Lions WR Ryan Broyles and his family live on $60,000 a year

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http://20somethingfinance.com/ryan-broyles-nfl-financial-success-story/

Ryan Broyles: a Frugal Pro Athlete Story we can All Learn from (they do Exist!)
Last updated by G.E. Miller

Most celebrity finance stories are super depressing and usually include the following phrases in the headline, “Files for Bankruptcy”, “Lost Millions”, or “Spent Entire Fortune on”. When I find one I like (i.e. Jason Brown leaving NFL millions to start a farm), I like to highlight them. I do it for the kids (and adult kids).

The latest one I crossed struck a chord with me, because it lays out a financial success path example for not only other professional athletes, but each and every one of us.

Ryan Broyles, a wide receiver for the Detroit Lions, was drafted in the 2nd round in 2012. He’s heading into the final year of a four-year rookie contract of $3.6 million (only $1.422 million was guaranteed when he signed).

ryan-broyles.jpg


Just after being drafted, he met with a financial advisor and took what he learned to heart. Broyles set a modest annual budget of $60,000 for his family (wife and 1 child), takes advantage of an NFL 401K match (the NFL really does this?!), and invests the remainder. He and his wife drive humble Mazdas (no offense to all you Miata lovers out there).

Good on you, Mr. Broyles.

Not only is Broyles thinking about his family’s future, but he’s thinking about others as well. From ESPN,

“Broyles immersed himself in the financial world. In March, he went to Washington, D.C., with New Orleans running back Mark Ingram to speak to students about financial planning. He worked with VISA and the NFL on promoting a Financial Football video game in classrooms to help teach financial security and planning in both D.C. and his home state of Oklahoma.”

Doubly good on you, Mr. Broyles.

Having made it through 3 of the 4 seasons on contract, Broyles has approximately collected about $2.7 million of his $3.6 million deal. Assuming he keeps his money invested, achieves a modest rate of return, and keeps spending at or below $60,000 annually (adjusted for inflation). At age 27, on a modest rookie contract, he never has to work another day in his life.

Professional athletes should take note – only guaranteed contract money is guaranteed. Every athlete who makes it to the pros has been told endlessly how great they are to the point that they probably all believe they are the best. The reality is, everyone else has been told the same thing and only a few end up sticking over time. Making it to the pros is rare, but surviving and thriving is even rarer.

Injuries, bad luck, poor performance, one memorable mistake, management or a coach who doesn’t like you, or simply the bad luck of being behind a superstar on your team at your position are all it takes for one to be permanently relegated to the bench. If you don’t succeed and get a much more lucrative second contract, you’re out of a job. And I have to think that employers aren’t exactly jumping to hire failed professional athletes with questionable collegiate education experiences.

As an NFL player wisely choosing to spend just a tad over the median household annual expense level (of $51,100), Broyles has wisely chosen to live indefinitely on his guaranteed money. Both he and his wife never have to work again if they choose not to. Any contract extensions is icing on the cake (and could bump his annual budget higher). As a result, he’s completely taken the debilitating stress and pressure off of himself to succeed,

“When I come to work, I don’t think about the money, man,” Broyles said. “I can tell you that, without a doubt. There might be some guys that do but I put myself in a position where I come out here and have fun. I don’t have that pressure, you know what I mean. My wife has no worries. My child has no worries. For the most part, I can help my family, you know.”

But, I didn’t write this article with a professional athlete audience in mind. My guess is that 0.0% of "20somethingfinance" readers will make the NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL. That doesn’t mean there isn’t something valuable to take away from this story.

Broyles is a contributor, but not a bonafide superstar and could very well not get a second contract. $1.422 million in guaranteed money (about $1.5M is needed to live indefinitely off of $60,000) is an amount that many of our households could easily eclipse in under 2 decades of work. Broyles cracked the equation. You may have slightly different variables in your equation (i.e. # of years to get there, annual budget), but you can crack the equation as well.

And $60,000 in expenses, while very modest for professional athletes, is still quite a bit! My wife and I have lived like royalty off of less than $30,000 for years in one of the most expensive housing markets in Michigan. Theoretically, we only need half as much as Broyles to hit our crossover point and achieve financial independence at our expense levels. Broyles can afford to go higher, so that is not a knock on him.

The path to endless financial success is really pretty simple:
  1. Figure out how much you spend.
  2. Drive those expenses lower.
  3. Figure out how much you need to cover those expenses.
  4. When you get there, be wary of the endless pursuit of more money and enjoy life.
That’s really all you need.
 

-X-

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Good on him. That's smart.
But I have one piece of advice. STAY AWAY FROM MAZDAS!
 

Tron

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Read this article earlier. Good guy and smart. Hope he can stay healthy and get back on track.
 

Jorgeh0605

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I would like to know how you can live like royalty on 30,000$. That I just don't see.
 

Jorgeh0605

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I was gonna ask how can you live on $60,000? Man, LA/OC is messed up......I was thinking my 2nd daughter is ruining me...LOL
A place with a low cost of living can sustain a budget of 60,000$ but 30k seems absurd unless you are single with no kids. I live in AZ and 60k is definitely do-able. I can see that not being the case in LA though. Sheesh.
 

