Submitted by weruroverlord95 t3_10p717m in personalfinance
A3thereal t1_j6indbr wrote
The amounts mostly seem okay, except water. I know this is highly variable by region, but I pay about $50 a quarter in a 2k sq ft home with 3 occupants, nowhere near 75 a month.
Beyond that, I ascribe to the 0 budget mentality. I would recommend adding lines for savings (tax advantaged retirement accounts being the first priority after funding your emergency savings and paying down your high-interest debt) as well as entertainment/travel/leisure/etc.
The entertainment/etc. lines would be rollover. Unused money from one month would go in to an account specific for this/these purposes and any spending on said category should never exceed the rolled over budget. It requires that you pre-fund any trips or leisure activities, avoiding the possibility of funding them at 24.99% annual interest rates.
With this philosophy, your expenditures should equal $3,605. You do lose flexibility, and some will advocate against. You can also create a 'slip' category in there of 5% of your income. This covers overruns in any critical category and any remaining funds here should go in to paying down debt or savings at the close of the month.
weruroverlord95 OP t1_j6invco wrote
Thanks. I'll review my water bills and check for any discrepancies.
I'm focused on paying off debt right now so the wife and I have cut out "fun" money until then. I've halted savings contribution until then. Plan on having it paid off completely by July.
A3thereal t1_j6iob2s wrote
>focused on paying off debt right now so the wife and I have cut out "fun" money until then
That's fair, but those additional debt payments should added as a line item as well. I would recommend caution in completely removing 'fun' money from your budget as it makes it difficult to follow your budget. One compromise can easily snowball to the point a budget gets ignored outright. Instead of eliminating consider leaving yourself $50 for a date night to allow the flexibility.
weruroverlord95 OP t1_j6iopfp wrote
Thanks for that input. That makes total sense. I would imagine burnout after a month or two. Will look into including this on the budget list.
A3thereal t1_j6iqfb6 wrote
Yeah. There's an excitement to creating a budget, the prospect of financial independence from high-interest debt. A honeymoon period if you will. It fades fast and the reality of adhering to it will hit hard. For some people it's a couple of weeks later, for some it's a few months. It almost always hits though.
Knowing it's in the budget makes it a choice not of whether to follow the budget, but how best to allocate that part of the budget.
weruroverlord95 OP t1_j6iqphv wrote
Making a plan for every dollar and executing it. I appreciate the feedback, truly!
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