Household C earns $9,800 a month take-home. This is where the money goes.

Household C earns $9,800 a month take-home. This is where the money goes.

This week's audit: a single high-income urban professional earning $9,800/month take-home who spends $1,280 on restaurants — 289% of the national benchmark. Three flags: the 3-zip restaurant habit, subscription creep, and $11,600 of unused 401(k) tax-deferred space. Three fixes with dollar estimates.

Family Budget Audit
2026/6/14 · 18:11
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Who is Household C

One person. Renter. Late 20s/early 30s, works in tech or finance. Lives in a mid-major city — think Denver, Austin, or Chicago's North Side. Bring-home pay after taxes, health premiums, and a modest 401(k) deduction: $9,800/month.
Household C is not in financial trouble. There is no deficit. But when you lay the monthly spending next to national benchmarks, three categories stand out — and two of them are quietly reshaping how much wealth this household builds over the next decade.

The spending breakdown

CategoryHousehold C (monthly)BLS 2024 benchmarkDifference
Housing (rent + utilities)$3,100$2,189+$911
Transportation (rideshare + transit)$620$1,110–$490
Food at home$410$519–$109
Food away from home$1,280$329+$951
Healthcare$195$516–$321
Personal insurance & pensions$950$816+$134
Entertainment & subscriptions$720$301+$419
Clothing & personal care$380n/a combined
Miscellaneous$210
Total$7,865$6,545+$1,320
A few things jump out immediately. The housing premium (+$911) is real but not unreasonable for urban renting in a competitive market — Household C has no car, which actually saves $490 against the national average and partially offsets the rent gap. Food at home is below benchmark, which suggests this person can cook; they just don't.
The two red cells deserve a closer look.
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Flag 1: Food away from home — $1,280/month

The national average for a single person spending on restaurants and delivery is $329/month. 1 Household C is at $1,280 — 289% of benchmark.
This is the "3-zip restaurant habit" in practice: a rotation of maybe 8–10 spots across different neighborhoods, plus Uber Eats and DoorDash on nights when going out feels like too much. No single meal is outrageous ($45 sushi here, $22 ramen there), but the frequency compounds. At 20+ restaurant or delivery occasions per month, the math adds up fast.
The benchmark household also eats out, to be clear. But they eat out an average of roughly once a week at modest spend. Household C's pattern looks more like a primary grocery strategy — restaurants aren't the treat, they're the infrastructure.

Flag 2: Entertainment and subscriptions — $720/month

The BLS average for entertainment is $301/month, which includes everything from Netflix to concert tickets. 1 Household C spends $720 — $419 over benchmark.
The breakdown likely looks something like: 4–5 streaming and media services ($80), a gym or fitness membership ($60–80), a few software subscriptions ($40), and then a large variable bucket: shows, concerts, sporting events, comedy nights. Urban single professionals in their late 20s are often in peak concert-going years, and tickets have gotten expensive fast.
This isn't inherently problematic spending. The question is whether all of it is being consumed and valued, or whether some of it is running quietly in the background.

Flag 3: Retirement contributions — only $11,400/year

At $180k–$190k gross, Household C is likely in the 32% federal bracket. The IRS 2024 401(k) employee contribution limit is $23,000/year. 2 The current $950/month implies $11,400/year — leaving $11,600 of tax-deferred space untouched.
This is the quietest flag. The food and entertainment overspends are visible on every credit card statement. The retirement gap is invisible — it just shows up as a smaller number in an account Household C checks a few times a year. But every dollar of 401(k) room left unfunded at 32% is a dollar taxed now that could have grown tax-deferred for 30+ years.
Household C has $1,935/month left over after all expenses. Most of that is sitting in a checking or savings account, earning minimal interest, when it could be reducing this year's tax bill and compounding inside a retirement account.

Three fixes

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Fix 1: Put a number on the restaurant budget

This is not "cook more" advice. Household C clearly enjoys restaurants — that's fine. The problem is no ceiling. The fix: pick a monthly restaurant + delivery number ($700–800 feels realistic for someone with this habit), load that amount onto a dedicated card or budget category, and stop when it's gone.
At $1,280 current spend, a cap of $750/month saves $530/month — the most recoverable dollar in this budget. Most of that reduction comes from two or three fewer delivery orders per week, not from giving up the neighborhood spots.

Fix 2: A 30-minute subscription audit

Subscription creep is real and it is sticky by design. The fix takes one evening: pull every recurring charge from the last two bank and card statements, list them, and ask for each: used this month? Cancel or pause anything that isn't used weekly (for a $20+ item) or monthly (for a $5–10 item).
Conservative estimate: $80–150/month recovered. A typical haul includes a streaming service kept for one show that ended, a news subscription barely opened, a fitness app left running alongside an in-person gym membership, and a SaaS product from a side project that wound down.

Fix 3: Fill more of the 401(k)

The math here is different from the other two fixes — this one actually costs Household C less in take-home pay than the number suggests.
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Increasing contributions by $500/month adds $6,000/year to the 401(k). At the 32% federal rate, that $500 pre-tax costs roughly $340 in take-home pay. So for $340 less per month in spending power, Household C gets $500 invested in a tax-deferred account. The effective return before any market gains is ~47% on day one.
The full opportunity, if Household C eventually maxes to the $23,000 limit, is capturing the remaining $11,600/year of deferred space — reducing taxable income by $11,600 in a 32% bracket saves approximately $3,700/year in federal taxes alone.
No fix in this audit comes close to that number.

The honest picture

Household C is doing several things right. No car. Below-benchmark healthcare and grocery spending. Net positive cash flow every month. That gives real room to work with.
The restaurant bill is the most obvious lever, and capping it recovers meaningful money fast. But the retirement gap is the one that compounds in silence. At this income level, the tax benefit of filling that 401(k) space is essentially a guaranteed return that no savings account will match.
Next week: A retired couple on fixed income — Social Security plus a small pension — navigating Medicare premiums, a travel habit that didn't shrink when the paychecks did, and a housing cost that made more sense in 2018.

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