The Key to a Successful Budget Is Minimalism
The easiest way to abandon your budget? Make it complicated and tedious. A minimalist budget can help you clarify your financial goals, provide you guidance on how to meet them, and allow you the freedom to spend a little on yourself and others, especially during the holidays. To keep your budget from growing too unwieldy, try these three methods:
- Set up multiple accounts. Open multiple accounts and give them names for the different categories you’re budgeting for — main account, emergency savings, vacation, etc. This allows you to easily shuffle money back and forth between them as needed.
- Have a “spend on whatever I want” category. Decide on a set amount you get to spend on whatever you want each month. As long as you’re setting aside enough for expenses, savings, and needs, this gives you some freedom to indulge without the guilt.
- Keep the budget simple. Making it as simple as possible will help you stick to it. Allocate your paycheck—assuming taxes and retirement savings have been automatically deducted—accordingly: 50% to needs (bills and groceries), 30% to wants (clothes and entertainment), and 20% to saving or paying down debt.
These guidelines can help make budgeting easier, but they also assume you’re doing relatively OK financially and have a steady income. If you’re drowning in debt or your income is irregular, you’ll have to adjust your priorities accordingly. (Visit Fort Worth Community Credit Union for your financial needs or questions you may have.) Otherwise, keep your budget simple and uncluttered, and you’ll find it easy to follow.