SierraRam

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I was gonna ask how can you live on $60,000? Man, LA/OC is messed up......I was thinking my 2nd daughter is ruining me...LOL

Ha! I have two 'grown-up' daughters and I've forgotten what cash looks like! 60K works almost anywhere in America except LA, the SF Bay Area & New York City! It won't get you a refrigerator box in those overpriced markets
 

dbrooks25

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$60k a year is very easy for a family of 3 to live off of in the midwest, especially if one of them is a small child. It really depends of the situation. His wife stays at home, so child care isn't a necessity and they live modestly I'm sure. I sure as hell wish my wife would read this article. She has the mentality where the more you make, the more you spend. :confused:
 

iced

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lets how see how long that money lasts in 10+ years with an older wife and a teenager
 

ramsince62

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Not to pop anyone's bubble, but the entire premise of the article (outside of the good advice to save and invest wisely for the future) is misleading. The articles claim that someone can return $60K annually from a 1.5 million balance "indefinitely" is no longer true as it was before 2007.

Prior to then, a conservative return of 4% from a base of 1.5 mil, returned (before tax) $60,000. Today, you're looking at around 3% unless you move out on the risk-yield curve.
 

JUMAVA68

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Good for him he's doing the smart thing living on 60 grand is keeping it real and realizing it could all end in a minute.
 

JUMAVA68

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A place with a low cost of living can sustain a budget of 60,000$ but 30k seems absurd unless you are single with no kids. I live in AZ and 60k is definitely do-able. I can see that not being the case in LA though. Sheesh.
60 k is very doable here in Las Vegas where its cheaper to live than most people realize.Of course the obvious downfall here is gambling so if you keep that in check or don't do it at all you'll be fine.
 

kurtfaulk

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60 k is very doable here in Las Vegas where its cheaper to live than most people realize.Of course the obvious downfall here is gambling so if you keep that in check or don't do it at all you'll be fine.

you mustn't live on the main strip where prices are astronomical.

.
 

JUMAVA68

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you mustn't live on the main strip where prices are astronomical.

.
I live 3 miles from the strip but those prices on the strip is for visitors who will pay anything.Aside from that Vegas is a nice place to live that won't break your bank account.
 

HeiseNBerg

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Good on him. That's smart.
But I have one piece of advice. STAY AWAY FROM MAZDAS!
What's wrong with Mazda's? I bought a Mazda 6 brand new in 2008, and it's been nothing but reliable. I still have it, and it still runs great.
 

Moostache

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People who manage their finances for "need" over "want" can get by on surprisingly little. For example, do you NEED that brand new car 3 years after taking a bath on depreciation from the last new car? Buying depreciating "assets" is always the worst thing you can do...buying them at interest? Now you are doomed to the rat race for good...

People who do stupid things with their money will never have enough. IF they make any amount more, they simply increase their spending or worse increase their debt load by the same amount. Sad thing is, without this kind of self-defeating behavior by many, the entire system of capitalism breaks down and grinds into depressions. People in general (not in specific cases) MUST over-spend and buy for want rather than need to grease the wheels.

Useful idiots indeed!
 

psxpaul

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I think I read somewhere else that he already bought his home with cash from his signing bonus, and that the $60k/year they live off of, is after taxes. So really, that's closer to living off of $90k per year, without having rent or a mortgage to pay. That should really not be newsworthy at all.

All of his medical expenses are covered by the team, as are most of his travel expenses. He likely gets quite a few meals for free.

His spending habits seem more like common sense, and it's really sad that so few players actually do this.
 

FrantikRam

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I think I read somewhere else that he already bought his home with cash from his signing bonus, and that the $60k/year they live off of, is after taxes. So really, that's closer to living off of $90k per year, without having rent or a mortgage to pay. That should really not be newsworthy at all.

All of his medical expenses are covered by the team, as are most of his travel expenses. He likely gets quite a few meals for free.

His spending habits seem more like common sense, and it's really sad that so few players actually do this.


This.

When the author of this article said he and his wife live like royalty from $30,000 per year, that means they're making roughly $50,000.

Spending $30,000 per year...he said his wife, didn't mention children.

If they have a cheap home/apartment, they could be living it up while spending only $30,000 total per year.
 

Dieter the Brock

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What's wrong with Mazda's? I bought a Mazda 6 brand new in 2008, and it's been nothing but reliable. I still have it, and it still runs great.

I saw a dude with a killer 87 RX7 the other day at the gas station. Look insane

but some lady in recent model mazda ran into the side of my car passing on a double yellow while I was making a left turn into my gate

I'm torn...
 

Ozoneranger

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60k wouldn't get you very far in the Bay Area unless you already own a home with a low mortgage. My wife and I lived frugally for years and put our kids through college on the fly- no student loans. After they graduated, we took advantage of the "catch up" provision in the 401(k) rules and at the same time lived very well on our combined income. Total home remodel, nice cars and Hawaii. We loved Hawaii.

Then cancer took my wife. After the fog lifted, I took a hard look at my finances, having not only lost my wife, but also 55% of my household income. I hired a financial advisor and set forth with a plan to retire at 60- in five years. All those years of saving and staying out of debt (save the mortgage, which is really a song) paid off. I have a healthy net worth and will most likely be able to live off my investments without touching the principle after I retire.

The key to financial security is staying out of debt and always asking, "Do I really need that?" The answer is almost always no. It also helps to have a girlfriend who is like minded and financially secure. Women can be expensive. I chose wisely.

Kudos to Broyles...he's a smart kid.