• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

KrantCents

Making Sense of Money

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact Me
  • Privacy Policy
How to Budget in 4 Steps

How to Budget in 4 Steps

May 2, 2014 by Justin

You can budget in 4 steps!  The traditional definition of a budget is an estimate of income and expenses for a set period of time.   A budget for me is a structure for achieving a financial goal.   It helps you track your income and how you spend your money.  My approach is to start with my financial goal and make changes in my spending to achieve it.  What are you waiting for?

Step #1

Before you can make changes to your expenses, you first need to be aware of where you spend your money.  If you were trying to lose weight, you would make a food diary.  You would create a diary of everything you eat.  Tracking your expenses starts with a diary of where you spend your money?  You have to know where you spend your money in order to manage your money.  You can start with your list of expenses, how do you spend your money and what you would like to spend.  What is your financial goal?  Is it to reduce debt, increase savings, make investments or just control your expenses?

Step #2

Analyze your expenses!  Where can you reduce your expenses without changing much?  For example, you could replace your lights with compact fluorescent lamps (CFL) and save some money on your utility bill.  You are not giving anything up, but you will need to invest some money in CFLs.  Aside from significantly reducing your utilities, CFLs last 10,000 hours.  You could take your lunch to work a few days a week and save over a hundred dollars per month.  Small changes in your expenses can yield huge rewards.  I wrote an article called “10 Changes Can Make Millions” that provides ten small changes would yield enough to earn over a million dollars over your working career.

Step #3

Some people use budgets to control their expenses.  I don’t think you need a budget to control your expenses.  Establishing a budget, you will set spending limits for categories of expenses and you can use those limits to control your spending.  In fact, I regularly check my spending every time I pay my bills.  I have the additional motivation to wring out every extra penny from my expenses.  Never accept the status quo!  You can either cut the expense such as cable TV or find ways to reduce it or cut somewhere else so you can keep it.  Extra money can be used to pay down debt or add to savings.

Budgeting can force you to get organized, but you do not need a budget to get you organized!  Systematically looking at where you spend your money will help you reduce or change your expenses.  Automate where you can such as mortgage payments, car payments, loan payments, and insurance payments to name just a few.  The more expenses you can automate, it will help organize your finances. It will save your time and avoid late fees.

Step #4

Since you are starting with the goal in mind, Steps 1-3 will help you achieve your goal.  For example, you want to save $2,000 per month.  Up to now, you have only achieved $1,000 per month.  Your task will be to find that additional $1,000 by cutting or changing your expenses.  Another choice would be to find an additional $1,000 in income.  If you are increasing your contribution to your 401K, there will be a reduction in taxes that will help approximately 15-25%.  By starting with the goal, you can be more focused at a specific number to achieve.  If the dollar amount is for retirement savings or debt reduction, set up a payroll deduction to make it automatic.

Final Thoughts

Spend less than you earn is the advice most personal financial bloggers will give you.  I will take it a step further that you should include savings in your budget.  Savings can range from 10% of your gross wages to maxing ($17,500,  2014 401(k) contribution) out your 401(k).  If you start with your goal, it will help you quantify how much you must cut or reduce your expenses.  Remember that your budget should include those yearly expenses that come up once or twice a year.  Insurance, real estate taxes and tuition are not monthly expenses; however you can set aside the monthly portion so you will have it when it is due. Budget in 4 steps makes it easy!

Photo by:  Flickr

Carnivals:

Aspiring Blogger Financial Carnival hosted by Aspiring Blogger
Yakezie Carnival hosted by Wealth Gospel
Finance Carnival For Young Adults hosted by The Four Hour Workday
Carnival of Retirement hosted by Save and Conquer
Lifestyle Carnival hosted by Lisa Vs. The Loans
Carnival of Financial Independence hosted by Savvy Scot
Carnival of Money hosted by Carnival of Money

Budget in 4 steps makes it easy!

Filed Under: Managing Money Tagged With: Budget, Budgeting, financial decisions, Goal setting, Goals, information, interesting, Money, Personal Finance, Planning, Savings, Stretching your Money, Values, Wealth

Comments

  1. Clarisse @ Make Money Your Way says

    May 2, 2014 at 1:19 am

    At first budgeting for me was so hard, especially when I didn’t track my expenses. I just wondered what did I buy and where did my money go? And now that I have installed a mobile application that can track my expenses and income, then it’s very easy for me to identify in which part do I need to lessen my expenses.

    • Krantcents says

      May 2, 2014 at 7:06 am

      Any change is always difficult to start, but worth it as you can see. As you get more comfortable with tracking, you will focus on just the problem areas.

  2. The Wallet Doctor says

    May 2, 2014 at 11:12 am

    I think your point, “Budgeting can force you to get organized, but you do not need a budget to get you organized!” is an interesting one. I’ve found that implementing that designing and following the budget really is how I get organized. But, I think you are right, depending on the person, you may be able to financially organized and have the budget be a layer on top of that, rather than the cause. You’ve given some great pointers here!

    • Krantcents says

      May 2, 2014 at 1:07 pm

      Although I broadly create a budget, I rarely look at it. I watch my expenses for variations and keep a spending plan consistent. You could say I operate on autopilot, but monitor my expenses monthly.

  3. Michael @ Money Beagle says

    May 2, 2014 at 12:26 pm

    Very good starting points. Budgeting needs to start this simple for people that have never done it as a matter of habit. Once you get the basics down, you can then go off and start tuning and enhancing it.

    I’ve found that people who make budgeting overly complicated from the get-go inevitably get frustrated and stop dealing with it, whereas a gradual approach would have probably led to greater success.

    • Krantcents says

      May 2, 2014 at 1:08 pm

      I think this is true for a variety of situations! Keep the changes small and simple and you can maintain or make changes permanent.

  4. Kylie Ofiu says

    May 3, 2014 at 5:32 am

    Budgeting really is that simple. I think skipping step 1 is a big mistake many people make. If they have no idea how much they spend and on what, they can’t expect to set spending limits and stick to a budget. Great tips.

    • Krantcents says

      May 3, 2014 at 8:31 am

      Becoming more familiar with your spending helps you change. Budgets often make you change your priorities and you need to know where you need to change.

  5. Poor Student says

    May 4, 2014 at 11:38 am

    When I budget, I give myself some loose estimate, more than what I usually need, in case something happens. I used to budget down to every single cent but it was hard! Now I still control my expenses but I can ‘breathe’.

    • Krantcents says

      May 4, 2014 at 1:19 pm

      I generally put some extra money in a miscellaneous account. I would rather control most of my expenses based on real expectations and have a reserve for those unexpected things.

Follow us on Facebook!

Friend us on Twitter!

Tweets by krantcentsusa

Follow me on Pinterest

Visit Krantcent's profile on Pinterest.

Copyright © 2010–2023 KrantCents • Built on the Genesis Framework