Can I afford a kid on $300k income? (single)
32, single, $300k/yr. Everyone says "you can never afford kids" — so here's the actual number: what one child does to this plan, and whether retirement still holds. Real math, not fear.
The setup
Age
32
Household income
$300,000/yr
Household
Single earner
Liquid savings
$96,000
Retirement savings
$288,000
Investing return
7%/yr
Financially feasible — your plan absorbs it
$569k
Total lifetime cost (lifestyle + education, inflation-adjusted)
Daycare (0–5)
$2,400/mo
Lifestyle bump
$155k
Net education
$414k
Savings Rate
50%
The total lifetime cost is roughly $569k — about $155k in extra day-to-day lifestyle spending and $414k in out-of-pocket education (daycare through college), all inflation-adjusted. Having a child next year reduces your retirement NW from $28M to $25M, but your plan still works without shortfall.
| Scenario | Timing | Retire NW | Retire SWR/mo | Shortfall | NW Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No kid | No new child | $27,673,841 ($10M in today's dollars) | $92,246 | None | — |
| 2027 | Have a child next year | $25,402,892 ($9.6M in today's dollars) | $84,676 | None | -$2.3M |
| 2029 | Have a child in 3 years | $25,549,811 ($9.6M in today's dollars) | $85,166 | None | -$2.1M |
| 2031 | Have a child in 5 years | $25,686,511 ($9.7M in today's dollars) | $85,622 | None | -$2.0M |
This analysis includes $414k in engine-modeled out-of-pocket education (daycare through college, inflation-adjusted, net of any 529 draws). Many families use student loans, scholarships, 529 plans, or community college to reduce this. Without college funding, the financial impact is significantly lower. The decision to start a family involves deeply personal considerations that no spreadsheet can capture.
Your real number depends on your savings, debts, and city. The averages above are a starting point — model your exact situation and get your verdict.
Model your own version — free
Your real answer depends on your full picture. Build it in under a minute.
Get my verdict →Frequently asked
Can a single household earning $300k afford a kid?
Financially feasible — your plan absorbs it
Total lifetime cost (lifestyle + education, inflation-adjusted)
$569k — modeled with Rightmont's projection engine for this exact scenario.
How was this calculated?
Rightmont runs your numbers through a year-by-year projection engine — taxes, compounding, Social Security, and your real cashflow — to model the outcome. Model your own version free in under a minute.
For educational purposes only — not financial advice.