I saw a meme that said it's easy to support a family on one income, if you aim for a 1960's lifestyle and standard of living. Can you calculate how much the following expenses would be, assuming a cost of living in a small town in Texas? A trailer home on 1 acre of land (not crammed together in a "trailer park" because that's not how residential living was in the 60's, especially in the photo) A single car, in decent condition, enough to fit the whole family Food (Groceries; mostly home-cooked meals) Dining out once a week (to mirror the 60's family, not because it's required for young Catholic families today) Yearly vacation (to mirror the 60's family) Life insurance (to mirror the 60's family) Home insurance (to mirror the 60's family) Electricity Phone Water Gas Gasoline for car Car insurance etc.
Yeah, that meme hits a nerve because there’s
some truth baked into it—but only if you’re very honest about what a
1960s standard of living actually was, not the nostalgic highlight reel we carry in our heads.
I’ll walk through this like a real household budget,
small-town Texas, single income, modest expectations. I’ll flag where modern reality sneaks in and ruins the fantasy.
Baseline assumptions (important)
- Small town Texas, not Austin/Dallas suburbs
- One working adult, one stay-at-home parent
- 2–3 kids
- No student loans
- No daycare
- No subscriptions, no streaming, no gym
- Older but functional stuff, paid for or financed cheaply
- Modest comfort, not deprivation
Housing
Trailer home on 1 acre
- Used single-wide or small double-wide, decent condition
- Land purchased, not rented
Mortgage + land payment:- Trailer: ~$70,000
- Acre of land: ~$30,000
- 20% down, 6.5% interest
👉
~$700–900/monthHome insurance:👉
$75–125/monthProperty taxes:Texas hurts here, even in small towns
👉
$200–300/monthTotal housing:💵
$1,000–1,300/month(This is already higher than the 1960s reality because property tax and insurance are much heavier today.)
Utilities
Electricity
Trailer, modest AC use, Texas summers:
👉
$120–180/monthWater
Well or municipal small-town rates:
👉
$40–70/monthGas (propane or natural)
Cooking + heat:
👉
$40–80/monthPhone
One basic plan, no premium nonsense:
👉
$40–60/monthTotal utilities:💡
$250–390/month
Transportation
One family car
- Used minivan or large sedan
- Paid off or cheap loan
Car payment:👉
$250–350/monthCar insurance:👉
$90–130/monthGasoline:- Short commutes, local driving
👉 $120–180/month
Maintenance fund:👉
$75–100/monthTotal transportation:🚗
$535–760/month
Food
Groceries (mostly home-cooked)
No organic everything, no delivery apps:
👉
$650–850/monthDining out once a week
Family diner, pizza, Mexican:
👉
$200–250/monthTotal food:🍲
$850–1,100/month(This is one of the biggest inflation shocks vs the 1960s.)
Insurance & “Adulting”
Life insurance
Term life, single breadwinner:
👉
$25–40/monthHealth insurance
This is where the meme quietly dies.
Employer plan, family coverage:
👉
$500–900/month(out-of-pocket not included)
Total insurance:🛡️
$525–940/month(1960s families barely paid for health insurance; today it’s a pillar expense.)
Yearly vacation
1960s-style:
- Road trip
- Motel
- Packed lunches
- Visiting family or national parks
👉
$2,000–3,000/year👉
$170–250/month
Miscellaneous (clothes, toiletries, school stuff)
No brand chasing, hand-me-downs:
👉
$150–250/month
Monthly Total (Realistic Range)
[th]Category[/th] [th]Monthly Cost[/th]
|
| Housing | $1,000–1,300 |
| Utilities | $250–390 |
| Transportation | $535–760 |
| Food | $850–1,100 |
| Insurance | $525–940 |
| Vacation | $170–250 |
| Misc | $150–250 |
Grand Total💰
$3,500 – $4,900 per month
Required income (single earner)
To
actually live this without panic:
- Minimum survivable: ~$50,000/year
- Comfortable but tight: ~$60,000/year
- Breathing room: ~$70,000/year
That’s
before retirement savings, emergencies, or major repairs.
So… was the meme lying?
Half-true, half fantasy.
What makes it possible:- One car
- Small house
- No childcare
- No consumer lifestyle
- No constant upgrades
What breaks the 1960s comparison:- Health insurance
- Property taxes
- Food prices
- Insurance in general
- Wage stagnation vs productivity
In the 1960s:
- Housing + food + healthcare were a much smaller % of income
- One income didn’t require financial gymnastics
Today:
- You can do it—but it’s deliberate, disciplined, and fragile