Budgeting 101: 12 lessons from a year of sticking to my budget (2024)

Since I post a lot of book recommendations on my WhatsApp statuses, somebody asked me this week;

“How did you develop an interest in books?”

I get asked this a lot.

“My mama. She loved reading and had many books.”I said.

Remember thefinance lesson on the power of environmental design?

“My concentration span while reading a book is little.”She said.

“Little is better than not reading at all. Look for books that you enjoy reading. Topics that you’re interested in. Or funny stuff.”

I hope she keeps reading. It gives me joy when I imagine the benefits of compounding knowledge she’ll experience in a few years.

Budgeting 101: 12 lessons from a year of sticking to my budget (1)

I also got a reminder lesson this week on the importance of small consistent habits.

I stopped paying my student loan (HELB) a year ago. Before that, I had been consistent for a year. I used to pay $30 per month through automatic deductions from the employer.

When I changed jobs, I stopped paying because I told myself that since I owed a lot of money, $30 didn’t make any significant difference on my loan; I didn’t check my statement before making this vague conclusion.

When you default on your HELB loan, you get a $50 penalty every month. This is $600 per year. There’s also an additional $10 annual ledger fee.

For the one year that I haven’t been paying, I have been lowkey afraid of the damage that these charges would do to the total figure.

However, I had other reasons that made me halt the payments. At the time, I was stuck in personal and mobile loan debts, didn’t have an emergency fund, only had one little long term investment and knew very little about money and investments. I had a myriad of financial challenges.

It made sense to pause payments at the time, tackle the other challenges one at a time, then onboard it again on my budget.

It’s okay to ignore some financial obligations for some time (not the ones with highest interest rates though) if you feel you can’t handle it all. Tackle a few at a time, then keep making adjustments to your budget. Remember thatbudgets are not jail terms.

Since the pandemic started and having been in a 24-hour lockdown for a month before we finally resumed work last week, there have been a few changes on my expenditure. I haven’t incurred costs such as transport, salon visits and recreation costs. With this extra cash, I had to think about how to spend it going forward.

That’s when I remembered my big skeleton in the closet; student loan!

On Monday, I decided to face my fear of the figure head-on. I have been making wild guesses for a while now, the average estimate being $3,000.

Guessing how much I owed has been paralyzing, I had to stop avoiding the problem.

Since I teach the same concept when I talk abouthow to beat debt, I had to have a taste of my own medicine again.

I logged in to the HELB online portal and got the figure. I owe $2,186.37.

Surprisingly, after seeing this figure, I didn’t feel bad. In fact, I laughed at myself.

On my budget spreadsheet, I added HELB.

I had to adjust a few other categories so that I can make $100 payments every month starting this May. That will take me 1 year and 9 months to fully repay it. After coming up with this plan, I felt like the huge weight made up of fear and uninformed guesses was lifted off my shoulders.

I have to admit that when I first saw the figure, my initial plan was to pay $160 every month just so that I can get rid of the debt faster but when I shared this plan with my pal, she reminded me that it makes more sense to make $100 payments consistently and invest the extra $60. That adds up to $720 (interest not included) per year in investment while still ensuring that I pay my loan, and avoid the monthly penalties.

This is why you should openly have money conversations with your friends. They will point out your grey areas and play the accountability partner role.

This is the third article on budgeting. Please read the firsthereand the secondhereif you missed them. They’ll be more helpful if you read them in that order.

I shared on the first article that I started with writing my budget on a word document then moved to use spreadsheets when I got proficient in Excel.

Every end month, I record my spending on a spreadsheet titled ‘2020 Expenditure tracking’. These are real figures (no guesswork!) from the Notes app that I’ve been using to record my expenses on the go!

Here is a chart of how my budget looked like in Jan.

In Feb…

Budgeting 101: 12 lessons from a year of sticking to my budget (3)

In April…

Budgeting 101: 12 lessons from a year of sticking to my budget (4)

Note: After filling the amounts spent on the budget categories list, these charts are generated automatically on Google sheets by clicking the bar chart icon found on the top right of the spreadsheet.

I will do a step by step guide of this process and provide an easy to use and downloadable spreadsheet.

