If you want to build or maintain a healthy
financial life, budgeting should be your fundamental starting point. After all,
how can you tell you’re on track if you don’t know where your hard-earned
pay-cheque is going?
Some of us, correction: most of us, will find it
daunting to maintain a budget. Getting all your expenses together, tracking
what should be paid and when, how much you have left for entertainment, saving
for long-term goals – it’s enough to make you give up before you
start. But what if there was an easier way to manage your cash-flow that
didn’t require hours of sifting through receipts or crunching numbers?
There is and it’s not that hard to get started. It
starts with categorising your monthly spending into four buckets:
BUCKET ONE Fixed costs. These are bills that
don’t fluctuate much and remain pretty constant each week or month, or whatever
period they are relevant to: things like rent or mortgage, a phone bill or your
car payment. It also includes essential costs that may vary slightly from month
to month, like utility bills such as electricity or water. Although they may
vary slightly, you can work out an average for the purpose of this budget. But
generally speaking, if you can predict how much an expense will be, it belongs
in this category.
BUCKET TWO Financial goals.These include any
sort of savings or debt goal you’re trying to work towards every month, whether
that’s paying off credit card balances, paying down your student loans, saving
for a home or paying into an emergency fund regularly, or topping up your Super
on a regular basis.
~
Take the FREE Money Personality Quiz to determine your emotional
attachment to money ~
BUCKET THREE Non-monthly expenses.Got a bill
that you have to pay at some point every year, but just not every month? This
could include your home or car insurance or for that matter, most annual
insurances, car registration fees, annual health payments, and even school
tuition belongs in this category. Add up what those types of costs total to
each year, then divide that total by 12. That should be what you’re setting
aside each month to cover those expenses when they come up.
BUCKET FOUR Flexible spending.This category
covers all those everyday costs that fluctuate each month. This can include
groceries, restaurants, shopping, movies, petrol and pretty much any expense
that may vary month to month.
So now that you’ve categorized your costs, how much
can you actually flexibly spend each month without blowing your
budget? Well, that’s a relatively easy calculation. What is your monthly
take-home pay? From that, subtract your total fixed costs, and your financial
goal contributions, and those non-monthly expenses you calculated. The amount
that’s left over is what’s available to cover your flexible spending – the
daily coffees, new shoes, magazines, etc.
If you want to know what your flexible spending is
per week just divide your monthly figure by 4.3, and you’ll have your weekly
spending number to stick to. So if you work out the above, and stick to it, you
won’t be in danger of spending more than you earn.
If you can put your hands on the numbers from your
bills, it’s not that hard to work out. And if you can work to a budget each
week or month, you’ll certainly be on your way to building a financially secure
future.
If you want some more great advice about securing your financial future
start by finding out your emotional attachment to money and how to
overcome and manage it by taking the Free Your Money
Personality Quiz.
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