Create and track your monthly budget using the 50/30/20 rule. Calculate income, expenses, and savings to achieve financial goals.
The 50/30/20 Budget Rule
The 50/30/20 rule is a simple budgeting framework that divides your after-tax income into three categories:
50% - Needs (Essential Expenses)
These are必须支付的费用you must pay to live and work:
- Housing (rent or mortgage)
- Utilities (electricity, water, internet)
- Groceries and basic food
- Transportation (car payment, insurance, gas, public transit)
- Insurance (health, life, disability)
- Minimum debt payments
30% - Wants (Discretionary Spending)
Things you enjoy but could live without:
- Dining out and entertainment
- Hobbies and recreation
- Subscriptions (streaming, gym, magazines)
- Shopping (clothes, electronics beyond basics)
- Vacations and travel
20% - Savings & Debt Repayment
Building your financial future:
- Emergency fund (3-6 months expenses)
- Retirement savings (401k, IRA)
- Extra debt payments beyond minimums
- Other savings goals (house, car, education)
- Investments
Budgeting Tips
Track Your Spending
Use apps like Mint, YNAB, or spreadsheets to monitor where money goes. Most people underestimate spending by 20-30%. Track for 2-3 months to see patterns.
Pay Yourself First
Automate savings transfers on payday before you can spend it. Treat savings like a bill that must be paid.
Use the Envelope System
Allocate cash to envelopes for each category. When an envelope is empty, stop spending in that category. Modern version: use separate bank accounts or prepaid cards.
Cut the Big Three
Housing, transportation, and food are typically 60-70% of expenses. Small improvements here have huge impact:
- Housing: Get roommate, move to cheaper area, refinance mortgage
- Transportation: Buy used car, use public transit, bike
- Food: Meal prep, pack lunch, limit dining out to 2x/week
Review and Adjust Monthly
Budgets aren't set-it-and-forget-it. Review spending monthly, adjust categories as needed, and reallocate from low to high priorities.
Frequently Asked Questions
What percentage of income should go to housing?
Aim for 25-30% of gross income, or about 35-40% of take-home pay. Going over 30% leaves less for other needs and savings. In high-cost cities, you may need to accept 40%, but cut expenses elsewhere.
How much should I save each month?
Minimum 20% of take-home income per the 50/30/20 rule. This includes retirement, emergency fund, and other savings. If you can't afford 20%, start with 10% and increase 1% every few months.
What if my needs exceed 50%?
Common in early career or high-cost areas. Options: increase income through side gig, cut wants category below 30%, find ways to reduce needs (roommate, cheaper car, meal prep). Temporarily reduce savings but never eliminate it entirely.
Should I budget gross or net income?
The 50/30/20 rule uses after-tax (net/take-home) income since that's what you actually have to spend. Other budget methods may use gross income - be consistent with whichever you choose.
How do I start a budget with irregular income?
Use lowest month's income from past 6-12 months as your baseline. Build extra buffer in savings. In high-income months, save the excess for low months. Consider getting regular part-time work to stabilize income.
What's the best budgeting app?
Popular options: Mint (free, automated), YNAB ($99/year, zero-based budgeting), Personal Capital (free, investment focus), EveryDollar (free, Dave Ramsey method), or simple Google Sheets. Best app is the one you'll actually use consistently.
How can I stick to my budget?
Start realistic - extreme budgets fail. Automate savings and bills. Use cash for problem categories. Track spending weekly. Allow small splurges (budget for them!). Review progress monthly. Get accountability partner. Remember your "why" - your financial goals.
Should debt payments go in needs or savings?
Minimum payments are needs (must pay). Extra payments above minimum go in the 20% savings/debt category. High-interest debt (credit cards) should be priority in that 20% before building large savings beyond emergency fund.