It gets cleaner by the month. And just in case you’re wondering, it’s not that I made 0 investments in April. Was stuck in 24-hour lockdown, couldn’t go out to make the deposits. Plus this is a good time to keep your monies in cash just in case…

In the meantime, my friend introduced me to an epic expenses-tracking app called Toshl Finance. I have tried more than 10 such apps but never got one work that works so smoothly!

After creating your categories and filling your expenses, you can view your expenses by date and by category. You get detailed expenses graphs which display the actual figure, percentage, number of expenses in each category and how much you spend per day on each category.

On a daily basis, you can tell where your money is going. And, it has provisions for all currencies so no headaches with conversions!

With this app, I won’t be using the notes app going forward. Which will save me loads of time because transferring the expenses to excel then categorizing them was so much work! Talk of growth!

“Needless commitments are more wasteful than needless possessions. Possessions can be ignored, but commitments are a recurring debt that must be paid for with your time and attention.” – James Clear

Lessons from my budgeting journey so far

1. When you succeed in one process, you get the psyche to succeed in another.

You communicate to your subconscious mind that you can win.

Since I have proved to myself that getting my finances in order is doable, I’m more confident in my learning capabilities. I can comfortably move to pursue improving a new area in my life such as my cooking skills.

You also gain a higher level of self-respect with time.

2. If you succeed with your money, you can win at anything!

This is because most of us start from a point of fear, withthe wrong money lessons passed down from childhood, scarcity mentality and almost zero knowledge.

3. You can control your money.

Give yourself the gift of reduced financial anxiety.

“One of the greatest forms of freedom comes from knowing what is important to you. It grants you the freedom to ignore everything else.” – James Clear

4. The fear reduces with time.

With time, your face will brighten when big figures are mentioned, your brain will generate ideas instead of the default ‘I cannot afford that.’

Instead, ask yourself ‘How can I afford it?’

5. Be honest with yourself.

“Hiding from your money problems exacerbates them, but it’s impossible to stop hiding without first overcoming shame. When you start talking about money, whether that’s your bad spending decisions or growing up in poverty, only then can you get rid of the shame surrounding it.” — Ashley C.Ford

6. Learn to say No.

It will hurt especially if you’re saying it to family or people you love. But in the hierarchy of responsibilities, you come first.

7. Don’t rely on your memory

Record and track your expenses often!

8. Work towards a lifestyle where good financial habits is normal behaviour.

Your finances are not something you only think of once in a while when it’s convenient. Or when you’re deep in debt. It’s an everyday thing. Having the right friends plays a huge role in this one.

9.One size fits all budget doesn’t exist.

But learning the fundamentals is key to improving.

10. What you feed grows.

Learn, relearn, unlearn. Let’s secure this bag!

11.Once you realize the amount of work and time it takes to come up with a budget and stick to it, then you won’t let other people’s lack of planning disrupt yours.

No matter how much you love them. Unless it’s an emergency.

12. The lessons roll over to other aspects of your life.

For example, if your health figure takes up too much of your money, then you’ll want to scout for a job that provides health insurance…but you wouldn’t know this if you don’t have a budget, would you?

As James Clear says, financial wealth is the power to choose how to spend money. This will however not happen if you don’t budget, if you don’t take the steps towards learning how to control it.

Subscribe to my blogto receive more gems every Thursday!

Budgeting 101: 12 lessons from a year of sticking to my budget (2024)

FAQs

How to get rich ramit sethi budget? ›

Sethi's Conscious Spending Plan
  1. Fixed Costs. According to Sethi, 50-60% of take home pay should be put toward fixed costs. ...
  2. Investments. 10% of your pay should go to investments. ...
  3. Savings. 5%-10% of take-home pay should go toward savings. ...
  4. Guilt-Free Spending.
Jan 13, 2024

How to make a budget work Ramsey answers? ›

How to Create a Budget
  1. Step 1: List Your Income.
  2. Step 2: List Your Expenses.
  3. Step 3: Subtract Expenses From Income.
  4. Step 4: Track Your Transactions (All Month Long)
  5. Step 5: Make a New Budget Before the Month Begins.

What lessons do you learn from budgeting? ›

Not only does keeping a budget help you understand where your money is really going, it also helps you align your spending with your priorities. Without a budget, your money just flows out of your accounts without direction. When you make a budget, you can ensure that how you spend your money matches your priorities.

