Goal Planners
One goal, one set of inputs, the whole path. Each planner chains three to five calculators together so you don't have to copy numbers between tabs.
-
⌂
Buying a home
Take-home → savings projection → what you can afford → mortgage payment. The full journey from paycheck to keys.
Open this plan → -
401
Retiring at 55 (or 65)
Take-home → 401(k) projection → safe withdrawal income → years your money lasts. The whole math, one set of inputs.
Open this plan → -
Q
Going freelance
W-2 take-home → benefits gap → break-even revenue → the hourly rate that actually matches your salary.
Open this plan → -
↗
Paying off debt
Months at minimums → months accelerated → invest-instead alternative → which strategy wins, in dollars.
Open this plan → -
▦
Rental property
Mortgage → opex → cashflow → cap rate & cash-on-cash. Does this deal actually work, or is it a YouTube fantasy?
Open this plan → -
⛁
Surviving a layoff
Bridge income → runway → lean mode → vs. the median job search. The question you Google in panic, with the math.
Open this plan →
Why plans, not just calculators?
A single calculator answers one question. "What's my take-home?" "How much can I afford?" "What's my monthly payment?" Real life is a chain: your take-home determines what you can save, your savings determine your down payment, your down payment determines your loan size, your loan size determines your payment. One set of inputs should answer the whole chain.
That's what these are. The math is identical to the standalone calculators — same engines, same data, same assumptions. The difference is the inputs flow through the whole story instead of stopping at the first answer.