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The phrase "financially comfortable" doesn't have a strict definition. In San Francisco, the net worth you'd need to feel "comfortable" is $1.5 million, according to a survey sample of 750 residents in that city — the highest amount cited among 12 major U.S. cities surveyed. Much of the difference in net worth thresholds between cities is due to shelter costs, especially in cities with severe housing shortages, like San Francisco, Los Angeles and New York City. While feeling "financially comfortable" is a subjective term, the survey makes a distinction between that and feeling "wealthy." For cities, it ranges from $4.4 million in San Francisco to $2.2 million in Dallas.
Persons: Charles Schwab's, that's Organizations: Wealth Survey, Boston, Denver, Seattle, Atlanta, Dallas, Houston, Phoenix, CNBC Locations: San Francisco, U.S, Franciscans, Francisco, California, Los Angeles, San Diego, York City, Washington, Chicago, San Francisco , Los Angeles and New York City, Dallas
With the peak summer travel season winding down, it's time for National Cheap Flight Day. "There's no specific day where flights are going to be at their cheapest," Katy Nastro, a travel expert at Going, tells CNBC Make. Instead, Nastro says that the best time to book air travel will always be in relation to when you're planning on flying. Here are three travel expert-approved tips for National Cheap Flights Day. They're watching data, they're watching traveler behavior and they're mapping out these pockets where they can be super competitive," she says.
Persons: Katy Nastro, That's, Nastro, it's, Gemma Jamieson, Skyscanner's, we're Organizations: CNBC, Google, Airlines
Emery Wells put himself on the path to a dream career by recklessly buying a $17,500 camera that he definitely couldn't afford. By 2014, his post-production company Katabatic Digital brought in more than $1 million in annual revenue from clients like Coca-Cola and Pfizer. Wells: Post-production is client service work. Did you always think Frame.io could become a billion-dollar company? I don't know if we're really going to get there."
Persons: Emery Wells, who'd, Wells, John Traver, shuttering, Traver, I'd, Mark Zuckerberg, Mark, we're Organizations: CNBC, Adobe, Digital Cinema, Katabatic, Cola, Pfizer, Frame.io Locations: Wells, New York, Katabatic
"I think people need to stop following trends, and they need to follow their heart more," India tells CNBC Make It. People of more typical means should avoid falling into the "celebritization of travel," India adds. Instead, India recommends choosing travel spots based on your own passions and what you want to learn more about. Think about what you're reading, watching, listening to and talking about to guide your travel decisions. Where is a place that you can go, try the massages daily, or really go deeper into the culture?"
Persons: Jaclyn Sienna India, Sienna Charles, Beyonce, Jeff Bezos Organizations: Wall Street titans, Hollywood, CNBC, Aspen, Netflix Locations: India, Europe, Egypt, France, Italy, South America, Africa, Southeast Asia
U.S. high school graduates looking for entry-level work might consider starting out at a company appearing on a new ranking from the American Opportunity Index. Released earlier this month, the list named 50 large companies as the best places for people with a high school diploma to launch their careers. The index scored companies based on three metrics: how likely they are to hire entry-level employees, promote them from within and set them up to land better-paying jobs when they leave. "We didn't see a whole lot out there for the 40% of high school graduates who aren't going off to post-secondary education immediately — most of whom have to find some sort of work," he continues. Rather than survey the companies, the index analyzed the career paths of around 5 million workers from 2018 until 2022 to make its assessment.
Persons: who've, Rajiv Chandrasekaran, aren't, Chandrasekaran Organizations: American, Schultz, Foundation, American Opportunity, Glass Institute, Harvard Business School, Walgreens, Financial Services, Gap Inc, Goodyear Tire, Starbucks Retailers, CNBC
Students and their families, along with college financial aid administrators, hoped the 2025-26 school year would be a return to normalcy. Financial aid administrators continue to deal with problems even as the school year quickly approaches. But ultimately, financial aid advocates conceded that they'd rather have a delayed-yet-functional application than an on-time and glitchy one. There's not much applicants can do at this point to ease stress about the financial aid timeline. Still, Vasconcelos shares three tips for incoming or current college students as the upcoming financial aid cycle approaches.
Persons: they'd, Shannon Vasconcelos, It's, Vasconcelos, Vasoncelos, We've Organizations: of Education, Federal, Congressional, Bright Horizons, CNBC, didn't, Aid, Social
Ambitious workers get a lot of advice early in their career about how to get ahead. One common tip is: Be among the first to arrive at the office and the last to leave to show your boss you're committed to the job. Looking back, Doe recognizes that the well-intentioned advice often comes with the caveat that working long hours shows your dedication to your work at the expense of your personal time and life. "I didn't have any sort of work-life harmony in my life," says Doe, who now runs her own marketing agency, Verbatim. Stacie Haller, chief career advisor at ResumeBuilder with over 30 years of recruiting experience, agrees.
