How to Set Up a Family Budget
Whether you want to save some money, get a handle on your family’s spending habits or just become better with your finances overall setting up a family budget can be a good idea. Doing so is a good way to let your family know that their spending habits do have an effect on the overall financial health of your family as well. In addition, setting up a family budget can help you get a control of your spending and see where it lies in the bigger picture, potentially preparing you to start a healthy savings plan sometime in the near future. This will make it much easier to get that new addition on the house, pay off the car, take that family vacation or do whatever else it is you may be looking to save for.
Of course, setting up a family budget is something that is much easier said than done. It takes actually formulating the budget and then selling your significant other and other family members on the idea. That in itself can be one of the more difficult parts of the budgeting process, but luckily we have a few solutions on how the idea of a budget and putting one together can be a tad bit easier on everyone involved.
Know What Your Fixed Bills Are and Average Them
There are some bills in your life that are going to be the same every month. Your rent or mortgage, your car payment, your school loan payment—these are things that are going to remain the same no matter what you do. Add them all up. That is something that has to go in your budget no matter what, and if you don’t take pains to make sure these are paid these are the ones that are going to get you.
Know What Your Variable Bills Are
Your variable bills are all of the other bills out there, the ones that change on a month to month basis. Your electricity bill, your phone bill—these are variable bills that are going to change. Add them up and divide them by however many of them there are and you will have an average. Since you can’t predict these bills, this is the best you can do. Factor this into your budget.
Factor In Unexpected Expenses
Factor in unexpected expenses as well; those are things that you don’t expect to happen, like overage charges on Little Jimmy’s cell phone bill or the emergency leg setting that Rover had to get.
Adding up all of these things and factoring them can help you figure out where your money is going and how to spend it better, more wisely. Do you really need the gold package or will basic cable do just fine? Perhaps a family sharing plan could keep your minutes down and prevent overages on your cell phones. And if you all have cell phones, is a home phone with the long distance package really necessary?
Setting up a family budget may work better for you than you think. It can help you set some spending rules for your family and get a handle on what you spend, so in the end you might even be able to save a few dollars here and there.
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