Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Principle #4: Make a Monthly Spending Plan

So I kept track of my spending for thirty days.

Broken Piggy Bank by Veronika Nagy.

At the end of the month, I tallied up my numbers into categories. I used the following list (which I've only slightly revised 13 years later) from the non-profit credit counseling service I went to, and found it helpful and pretty thorough. Feel free to delete categories you don't need or add categories that aren't already on the list.

Two points: (1) This is a monthly expenses worksheet. So if you spend about $250 on holiday gifts in December, divide $250 by 12 months and enter $21 for holiday gifts in the appropriate place. Do the same for any annual/semi-annual expense, such as car license/registration or eye exam/teeth cleaning. (2) At the time, I used another worksheet to calculate my debt repayment from a list of all my debts. However, I've included a line entry for minimum credit card payment because that may be one of your basic monthly expenses if, like most of us, you have some credit card debt.


Okay, so here's the list:

Basic Living Expenses

Housing

1. Rent/Mortgage
2. Oil
3. Gas/Electric
4. Water/Sewer
5. Garbage pick-up
6. Basic Telephone
7. Basic Cable
8. Property Taxes
9. Property/Renters Insurance
10. Maintenance

Food

11. Groceries (incl. cleaning supplies and paper goods)
12. Lunches (work and school)
13. Pet food and litter

Dependent/Child Care

14. Alimony & Child Support
15. Babysitter/Day care

Transportation

16. Car payment(s)
17. Gasoline
18. Car maintenance/repairs
19. License/registration
20. Car insurance
21. Parking
22. Commuting costs

Medical/Dental

23. Insurance Premium/Deductible
24. Doctor/Therapist/Optometrist
25. Dentist
26. Prescriptions/Medications

Insurance

27. Life/(whole/term)

Clothing

28. Family Clothes
29. Uniforms (work/school)
30. Laundry/Dry Cleaning

Education

31. Educational Debt

Debts/Taxes/Fines/Surcharges

32. IRS or other
33. Fines, tickets, etc.
34. Credit card minimum monthly payment(s)
35. Any other

Subtotal of Basic Living Expenses: _____________

Non-Basic Expenses

A. Tuition
B. Hair Care/Cosmetics/Toiletries
C. Cell phone
D. Books/Newspapers/Magazines/Subscriptions
E. Tobacco
F. Liquor/Beer/Wine/Soda
G. Movies/Concerts/Plays/Videos/DVDs
H. Dinners Out
I. Dues/Memberships
J. Donations (religious/charity)
K. Gifts (birthdays/holidays)
L. Children’s allowance
M. Pet care/veterinary
N. Lottery
O. Hobbies/Lessons
P. Vacations
Q. Other (in my case, I had bank fees and had used an accountant to help me with my taxes in this particular year)

Subtotal of Non-Basic Expenses: __________

Total Monthly Expenses (Basic + Non-Basic): ____________

Total Monthly Income: _______________
Total Monthly Expenses: _______________
Monthly Excess/Deficit (Monthly Income minus Monthly Expenses): _______________

Be sure that your monthly income is based on what actually comes in -- not on what you think you might make. Be honest--both about what you spend and about what you earn. Once you are totally honest with yourself, everything else begins to fall into place.


At the O'Kitten household, we've been using the same basic format for about six years now. This month, our plan looks like this:

1/14 - 2/10/09 [I put in the dates so that we know exactly the period the plan covers]

Rent/Utilities (total 954.86):

Rent: 722.11
Electric: 65.00
Gas: 15.00
Phone/cable/internet bundle: 135.00
Renter's insurance: 17.75

Medical (total 290.00):

Medication: 140.00
Therapist/Doctor Co-pays: 150.00

Grocery (total 280.00):

4 weeks at $65/wk: 260.00
Cat food and litter: 20.00

Other (total 282.00):

Transportation/Metro Card: 20.00
Debt repayment: 262.00

Total expenses: 1806.86

Total income: 1814.00
Total expenses: 1806.86
Monthly income minus monthly expenses = 7.14

And remember--it's just money. A lot of days I have had to repeat to myself: "For today, I have everything I need." Try not to fret over the past or worry about the future, but stay in today.

Drawing by Jim Doran.

2 comments:

Ragnar said...

Oy...we've been trying to do this, and it's SO DEPRESSING. On the plus side I've been cooking at home a lot, so that makes me feel better than spending money in restaurants.

I love that credit card offer thing. Beautiful

and good for you, you're an inspiration.

Obsidian Kitten said...

okay--it was kind of depressing at first. but once we got a handle on it, it was great knowing we weren't going to run out of money between checks every month.

and cooking at home is great! definitely helps a lot.

i always pay the bills as soon as we get paid, and then take out cash for the month for the groceries etc (and gas, when we had a car). then i put that cash in envelopes for each week. not using the debit card for those expenses keeps it all in line--but that's another post. more to come!