lowest income and divide by 12. “You should be able to live off what you’d bring home in the worst-case scenario,” says Maurer. Doing so reduces the risk that you’ll have to tap savings or borrow in down years. Then take half an hour to tally your essential monthly expenses – such as food, mortgage, car payments, as well as retirement and education savings. If you don’t have taxes withheld, estimate your yearly IRS bill using last year as a model, divide by 12 and add that in as well. If your monthly total exceeds the worst-case budget, it’d be wise to rein in spending. The easiest way to do this is to eliminate big fixed expenses – like that leased Mercedes or the annual ski trip to Banff. To help you live under budget, set up your banking so all your pay is deposited to a savings account and have the amount of your expenses automatically transferred to a checking account on a certain day (or half, every two weeks). Then, only spend from that account. Do keep a cushion – say $2,000 – in the checking account as protection.

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Step2

Plump up your cushion Households with steady paychecks need three to six months of living expenses in the bank as an emergency fund. If your income is less predictable, however, strive to have at least a year’s worth, says Jennifer Hartman, a financial planner in Los Angeles. Besides the typical reasons to tap this fund – to pay for the emergency root canal or unexpected home repairs – you also may need to dip into it in lean years when you don’t earn your baseline budget. Better to use a cash stash than to borrow. (That said, it’s wise to have a line of credit, like a low-interest-rate, just in case.) Put the fund in a high-yielding bank account or money-market fund. A good option: money-market account.

Step 3

3Save right for retirement For retirement planning, you can’t simply use the standard estimate that you’ll need 70% to 80% of your current income each year in retirement; you may end up with too little or too much saved. Instead, look at how much you’re spending today – go back to the tally you made earlier. Adjust it a bit based on how your expenses might change in retirement (no mortgage, more travel). This is how much your nest egg will need to provide for you each year. To find out if you are on track to save enough, use our retirement planner, filling in that dollar figure as how much you’ll want each year in retirement. You may need to adjust how much of your salary you save. Once you determine an appropriate portion, include this in your worst-case budget so that you save even when business isn’t booming. And immediately stash that percentage of each check in a retirement account. If you’re unsure how much you’ll be able to put in a Roth or SEP-IRA, which have caps based on income, set the money aside in a savings account and come back to it at year’s end.

Step 44
Use gravy for other goals In good years, you’ll earn well above your budget. If you follow the previous advice, that money will automatically go to a savings account. At the end of every month, you can take 10% out for fun; then dole out the rest toward medium and long-term financial goals. Your first priorities: replenishing (or building) your emergency fund and paying down high-interest debt.
Step 55

Fill gaps in your safety net Usually the calculations for how much life and disability insurance you need are based on how much you earn; once again, you’ll want to look at how much you spend. For life insurance, consider what portion of your yearly expenses won’t be covered without your salary. Multiply that by the number of years you want coverage (until your kids finish college or you hit retirement is typical). Add in any big stuff like kids’ college costs. Get quotes for term policies. With disability insurance, even if you get it through an employer, it may not cover commissions and bonuses. See if you can buy additional coverage through your job. If not, or if you don’t have a plan through work, start shopping with a trade group or insurance agent. Aim to cover fixed expenses, but be aware that policies usually replace only up to 60% or 70% of your earnings per year.

Step 66

3 fast fixes Bulk up liquid assets. Since Gordon is the family’s sole earner and works on 100% commission, he needs an emergency fund stocked with at least a year’s worth of living expenses, much more than his current three months. That would cover unexpected expenses, temporary unemployment and a long stretch of lower earnings. Fund retirement. If your employer does not match 401(k) contributions. Therefore, you should first put as much as he can in Roth IRAs. You will have more investment options and can withdraw your contributions after five years, if needed, without a penalty. After that, he can max out the 401(k).

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