Tag Archives: spending

Not Going Broke, A How-To

After vacationing in Japan, visiting New York, and moving in with my boyfriend, all within three months, I had a lot of debt and needed to have a plan to get rid of it. I have a decent job that sort of allows me to live comfortably, but the reality is that I needed to budget my spending and hold myself to it. Budgeting my way out of debt and into better savings sucks. It really does, but it’s part of being a responsible adult who maybe wants to buy a house, or get married, or take another big vacation abroad.

Photo by Meaghan Morrison

Photo by Meaghan Morrison

Let’s take a look at how I try to set up my budget, which is generally applicable for a young working professional living in the major Bay Area. Please note that the cost of living can be scaled down (or up) depending on where you live.

How Much Money You Make

For salaried workers, this is pretty simple. How much do you get paid? How often do you get paid? Multiply accordingly to figure out about how much you make each month. For example, let’s say my annual income is $40,000–after taxes. It comes out to about $1,200 per paycheck twice a month. We’ll work with a baseline of $2,400 dollars each month, subtracting as we count our expenses.

Cash Flow: $2,400

How Much You Have to Spend

Car payments, rent, and insurance are some typical costs. These are required for not losing your car, your home, and your health (or maintaining any of the above), and as such, these are your priority payments each month. In addition, since you have to buy gas for your car, you should estimate the average cost of a tank and the number of times you fill up in a month. I generally go to a gas station about three times a month, give or take a week. There’s not really an opportunity for cost savings here, barring trading down your current car and moving back and forth.

Cash Flow: $2,400

Rent: -$700

Car Payment: -$306

Gasoline: -$120

Car / Renter’s Insurance: -$110

Cash Flow after Necessities: $1,164

How Much You Have for Food

Barring rent, food is where I spend the majority of my money each month. Cutting back from having sushi two to three times a week sucked, but I had to devise a plan for saving money where I usually spend the most.

First, I accounted for breakfast and work lunches. I normally don’t eat breakfast, but sometimes I do get coffee. Paying $4 three times a week for a coffee and snack comes to $12 per week for breakfast. For lunch, the cafeteria at my work tends to charge about $6 per meal, but I want a little breathing room to eat out with my co-workers once a week at about $15. A $6 cafeteria lunch four times a week, plus $15 for eating out once a week, comes to $39 per week for lunch. Next, we should account for dinners, desserts, and other snacks you would normally eat at home. I try to eat something of moderate size and of moderate price from the grocery store most nights of the week. This usually comes out to about $10 a day, sometimes serving for two or more.

To account for eating out, I let the cost savings roll over, and try to not binge on alcohol or appetizers. In order to calculate how much you’d spend each month, multiply your weekly costs for breakfast, lunch, and dinner by about 4.3 (the average number of weeks in a month). It isn’t an exact number, but it generally works out to be fairly accurate (and then I round up to the nearest whole dollar).

This part of the budget varies greatly from person to person, as some people care more about what they’re eating, how often they’re eating it, and if they can stand leftovers. I for one don’t mind leftovers, but hate monotony in the variety of my overall meals, so I spend a little more on some meals for bigger tastier foods.

Cash Flow after Necessities: $1,164

Breakfast: -$51

Lunch: -$168

Dinner: -$300

Cash Flow after Food: $645

How Much You Have for Fun

Shit gets tricky here. You have a finite amount of money left this month. You could spend it on drinking, a new pair of shoes, or a coffee table. I like all of these things, but my savings are more important to me. If you don’t have any, what happens when you run into trouble? I’m a bit proud and don’t really want to ask my mom and dad for help, so I put a small, but decent chunk directly into savings.

After that, it’s sort of like juggling. You can revise how much you spend each month on entertainment, such as movies or small trips. Or maybe, you want to spend more money on material things, and go shopping more often. These budgets are flexible because you still have money left over. I recommend that you put anything remaining from your cash flow into savings.

Cash Flow after Food: $645

Savings: -$200

Entertainment: -$120

Shopping: -$200

Cash Flow after Fun: $125

Getting Out of Debt

Above, there’s the basic outline of a budget, but you can see that at the end, there’s not a lot to pay back toward existing bills. Here’s where you look at all the things you’re spending money on and figure out where you can afford to cut back. For example, you don’t really need to spend $200 a month on shopping for new things. This could be cut down to $50 for new games or some new makeup, bringing your debt repayment funds up to $275. Furthermore, not everyone is like me and spends a lot of money on food. Some folks I know spend less than $200 a month on food, and that could be you too! Saving money to pay debt sucks, but it needs to be done if you want to be a financially responsible adult. Just learn to cut where it doesn’t hurt as bad.