Persons: Brianna Doe, Doe, we've, Stacie Haller Organizations: CNBC
In past interviews with CNBC Make It and other publications, many centenarians credited their diet for living a long, healthy life. Elizabeth Francis, 115Elizabeth Francis, the oldest living person in the U.S. who is 115 years old, told ABC 13, that she eats "everything." Deborah Szekely, 102At 102 years old, Deborah Szekely still helps to run her fitness resort and spa three times a week. Lunch: Salad at home, she said, or lunch at restaurants. Her diet is very similar to the Mediterranean diet, and it includes fish, whole grains and fruits and vegetables.
Persons: Elizabeth Francis, Francis, Ethel Harrison, TODAY.com, Harrison, Deborah Szekely, Szekely, Shirley Hodes, Hodes, Daisy McFadden Organizations: CNBC, ABC Locations: U.S
Laquintano, 28, started working there with her older sister when she was 16 to kill time while she was off school. She works at Rita's with her younger brother, Andrew, who is home from college for the summer. As a remote employee, Fullerton says working at Bird & Betty's has also given him a much-needed social outlet. Oddly enough, working more has helped me feel happier, more relaxed." Alvarado spends her summers working as a camp counselor at the Kickapoo Kamp for Girls in Kerrville, Texas.
Persons: Gen Zers, millennials, Anna Laquintano, she's, Rita's, Laquintano, I've, it's, Andrew, Pat Fullerton, Betty's, Fullerton, he'll, Krystal Alvarado, She's, Alvarado Organizations: Fullerton, it's, American Heritage Federal Credit Union, CNBC, Bird, Start, Girls Locations: Beach Haven , New Jersey, Rockledge , Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Rita's, Italian, New Jersey, Beach, Fullerton, Hoboken , New Jersey, Texas, Alvarado, Hidalgo County, South Texas, Kerrville , Texas
Bella Robben has been living in Australia for almost a year. Bella RobbenRobben's original plan was to visit Australia for just one week, but right before the trip she decided to apply for the country's working holiday visa. Bella RobbenIn Australia, Robben says she is able to earn enough to have a life and to save. Now, approaching one year in Australia, Robben says she isn't the same person she was when she first arrived in the country. Bella Robben
Persons: Bella Robben, Robben, Louis, I've, Bella Robben Robben, Port Douglas, that's, it's, she's, I'm Organizations: CNBC, Tourism Board, Student Locations: Australia, St, Louis , Missouri, Peru, Colombia, Europe, Barcelona, London, Lisbon, Melbourne, U.S, Australia's Northern Territory, Robben, Port, Australian, Queensland, Far North Queensland, America, Southeast Asia
In 2023, after getting let go from his job at Meta, he decided to take his company, Ultimate Food Tours, full-time. "They were sending me little goals to challenge me to make these food tours," he says. "The first dollar I made from my Chinatown Food Tour was in October of 2019," he says. 'I made the decision to cut the safety net'By 2021, he'd added his Iconic Food tour and given his business its name: Ultimate Food Tours. "So I made the decision to cut the safety net in early 2023," he says, "to run Ultimate Food Tours full time and leave the corporate world."
Persons: Scott Goodfriend, Goodfriend, Baz Bagel, Mark Isreal, — he'd, Tasia Jensen, Marisa Forziati, Edelman, Friends, He'd, monetizing, he'd Organizations: Foods, Brooklyn, Meta, Food, UCLA, CNBC, University of Colorado Boulder Locations: Lower, New York, Manhattan, Ferrara, Calabasas, Los Angeles, L.A, LA, Web3, Astoria , Queens, Sheepshead Bay , Brooklyn, Brooklyn, Sunset
Tracey Tee founded Moms on Mushrooms, a platform where moms can discuss, both online and in person, their interest and experiences with microdosing psilocybin mushrooms. "Some girlfriends invited me to a camping trip that summer [in 2020] to just camp out with some moms," Tee says. She lives in Colorado where psilocybin mushrooms are legal to grow, use and share. So, Tee sought out an alternative solution for managing her mental health as she began to wean herself off the SSRI: microdosing psilocybin mushrooms. Moms on Mushrooms is the platform Tee created for moms to discuss their interest and experiences with psilocybin mushrooms.
Persons: Tracey Tee, Tee, that's, wean, Tee wasn't, Microdosing, microdosing, Louis, Joshua Siegel, Siegel Organizations: Lancet, Facebook, CNBC, Washington University School of Medicine, Washington University, NYU Langone Health, Center, Psychedelic Medicine, Psychedelic Locations: Colorado, St
For some Americans, the American Dream has become more like a vision. That's according to a recent Pew Research Center survey, in which more than 8,700 U.S. adults were asked to describe their views of the American Dream. "The American Dream is changing, according to small-business owners," Fara Howard, GoDaddy's chief marketing officer, told CNBC Make It at the time. Thirty-one percent said they'd already achieved the American Dream, and 36% said they were on the right path toward it. "These views are nearly identical to when the Center last asked this question in 2022," the Pew report noted.
