At first, it may be painful to do this. However, once you
develop a monthly budget, it’s extremely easy to track and analyze.
The principle behind having a monthly budget is simple: each
month, more money must come in than goes out. There is no alternative; you can’t
spend more than you make.
I know this is contrary to how our government and most
Americans manage their finances.
However, if you adhere to the budgeting process
explained (and shown) over the next few pages, you will become financially
secure over time.
The simple act of developing, tracking, and analyzing your monthly
budget will result in sound fiscal management. So, let’s break the process into
these three parts:
1.Develop a budget—List all your
expenses and all your income, and account for them in your budget.
2.Track your budget—The first
day of every month, summarize your performance against last month’s budget, and
prepare this month’s budget. Once you have done this a couple of times, it will
take you next to no time at all to manage.
3.Analyze your
budget—Look at your budget and see where you are doing well and where
you’re not. Make the necessary changes that allow you to save more money.
In order to understand budgeting better, let’s look at
the first step, developing a budget.
To develop a budget, you need to estimate (1) what is going
in your pocket (income)
and (2) what is coming out of your pocket (expenses) every month.
Let’s look at what is going in your pocket:
1.Salary—Look at the after-tax
dollars in your paycheck.
2.Bonus and commissions—If you
are eligible to receive this, it will have to be an estimate (in after-tax
dollars). I usually don’t include it and end up saving the “surprise”
income.
3.Dividends and
interest—Estimate this based on your prior year’s investment
history.
4.Gifts—You usually receive
these only on birthdays and holidays (and they go away as you get older).
Now, let’s estimate what is coming out of your pocket.
Major
expense categories include the following:
1.Housing—Mortgage or rent is
usually your biggest expense. However, you can’t forget property tax, insurance,
and estimated maintenance/repairs. Renting will usually eliminate some of those
expenses.
2.Utilities—It’s amazing how many “support services” are
needed to run your house. Electric, gas, water, garbage, cable, Internet, and
phone services are the major utility expenses.
3.Automobile—Until you can
purchase your car with cash, your major automobile expense will be your car
payment. However, you will also need to include insurance, gas, parking,
maintenance, and repairs. If you’re smart, you will also start a fund that
enables you to purchase your next car with cash.
4.Food—The two major expense
categories here are groceries and restaurants.
5.Entertainment—My example
includes movies, sports, clubs, vacations, electronics, and cell phone service.
This works for the individual in my example, but you definitely need to
personalize this area for yourself (depending on your personal entertainment
habits).
6.Miscellaneous—Here, I lump
together any items I didn’t account for in other categories. Include expenses
like gifts, supplies, and toiletries, but personalize this category based on
your own habits.
7.Other insurance—This is where
you need to account for health and life insurance payments. I used this category
as a catchall for health care expenses, so I include physicians, dentists,
optometrists, prescriptions, and any other health care-related expenses I
have.
8.Other loans—In addition to
loans included in other categories (home and car), you may have student loans or
credit card debt. Include both of these in this category.
9.Charity—It’s nice to have this one broken out. It makes
you think about giving not only money but also time to various charities.
10.Savings—You need to have this
in your budget, even if it’s $0 when you first start out. This is one of the
main reasons you are budgeting: to find a way to save money every month.
11.401K fund—If a 401K is
available with your employer, this is another forced savings method you need to
use. We will discuss this in a later lesson.
12.Emergency fund—Do you have
money in case of an emergency? You need to.
We’ll also discuss this in a later
lesson.
Now let’s look at an example of a budget that takes into
account all the categories we just outlined.
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