Money Matters
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Happy Thursday! I am curious to know how far in advance does everyone plan their monthly budgets. Do you plan by weekly, bi-weekly, monthy, or yearly. I do my household budget for the entire year but then i find myself always revising it and before you know it i did 6 different budgets .
Re: Budget Planning
I get paid every two weeks and H on the 30/31st, but each paycheck is allocated pretty much the same each month.
Ex. My first check goes to utilities, phones, internet and mad money, plus food, gas and entertainment. My second paycheck goes the mortgage and then the remainder of the months food, gas and entertainment. H's one check pays for student loans, ROTH contributions and savings.
ETA: You scared the crap out of me with Thursday - And I had to triple check! While I'm ready for the weekend, I still have TONS of work to do this week.
We are still new to budgeting. Neither of us budgeted before we were married and I sometimes wonder how we survived, haha! Right now we just budget bi-weekly for each pay period. We both get paid bi-weekly and on the same day so it helps.
What we do is take both our incomes for that paycheck and budget out bills for those two weeks, gas, groceries, savings, whatever we have planned within those two weeks (like a concert, camping, if we go out to eat, any events....) and then set a "miscellaneous" for any extras that might pop up. We are letting whatever we have left build up and then will put it in savings after a while.
The Wednesday before we get paid, I write it all down (both our paychecks are "pending" so I know what we are getting paid) and as the bills come out or we pay for the other things, I write down next to it just to see if we were over or under.
It may not be the best approach, but we are still learning what works best for us. This way has been working so far (we just started trying a budget in Oct 2014 when we moved to Texas from Indiana).
I have two spreadsheets (same file). The first one is about one month and has a running total of each debt (credit card, car loan, home loan, HELOC, etc.), plus how much I am going to pay it down on which Friday. I update this...change the dates, update the new starting balances...about every few weeks.
Underneath that area, I then have a running total of my biggest loans. The house, HELOC, and car and I plan about six months out how much/when I will be paying those down. This section is a bit redundant from the top and is more psychological than useful. It helps motivate me to see how much I can pay down the bigger loans over a longer period of time. I update this if anything changes (and it often does), but only update and change the dates/starting balances every few months.
The second sheet is just a list on one side of my monthly bills, with estimates for things that vary (like food) and then a list on the other side of my income. Underneath those, I have a calculation that is income-expenses=disposable income. This sheet only changes on the rare occasion when something changes on one of those categories.
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On the 15th of each month I figure up where we're at in each category of the budget so far, and we discuss where we need to slow down spending or if we need to add something in.
We also do a budget for annual things we set aside for monthly.
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We create a budget for every paycheck, which means bi-weekly. We are on the same pay schedule so that makes it easy.
I usually write out about six months' worth of budgets in advance, broken down by paycheck.
We also put everything on credit cards for the points; however, I usually make a credit card payment each payday instead of once a month so I know I am staying on track.
One odd thing I do, because it just works for me psychologically, is my workplace's bank is the same as the bank with my mortgage. So I basically cash my first paycheck of the month and then pay my mortgage with cash.
But for my monthly budgeting purposes, I don't include my mortgage in my expenses, but then I also only count my income from that check as the difference.
I couldn't even explain why I like to do it that way, because it really doesn't matter, lol. It's just more fun for me to look at it like Paycheck #1-mortgage=disposable income. Except I just focus on the disposable income part for my budgeting.