Persons: , it's, Raj Chetty, Chetty, Michael Sandel, GoDaddy, Fara Howard, Gen Z, Ted Rossman, they'd Organizations: Pew Research Center, CNBC, Harvard University, Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, Harvard Locations: U.S, homeownership
Shane Reid's journey to co-editing the smash-hit "Deadpool and Wolverine" started, of all places, with Taylor Swift. "Blake sold me through and convinced Ryan and [Director] Shawn [Levy] I was someone they should bring on." In an Instagram story following the release of "Deadpool and Wolverine", Reynolds credited Lively for encouraging him to give Reid a chance. "My wife directed a music video and fell in love with her editor @sreid2," he wrote. Plus, sign up for CNBC Make It's newsletter to get tips and tricks for success at work, with money and in life.
Persons: Shane Reid's, Taylor Swift, Reid, Hennessy, Blake Lively, Charlie Puth, , Ryan, Ryan Reynolds, Blake, Shawn, Levy, Deadpool, Reynolds, Lively, @sreid2, I've, I'm, Jason, Ivan Reitman, it's, Reitman Organizations: BMW, Adidas, CNBC
"I've grown up with the American perspective that your career is really important," Ingrim tells CNBC Make It. Ingrim has worked for financial service companies across Europe, which typically provided 25 vacation days per year on top of around 10 public holidays. "If you go to a party in the U.S., one of the first things people do is ask each other what they do for work," Ingrim explains. The social norm reflects an overall culture that prioritizes life outside of work more so than the typical U.S perspective. Plus, sign up for CNBC Make It's newsletter to get tips and tricks for success at work, with money and in life.
Persons: Alex Ingrim, I've, That's, Ingrim, He's, Chase Buchanan, Louisa Organizations: CNBC, Chase Buchanan USA Locations: U.S, France, Malta, Italy, Europe, Florence
Charlie Puth may have studied at the world-renowned Berklee College of Music, but one of the best things he ever did for his career was cut class. With aspirations of breaking into the music industry, Puth knew he wanted to get his music in front of record labels that could help launch his career. "I just thought to myself, 'Which teacher will care the least if I miss class?'" On top of that, he found it compelling to keep trying because nobody was slamming the door in his face. Plus, sign up for CNBC Make It's newsletter to get tips and tricks for success at work, with money and in life.
Persons: Charlie Puth, Puth, I'm, he's Organizations: Berklee College of Music, CNBC, Atlantic Records Locations: New York City, Boston, Los Angeles
Pyle started answering strangers' questions about their gas and diesel engines on JustAnswer as a side hustle in October 2006. He quit his full-time $75,000-per-year job at Ford Motors when JustAnswer outpaced his salary in 2012, Pyle says. Pyle made $170,500 in 2023, an average of $14,200 per month, on JustAnswer, according to documents reviewed by CNBC Make It. His monthly income is more than three times as much as the national median monthly side hustle earnings and mechanic's salary combined. Pyle also bought an RV and is building a second home, largely by himself, on the property — all funded by his JustAnswer work.
Persons: Chris Pyle, Pyle, JustAnswer, , Ford, Pyle's Organizations: Ford Motors, CNBC, Cub, Bass Pro Locations: JustAnswer, Dickson County , Tennessee
Kave and fellow American ex-pat Jennifer Crain are the co-founders of Abricot, a cocktail bar in Paris' 10th arrondissement. The bar has a small staff: three hourly employees and three contract employees. A mutual connection virtually introduced Kave and Crain shortly after, and the pair started expanding Crain's idea for a Parisian cocktail bar. They found a location and named their business Abricot, which is French slang for female genitalia. The delays ate up most of the initial investment, Crain says, as Abricot paid rent for over a year before it opened.
Persons: Allison Kave, Kave, she'd, Jennifer Crain, Crain, Abricot Organizations: Abricot, CNBC, Crain, Employees Locations: U.S, Paris, San Francisco, Austin , Texas, Brooklyn , New York, Brooklyn, crowdfunding, France, Europe
In his years helping Americans move overseas, he says one major expense ends up not be worth it: paying to ship your belongings to your new home. "You can't just pick up everything from your old house and put it into your new house in Europe," Ingrim tells CNBC Make It. A lot of times, larger furniture pieces simply don't fit in oftentimes smaller European spaces, he says. The good news is that people are often "pleasantly surprised" at "how much cheaper a lot of the furniture is in Europe," Ingrim says. That goes for appliances, too: "A new kitchen in Europe is a lot cheaper than it is in the U.S."
