Budgeting in Six Easy Steps
Creating and sticking to a personal budget is a vital
part of personal financial planning. Consumer Credit Counseling
Service offers an easy, six-step method for arriving at a
budget you can live with:
Step 1
Determine your monthly income. Take into consideration your
payroll deductions (health insurance or other group benefits,
income taxes, union dues, pension) and other sources of
income.
Add together all income, less deductions. On a piece of
paper record the resulting figure as VALUE A.
Step 2
List your "fixed" and "variable" monthly expenses, such as
housing, utilities, food and transportation. Remember to
allocate funds for clothing, medical care, child care, personal
expenses, recreation and emergencies/repairs.
Break down your annual, semi-annual and quarterly expenses
(taxes, insurance) into a monthly figure that can be put aside
and withdrawn when these bills become due. Example: car
insurance that is $150 every six months needs $25 per month set
aside. You will earn interest on these funds and will have no
problems meeting all other expenses in the months these become
payable.
Remember not to duplicate expenses that may already be
deducted from your paycheck.
Add all of your expenses–this is VALUE B.
Step 3
The next step is to find your "discretionary income" by
subtracting your total expenses (B) from your total net income
(A).
Write this number down on a piece of paper as VALUE C.
Step 4
List all unsecured debts (credit cards etc.), the monthly
payments and the balances. If you don't know your exact debt
amount, now is the time to determine it.
Record your monthly total as VALUE D and continue with the
next step.
Step 5
Some of your discretionary income is committed to the
installment debt listed above. Step 5 is to determine if you
have any remaining discretionary income after making these
installment payments by subtracting your total monthly payments
to creditors (D) from your discretionary income (C).
If this figure is a negative number, you are not ready for
Step 6 - setting goals. Consult a personal financial counsellor
and work on getting this figure into the positive numbers.
Step 6
It is now time to establish short- and long-term goals. Make
a list of these goals, using these examples to help you get
started.
Long-Term. - Real Estate Purchases, Future Education,
Retirement
Short-Term - Home Improvements, New Car, Travel
Other Desired Investments - Stocks, Bonds, CDs, Mutual
Funds
Once you have made a list, determine how much you need to
save monthly by dividing the amount of money required to meet
each goal by the number of months that you have available to
save for it.
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