• Home Equity Loan   • Home Refinance Loan   • Home Purchase Loan   • Second Mortgage Loan   • Debt Consolidation Loan
Home Equity Loan Store «A website where you can find the lowest interest rates on home loans with absolutely free quotes from multiple lenders»
::

Budgeting: A Tough Love Way to Handle Your Household Budget


Developing and living by a household budget is by far the best way to get your expenses under control which, in turn, can mean a much less stressful life.

However, many families find it very difficult to stick to a budget. It does take hard work and a lot of self-discipline, at least in the beginning. The good news is that most families find the longer they can stick to a budget, the easier it becomes. This is because sticking to a budget eventually becomes an unconscious habit, just like driving a car. And once it becomes a habit, the budgeting process just sort of goes on cruise control and requires much less thought or effort.

But what do you do during those first three, four or six months, when sticking to a budget feels so difficult?

There are several answers to this. The first is to make sure your budget categories are realistic. You may think you can get by with $100 a week for groceries, but is this real? Do you have checks or receipts that verify how much you have been spending at the grocery store? You really need to know. Otherwise, you may budget too little. In turn, this becomes frustrating because you will always be over budget.

Second, make sure you have all categories covered. There are some categories that are easy -- rent, mortgage payment, utilities, car payments, etc. But think hard about all other categories such as clothing, eating out, prescriptions, pet care, tuition, books, allowances, movies, CDs and DVDs, and computer software and games, to name a few. If you don't budget for all these kind of expenses, I promise they will bust your budget.

Finally, if you find you just can't seem to stick to your budget, here's a sort of tough love answer.

Go to your nearest office supply store and buy a box of #10 envelopes. Take them out and label one for each of your budget categories. Then write on each envelope the amount you have budgeted for that category.

For the purpose of this exercise, it is not necessary to break down general categories into subcategories. For example, you can label one envelope "entertainment" and not worry about envelopes for "movies," "eating out," "DVDs," etc. Just be sure the number you write on the envelope for any general category represents the sum of all its subcategories.

When you next get paid, cash your paycheck and bring it all home in $50, $20 and $10 bills. Then put and amount of cash in each of the envelopes equal to the amount you budgeted for that particular 6category.

Now, as you need to pay bills or buy groceries, etc., use the cash in the corresponding envelopes to pay them. You will know when you have reached the budgeted amount for any category because its envelope will be empty. What do you do when you find an envelope is empty? You do nothing. That category is all finished for this pay period. If the envelope is empty and you still have expenses, either you haven't budgeted correctly or you have overspent. You might be able to fudge and take funds from another category envelope. For example, if you have a week to go and are $40 short for groceries, you might be able to take the $40 out of the entertainment envelope. Just keep in mind this means $40 less for entertainment.

Do this for a few months and I promise you will not only learn to budget accurately, you will learn to stick to your budget.

For FREE help with debt and credit, subscribe today to Douglas Hanna's free email newsletter "8 Simple Steps to Debt Relief" at http://www.all-in-one-info.com


MORE RESOURCES:

Globe and Mail

PERSONAL FINANCE: Will that housing deal help you?
Reuters
By Linda Stern | WASHINGTON Feb 9 (Reuters) - The housing settlement announced Thursday should make it easier for troubled homeowners to modify their mortgages and escape foreclosure, but it won't make everyone whole, consumer advocates say.
Homeowners Receive $25 Billion Mortgage Settlement, But Is It Enough?U.S. News & World Report (blog)

all 3,770 news articles »


PERSONAL FINANCE: Should employees own more company stock or less?
Reuters
By Chris Taylor | NEW YORK Feb 10 (Reuters) - If you're a high-ranking executive like Apple Inc CEO Tim Cook, company stock is your best friend. He received a reported $375 million in restricted stock for 2011, one of the largest pay packages on record ...

and more »


PERSONAL FINANCE: Why pedigreed pooches cost more
Reuters
(The writer is a Reuters contributor. The opinions expressed are her own.) By Alina Dizik NEW YORK Feb 9 (Reuters) - Bruce, a Finnish Lapphund who's best described as a Pomeranian meets Alaskan Husky, will attend the canine equivalent of the Oscars for ...

and more »


Simple sketches break down personal finance
Park Record
Richards said Marrouche's take on personal finance is pretty common. "I don't know many people who aren't frustrated with their money," he said. "Smart, educated, successful people still get frustrated, and part of that is because it's gotten so ...

and more »


PERSONAL FINANCE: Pet insurance-a costly necessity
Reuters
By Heather Struck | NEW YORK Feb 9 (Reuters) - After Nicole Bodzon, 28, a consultant in Conifer, Colorado, paid $1600 for her pug, Pepe, to have a possibly cancerous tumor removed from his eye, she thought she might benefit from an insurance policy.

and more »


Mortgage Rates & Trends

Bankrate: Mortgage Rates Up Slightly
Sacramento Bee
About Bankrate, Inc. (NYSE: RATE) Bankrate is a leading publisher, aggregator and distributor of personal finance content on the Internet. Bankrate provides consumers with proprietary, fully researched, comprehensive, independent and objective personal ...
Thursday's Personal Finance StoriesMarketWatch

all 220 news articles »


PERSONAL FINANCE-Better than a mattress: money fund tips
Reuters
The top-yielding bank savings accounts and money market deposit accounts are paying 0.8 percent to 0.9 percent, said Greg McBride, senior financial analyst at personal finance website Bankrate.com. "That's 20 times the yield," McBride says.

and more »


Friday's Personal Finance Stories
MarketWatch
Also in today's Personal Finance news on MarketWatch, Jennifer Waters takes a look at how our car insurance rates are calculated and shares that while we might think we're saving money on an economy car, the higher insurance rates may wipe out those ...



6 personal finance tips for new Canadians
CBC.ca
Besides the challenge of settling into a new home and culture, immigrants to Canada face a host of issues when it comes to getting their financial lives in order and planning for their retirement. But there's one thing Canadians all have in common: the ...

and more »


Personal Finance: Favorable changes ahead for 401(k)s
Chattanooga Times Free Press
By Chris Hopkins Defined contribution plans like 401(k)s have long ago become the dominant vehicle for retirement saving and investment. Between 1990 and 2011, plan assets have expanded nearly fivefold to $4.3 billion. And yet, it has often been the ...

and more »

Google News

Home Equity Loan | Home Refinance Loan | Home Purchase Loan | Second Mortgage Loan | Home Improvement Loan | Debt Consolidation Loan | Loans | Leases & Leasing | Personal Finance | Mortgage Refinance | Debt Consolidation | Debt Relief | Finance Resources
© 2006 Home Equity Loan Store | Personal Finance Information | Personal Finance Articles