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We all know that Mr. Money Mustache is fairly good at Not Buying Unnecessary Crap. But what about necessary things, not to mention services and investment options? Many people ask me in emails which companies I like, so I thought it would be useful to put them all into one page which I can update as needed.

On this page, I list the stores and services that I actually DO use, just in case you want to check them out for yourself. I try to put some serious research into each of my choices as a consumer, but that still doesn’t mean they are automatically the best ones. If you see any areas where I could improve, let me know in the comments and I’ll look into it and possibly make the switch. If it’s a win, I’ll change my status to reflect the upgrade.

Some of these companies happen to offer commissions for online referrals. Other ones don’t. This doesn’t affect my choice, but where available, I made point of using the right type of link so that this blog will get a credit if you end up becoming a customer. It’s a nice and fully optional way to help out this blog if you choose to do so.

Investing: Vanguard, Betterment, Lending Club

To me,  has always been THE one-stop shop for index funds of all types. They have the lowest expense ratio and the most respect for their customers. In fact, the company is legally structured as an investor-owned entity, meaning its responsibility is to YOU as opposed to an outside group of shareholders. Read around all you like – the smartest investors will generally recommend Vanguard funds.

Recently I’ve started moving investments to a newer service called , which is basically a fancy front-end for Vanguard funds. In exchange for a surprisingly low fee ($150/year per $100,000 invested), you get automatic rebalancing and tax loss harvesting, which generally saves much more than the annual fee. Plus a very convenient smartphone (or web) based user interface which makes investing and learning about investing loads more fun.

Related Article: For over two years, I’ve been running a Lending Club “Experiment”, which involved putting in $30,000 into a carefully selected batch of their higher yielding (aka riskier) notes.  So far, I’m pleased with the results – the investment has earned over a 12% annualized return. You can keep track of my monthly results with the article link below.

Related Article:

Banking: Capital One 360

Capital One 360 is my primary bank account. They offer no-fee checking and savings accounts that also pay interest – and they consistently rank close to #1 in the interest rates they pay. They are also highly competitive mortgage originators. My favorite feature, however, is the ability to link the Capital One 360 checking account to three other bank accounts so you can shuffle your money around electronically at no cost.

Getting Started / Financial Tracking: Personal Capital, Mint, YNAB

Credit Card:  Chase Ink Plus, Chase Sapphire

Until December 2015, I had a Travelocity American Express card that offered excellent travel cash bonuses, but alas they just discontinued this program.

Currently, my bonus cards the Chase Ink Plus business and Chase Sapphire Preferred. These both offer pretty major signing bonuses in the range of $500, and I have been able to cancel each card before the introductory year ends up and sign up for a new card, collecting another bonus each year.

There are also an ever-growing number of credit cards that offer large sign-up bonuses and cash-back percentages on various categories of stuff – even without annual fees. Here is a list of referral links for other potentially good cards. It’s on a separate page to avoid cluttering up this main page:

Related Article:

Taxes: 1040.com

Mrs. M and I actually enjoy doing taxes and accounting work, and I’ve even read quite a few books on tax strategies for small business. From 1999-2014, we always did our own business, personal, and rental house taxes, using Turbotax. If you’re a straight-up employee or run a simple business, doing your own taxes is a no-brainer.

In 2015 we finally gave in and hired a brilliant Mustachian tax accountant, because the complexities of our family business (which includes this blog) meant we were wasting a lot of money in overpaying taxes.

Nowadays I feel that the 1040.com software has eclipsed the bloated Turbotax software in usability, so check out the link above if you want to try it out. 1040.com will even let you do basic taxes online for free, although it’ll cost you a bit more for more complex tax scenarios. Note that many states (including Colorado) allow you to file free through the state’s website.

Accounting and Bookkeeping:

After using Quickbooks for 15 years, I was excited to switch to this much more efficient alternative beginning in 2016. Cheaper than Quickbooks, a Xero subscription is 9 bucks a month ($30 for larger businesses) for very intuitive online and mobile access.

Instead of a year-end crunch in front of the desktop PC, I can now effortlessly keep up with transactions as they happen using only the nicely made Xero phone app! Then simply hand off the end-of-year report to my accountant (or your favorite tax software) at the end of the year. If you’re curious try the . Towards the end of this trial, look for an email from their sales department offering a 50% discount on the first 6 months before joining.

Cell Phone Service: Republic Wireless, and other Mobile Network Virtual Operators

Republic Wireless – click for the full scoop

From 2012 through 2015, both Mrs. MM and I enjoyed using for mobile phone service. It’s $10 per month for unlimited calling and texting on your choice of good low-cost smartphones, the Motorola X or Motorola G.  We recently changed to Google Fi (more expensive, but with higher end phones and excellent international service at no extra charge)

Latest article on

Before Google Fi showed up, I used   for international trips. (Using the Republic phone internationally is free for calls, data, and text, but only when you have access to a Wifi connection. Great for hotels and the homes of friends, not so great when driving.)

 Other providers:

Straight Talk is another service many readers mentioned using.  They offer an “All You Need Plan“: $30 a month – 1000 minutes, 1000 text or multimedia messages, and 30 MB of data transfer.  They also offer an “Unlimited Plan“:  $45 a month – Unlimited Minutes, Messages and Data Nationwide anytime (although some say it’s not really unlimited, so look into it if your data usage is really high).

Other readers have recommended TracFone.  Depending on your  usage, you might check them out.

Car Insurance:  Geico

This one has been easy: our car insurance is obscenely cheap these days at rougly $360 per year for two cars and two drivers. I am a big fan and have been for over ten years.