Note that if you have long-standing credit card debt, you should try to pay it off first before putting a lot into savings. Your savings doesn’t accrue interest, while owing money to credit card companies costs you more in the long run. You should also aim to pay off your credit cards every month, making the bills in the long term much more manageable.

Making Everything Easier

Finally, work out your budget in Microsoft Excel or Google Spreadsheets: it’s an excellent way to have a copy that you can manipulate and track your progress. Alternatively, you can use a site such as Mint to have them track your spending. Such websites can pull records from your credit cards, bank statements, and other bills to better show much you’ve been spending, and usually they have great ways to analyze your spending or track your goals. You can use these to see where you’ve been putting all your hard-earned cash, so you can decide where you need to cut back.

Good luck with the budgets and the savings!

Thinking About Your Money

Once you reach your twenties, you’re expected to know a lot of things. You’ve gotten to a point where you are expected to know how to work, feed, and clothe yourself—but having an actual plan for your paychecks may not be something you’ve figured out yet. We all have a sense of the lifestyle we want to live—whether that’s buying a house, starting a business, or traveling the world—but often we don’t spend enough time on the road map that will actually get us there.

Financial planning is a subject that young people are often uncomfortable with. There are so many technical terms you’re magically supposed to understand—but what if no one ever told you which ones really matter? I get it. I went to school for design, and no one was teaching me how to make the most from my money.

Luckily, my parents understood that this is confusing for those of us just starting out and were able to answer most of my questions. So, the advice I lay out here comes to you from someone who was a novice but has learned a lot recently by making small but important changes to the way I think about my money. This stuff is scary—you’re making decisions about large amounts of money. But it would be scarier to turn 30—or worse, 40—and realize you really have no plan in place to make sure you can buy a house, help your kids through college, take a year to travel the world, or retire before you’re 80.

This is the first of five articles about the basics of dealing with your finances in your twenties. To start, you should be thinking about your money in categories—four categories to be exact. Four categories that are used to buy different things at different times in your life. And because they’re used at different times, for different reasons, they all live in different places. Right now we are going to go over these categories so you can keep the big picture in mind. Each of the next four articles will go in depth with one of the categories so you feel comfortable going out and making informed decisions with your money.

So let’s get into it. Oh! But before we do, if you want to make this as painless as possible, you might want to save (or maybe even print) the following chart.

All right, here we go. The first category you should think about your money in is Immediate Spending. This is the one you probably already have down pat. This is what’s in your checking account, the money that you will need within a year. This is what you use to pay your rent, bills and buy food from as well as those concert tickets you want and the new glasses you’ll need after you break your glasses at the concert. My post will focus on budgeting and my favorite way to keep track of my money painlessly.

The second category is Short-Term Spending. This is money for 1-5 years away. If you have a savings account, you already have a start on this one. But… you might not really use it for savings. It’s just… you know, that other account. While a savings account works here, I’m going to suggest thinking about a Money Market Account (which is practically the same) and/or CDs (certificate of deposit). Both simply give you higher APY (annual percentage yield, or interest rate), meaning you make more money by simply putting your money in the right place. This money is spent if you need to put a deposit down on an apartment or a new car, want to travel for a few months or in case you get unexpectedly laid off from work.

The third category is Long-Term Spending. This is the money you use to buy a house and start a family, start your own business, or to go back to school. You want to feel confident that you will not need to touch this money until 5 to 40 years from now. You want to invest this money in the stock market and/or in bonds. For all our sanity, when we talk about the stock market, we’re going to keep it to investing in mutual funds and individual stocks. Yes, the stock market can definitely seem scary, but I promise to make it as simple as I can.

The last category is Retirement. Please don’t neglect this one, guys. It’s such an easy one, and starting early has an enormous impact on how much money you retire with. This is the money for all expenses you will have post-retirement. It goes into a 401k, an IRA (individual retirement account), a Roth IRA—or some combination of these.

Okay, those are the basics. Four categories of money for four different types of spending. We will go in-depth with each category in each of the next four articles. Hopefully, by the end of this series, you’ll have a better understanding of how to start plotting your financial road map. I promise, no matter how little you have to save it isn’t as hard as it seems. Once you plot your road map, you’ll be well on your way.

money

Photo by Meaghan Morrison