What is your money plan? (2024)

What is your money plan? (1)

I lost a battle with a clickbait-y headline last week.

Really, I never stood a chance. It sucked me in the second I saw it.

I don’t track my spending and I’m not sorry,” the headline screamed.

I couldn’t help but to click the link. What can I say? I was curious. At least that’s the easy explanation.

Deep down, I could relate.

I still don’t truly track my spending. I might look for patterns and tally what I paid. I certainly compare and contrast from month to month and year over year. But all that shows is what I did long after I’ve done it. Any leaks in my spending won’t be spotted until the end of the month, meaning I’m not enjoying one of the major benefits of tracking.

So don’t bet on me bragging about it in headlines here. I’m not proud of it. But my method works for me, although I could be more diligent.

Two things have allowed me to get away with not consistently tracking my spending. I’m not a big or frivolous spender. Major purchases were never my thing, and I’ve eliminated most spontaneous spending. The other thing is I’ve also organized my finances to where I’m funneling most of my money to planned places.

But I don’t have a system.

If you asked me for a percentage breakdown of how I disperse my after-tax income, I’d shoot you a blank stare. I’m still developing that level of detail.

But in the same week that a wealth-building workshop introduced me to one method, the author of the article with the attention-grabbing headline offered another spending plan.

Here’s how it works: Every month I budget a certain amount for various categories like gas, groceries, pets and personal spending. On payday, I automatically transfer amounts into those funds and update the totals in a budgeting spreadsheet. As long as money is available in those funds, I know what I can spend and what I can’t.

If I don’t spend the allotted amount in a month, it rolls over to the next month.This still allows you to make savings goals as well. All you have to do is make that one of the places you automatically transfer money to during the month.

Last year, Ro$$ Mac made me aware of the 50-30-20 rule. That calls for you to direct 50% of after-tax income to necessities, 30% to wants and 20% to savings and debt.

In his free webinar last week, Market Briefs CEO Jaspreet Singh alerted me to a variation: the popular 75-15-10 rule. Singh called it leading your money. This iteration calls for you to put 75% of after-tax income to daily expenses, 15% to investing and 10% to savings.

Do you have a plan for your money? If not, do you need one?

I’m still adhering to a few fundamental money principles as my guides. I’m living below my means, carrying low debt and investing every penny I can.

Someday I’ll carve out time to calculate my percentages.

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What is your money plan? (2024)

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