(Caveat: my cars are old with no collision damage or comprehensive coverage, and we are married age-40 drivers living in a small, safe city who put very low mileage on these cars. No accidents or speeding tickets on the record. But the savings of Geico over competitors is even larger in situations with higher premiums.)

House Insurance: Safeco

I have swapped out the house insurance several times in recent years. First I was with State Farm, but they raised the rates for no good reason one year. I restored the old rate by switching to ASI, but they too jacked up their rates unexpectedly after a year. So I switched to Safeco, and so far rates have been stable. I am paying about $500 per year for a $275,000 rebuild coverage with $5k deductible. (The property is worth about $400k in today’s market but a lot of that is the value of the land).

Health Insurance: ehealthinsurance.com

When using ehealthinsurance.com as the search engine, the winning policy in my case after sorting by price was a United family plan with a high deductible (10k).

Related Article:

Blogging – Web Hosting:

has been good to us – Until March 2013 they hosted this rather busy blog (it reached 2.3 million pageviews per month) using the “Pro Plan” at $25/month. Normal hosting plans are now down to about $4 per month due to a special high volume discount they have provided to readers of this blog. This includes massive space and no limits on traffic, and the speed is excellent (during an FTP test, I easily downloaded from the account at 16Mbits/sec even while the blog was running in the background, and even that was probably limited by my cable internet connection rather than Bluehost.

They have automatic installs of wordpress and all kinds of other software (such as the forum software we use) all built in, so it takes less than five minutes to set up a relatively fancy blog.

Nowadays with over 6 million pageviews per month, we have moved up to the Uber-powerful development/hosting combo platform called . But for under-one-million websites, Bluehost is a great choice.

Related articles:

Blogging – The Guy to Hire when you Need Some Help: Kevin Worthington

The technical aspects of this blog are now managed by a freelance system administrator and WordPress expert named Kevin Worthington. He stepped up to help during the March 2013 overload crisis when this blog finally proved it was too big to run on a normal web hosting service.

If you are looking to start, maintain, or grow a blog or other technical enterprise, and need more technical skill on your side, this guy gets my ultimate recommendation. And he’s still looking for more clients. Get in touch with him through the contact form on his site: 

: actual courses from various universities, made available mostly free

: a smart and personable guy just started making some YouTube tutorial videos to teach his family and friends, and it took off, eventually getting the attention and backing of Bill Gates. Nowadays they’ve got a video library with over 3900 videos in various topics and over 225 million lessons delivered.

(a collaboration between Harvard and MIT): Big-name courses, made available for free – with options to pay a discounted fee to receive actual course credits.

: A selection of neat-sounding courses in the Artsy arena (photography, business, design, photoshop, video&film). To complete the circle of this new online world, you’ll find Tim Ferriss and Ramit Sethi on there as instructors, teaching their stuff even as they continue to run their own businesses based on the idea of learning stuff online.

: Mrs. Money Mustache has been learning Spanish (and brushing up on her French) using Duolingo.  It’s free language education for the world.  They currently offer free (and amazingly useful) courses in Spanish, English, French, German, Portuguese, and Italian.

: Jr. Money Mustache and Mrs. MM enjoy creating projects in Scratch.  It is a free programming language for kids and a really fun way to learn to create your own interactive story and games.  Jr. MM give it a thumbs up!

The Library: The library is a great place to find a lot of great free learning materials that don’t just include books.  Our local library offers free online courses.  Find out what your library offers.

See Related Article:

Business – The Legal Representation to use when you need someone at your back.

In March 2014, this blog started receiving some legal threats from companies who were trying to get me to remove conversations posted by other users in the forum. You can read more about one of them .

After hearing from dozens of the country’s top law firms, I chose an called Dornan Lustgarten and Troia. I worked with attorneys and because of Josh’s experience in first amendment cases and both of their lightning-fast responsiveness. They are also warm and reassuring people to work with in general. They changed my opinion of litigation and the court system from “scary” to “FUN!”

Ross Pesek has since gone on to start his own law firm in Omaha – .

If you’re a growing blogger or business owner and need help with legal issues, I could not recommend this firm more highly.

Books: The Library, BetterWorldBooks

takes care of almost all my reading needs. Sometimes I read books electronically – on a laptop or smartphone. In the very rare case that I actually want to own a paper copy of a book, I’ll look for a used one at – 8 Million Used Books sold to fund literacy worldwide. Free Carbon Neutral Shipping Worldwide.

For students, I’ve heard good things about and .

Groceries: Costco

I like to get the expensive staples like olive oil, nuts, cheese and coffee at Costco once per quarter, which saves our family about $1000/year on groceries . For the smaller weekly runs, I’ve grown to really like the Kroger grocery chain (represented in my area by Denver-based King Sooper’s). It is much better than Safeway in many ways, especially organic food.

Related Article:

Bikes and bike parts: Bike Nashbar

My last two bikes, as well as my last 8 years worth of various parts like tubes, tires, and lights, have been from Nashbar.com. This store is great. While I still recommend checking Craigslist whenever you need to buy a bike, if the scene in your area looks bleak you should feel good about buying a new bike somewhere like this, because the prices are great during the sales. You can often get a sweet city commuter bike for $300-$400 that will provide over 10 years of hardcore service with minimal maintenance.

Home Business – (Fax <-> Email service)

I buy everything from furnaces to underwear at Amazon, because the efficiency of it cannot be beat. If you use the little box below to start your Amazon search it will benefit MMM and friends, and many thanks for that.

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