What should be considered when setting a budget in EverFi? ›

financial goals, current expenses, and income.

What is the 50 30 20 rule? ›

Those will become part of your budget. The 50-30-20 rule recommends putting 50% of your money toward needs, 30% toward wants, and 20% toward savings. The savings category also includes money you will need to realize your future goals.

What is the 40 30 20 10 rule? ›

The most common way to use the 40-30-20-10 rule is to assign 40% of your income — after taxes — to necessities such as food and housing, 30% to discretionary spending, 20% to savings or paying off debt and 10% to charitable giving or meeting financial goals.

What is the #1 rule of budgeting? ›

Oh My Dollar! From the radio vaults, we bring you a short episode about the #1 most important thing in your budget: your values. You can't avoid looking at your budget without considering your values – no one else's budget will work for you.

What is the 20 60 20 rule for debt? ›

Put 60% of your income towards your needs (including debts), 20% towards your wants, and 20% towards your savings. Once you've been able to pay down your debt, consider revising your budget to put that extra 10% towards savings.

What is the simplest budgeting method? ›

Basic Budgeting Method #1: The Classic Budget

Listing out your expenses, line by line, is a tried-and-true budgeting strategy. Get started by listing all of your monthly expenses in rows. This includes the needs (your rent or mortgage payments, car payments and insurance, cell phone bill, groceries, etc.)

What are 3 things about budgeting? ›

Budgeting can help you set long-term financial goals, keep you from overspending, help shut down risky spending habits, and more.
  • Helps You Work Toward Long-Term Goals.
  • Can Keep You from Overspending.
  • Can Make Retirement Saving Easier.
  • Helps You Prepare for Emergencies.
  • Can Reveal Spending Habits.
  • The Bottom Line.

What percentage of people keep a budget? ›

More than eight in 10 Americans surveyed by Debt.com in 2023 reported they budgeted their money, a number that's been trending upward since 2018. The vast majority of budgeters in the survey said the practice got them out of debt or kept them from going into debt.

Do people who budget save more money? ›

Your budget can help you save money for the future. You can make savings one of your expenses. You might find ways to spend less money. Then you can put money into savings every month – maybe into a bank or credit union.

What 3 things should be considered when setting a budget? ›

Creating a budget
  • Step 1: Calculate your net income. The foundation of an effective budget is your net income. ...
  • Step 2: Track your spending. ...
  • Step 3: Set realistic goals. ...
  • Step 4: Make a plan. ...
  • Step 5: Adjust your spending to stay on budget. ...
  • Step 6: Review your budget regularly.

What should I consider in my budget? ›

This includes needs, like your electricity bill and groceries; wants, like streaming TV subscriptions and take-out; and even planned savings, like monthly contributions to your 401(k) or emergency fund.

What should not be included in a budget? ›

Here are five types of income you should never include in your budget.
  • Extra Paychecks. Depending on your pay schedule, some months out of the year will give you an extra paycheck. ...
  • Income Tax Refund. ...
  • Bonuses. ...
  • Side Hustle Income. ...
  • Any Other Income that is Not Permanent.

How did Ramit Sethi become rich? ›

Ramit Sethi's net worth is over $25 million. Most of his wealth is created from his online businesses, including I Will Teach You To Be Rich, Growth Lab, premium online courses, etc. Ramit started his blog IWT (I Will Teach You To Be Rich) in 2004 while studying technology and psychology at Stanford.

What is the income rule for Ramit Sethi? ›

Apply the rules of 10 and 20.

Sethi says he saves 10% and invests 20% of his gross income minimum. In his book, 'I Will Teach You to Be Rich,' Sethi suggests saving 5-10% and investing 5-10% as part of a Conscious Spending Plan (aka budget).

How much should fixed costs be in Ramit? ›

Fixed costs: These costs should total no more than 50% to 60% of your take home pay. They may include things like rent, mortgage payments, utilities and debts. If you spend more than 60% of your income here, you may need to re-evaluate your budget.

What is the best budget to build wealth? ›

We recommend the popular 50/30/20 budget to maximize your money. In it, you spend roughly 50% of your after-tax dollars on necessities, including debt minimum payments. No more than 30% goes to wants, and at least 20% goes to savings and additional debt payments beyond minimums.

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