Persons: Alex Ingrim, Louisa, Chase Buchanan, It's, that's, Ingrim Organizations: Chase Buchanan USA, CNBC Locations: San Diego, France, Canada, Malta, Italy, Ingrim, Florence, Europe, U.S
American sprinter Gabby Thomas won her first Olympic gold medal in the 2024 Paris Games women's 200-meter final on Tuesday — an accomplishment that she credits, in part, to her second job. The 27-year-old, who took home bronze and silver during her Olympic debut at the Tokyo games, balances her career as an Olympian with a job in health care. Thomas holds a bachelor's degree in neurobiology from Harvard University and a master's degree in public health from the University of Texas Health Science Center. In the months leading up to the Games, Thomas trained three to six hours a day, but at night, she worked at an Austin volunteer health-care clinic for people without insurance. "I think I'm just so grateful to get to do what I love," Thomas told Olympics.com.
Persons: Gabby Thomas, Thomas, Olympics.com, I'm, Organizations: Harvard University, University of Texas Health Science, Games, NBC News, NBC, CNBC Locations: Tokyo, Atlanta , Georgia, Los Angeles
Jackson, 37, is a technician at Vestas, a wind turbine manufacturer, in Bee County, Texas, and earns $73,000 per year. The Labor Department reports that wind turbine service technicians have one of the highest rates of injury and illness of all occupations. Here's how Jackson earns $73,000 a year as a wind turbine service technician in Texas. Mickey Todiwala | CNBC Make ItWhile you don't need a bachelor's degree to become a wind turbine service technician, some jobs might require you to complete a 2-year technical program or apprenticeship. "The wind turbines are smart, they're basically computers and constantly communicating to us what is going on with them."
Persons: Jessica Jackson, , Jackson, It's, Jackson's, Mickey Todiwala, Vestas, She's Organizations: CNBC, The Labor Department, University of Arizona, Blattner Energy, Blattner Locations: Jackson, Bee County , Texas, U.S, Texas, Vestas
Take it from Alex Ingrim, who's originally from Washington, but left the U.S. to study in France, where he met his now-wife, Louisa. Over the last 17 years, Ingrim, 36, has lived in France, Canada, the UK, Malta and now Italy. That's the minimum amount of time you'll need to start shopping and doing chores like you live there, Ingrim says. "If you go for two weeks, you're not really fully going grocery shopping," he says. "Try to understand the realistic budget for how you live," Ingrim says.
Persons: Alex Ingrim, who's, Louisa, He's, Chase Buchanan, Here's, del, Ingrim, Ingram Organizations: Chase Buchanan USA, CNBC Locations: Washington, U.S, France, Canada, Malta, Italy, Florence, Europe, del Sol, Spain, Cyprus
If you're considering leaving your job, here's Dogen's best advice to follow in his footsteps. That he stayed only four months at the new gig is its own story — but it's also worth noting that by leaving so abruptly, he bucked a piece of his own advice: "Never quit your job," Dogen says. How you manage leaving your job is going to depend on your specific circumstances. If you're willing to do something similar, "more often than not, your employer will work with you — especially if you're a better than average employee," Dogen says. Plus, sign up for CNBC Make It's newsletter to get tips and tricks for success at work, with money and in life.
Persons: here's, Dogen, it's, He'd, I'm, there's Organizations: CNBC
But when you pay rent, "you're not throwing money away," Sethi tells CNBC Make It. When looking at homes as an investment, renters commonly overlook the "phantom costs" of owning a property beyond the monthly mortgage payment. "People say they don't want to throw money away on rent," Sethi says. "I've made more money renting than I would have owning," he says, referring to investments made with money that could have been spent on a down payment and phantom costs for units similar to the ones he rented. Considering that home values have increased by 85% since 2010, many Americans have built wealth by owning a home.
Persons: Ramit Sethi, Rich, Sethi, I've, that's Organizations: CNBC Locations: Los Angeles and New York
At age 12, Bella Lin spent an hour every week "scraping, scrubbing and power washing" excrement off her two guinea pig cages. This year, GuineaLoft has brought in roughly $71,000 a month in revenue so far, according to documents reviewed by CNBC Make It. GuineaLoft's Amazon storefront sells hay feeders and no-drip water bottles for guinea pigs, but also acrylic cages and accessories for hamsters, rabbits and birds. While Lin considers herself to be a "veteran guinea pig owner," she's had to gain experience designing cages and products for the smaller pets. 'I'm kind of just the guinea pig girl'Outside of BizWorld, Lin's friend circle is void of other entrepreneurs: "To them, I'm kind of just the guinea pig girl," she says.
Persons: Bella Lin, Lin, GuineaLoft, Kevin Heinz Lin, isn't, TLeggings, , Kevin Heinz, she's Organizations: CNBC, The University of Chicago Locations: Sunnyvale , California, Hangzhou, China
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