Building Your YNAB Budget (2024)

Building Your YNAB Budget (1)

Today we’re going to show you the method of budgeting that totally changed the way we feel about budgeting. It’s a move away from the traditional budgeting that has you feeling like a failure every month. We want a budget that will empower you to really tell your money what to do instead of the other way around.

We use YNAB– that’s You Need a Budget– for managing our budget, so that’s what I’m going to show you today, you can apply these same principles to a pencil and paper budget or using a spreadsheet you make yourself.

Whatever you choose to use whether it’s YNAB, pencil and paper, or your own spreadsheet, this method of budgeting will change your life! That might sound dramatic, but that’s really what it did for us!

What’s different about the YNAB budgeting philosophy?

If you’ve done any budgeting in the past, it’s most likely been of the traditional sort. A traditional budget is characterized by a list of categories, each with an assigned amount of money you plan to spend in thatcategory. Your budget is based onyour projected income for the month, which hopefully is more than the total of all the expenses.

Essentially, a traditional budget is a plan of how you will spend the money that you hope to get that month.

We have failed dismallyevery time we’ve tried to live by a budget of this sort. These budgets are a chore, and the most frequent emotion they engender is a sort of lingering guilt. Our actual spending never quitematched our budgeted amounts and we constantly felt like we had failed and should have been better at projecting our expenses or our income. We sometimes found ourselves gerrymandering purchases into unnatural budget categories, as if the budget were an unchangeable fact we had toconform to. We avoided reviewing the budget together, and eventually, just stopped using it completely. It didn’t matter if the actual budgeting tool were a sheet of paper, a spreadsheet, or a program like Quicken or Mint, it was always a bad experience.

With a traditional budget there were no built-in restraints or safeguards to ensure that our spending followed our budget. There were no checks to ensure that our spending money had even been earned yet. The rigidity of traditional budgeting methods left us feeling like failures at worst, and unenthusiastic participants at best.

Moving Away From Traditional Budgeting

In contrast to traditional budgeting, the budgeting model we recommend and we’re going to walk you through today is a forward-looking budget, which is actually really intuitive. If you’ve never budgeted before,you won’t know the difference. It will just make sense. If you HAVE budgeted in the past, you’ll probably wonder WHY you never thought to do it like this before.

Most traditional budgeting software and philosophies look backwards at what happened. They analyze where your money went after it’s too late to do anything about it. YNAB, on the other hand, looks forward. Youassign your real, actual money to categories before you spend it.

Because I really believe that it is the most effective way, I’m going to lead you through starting your fresh budget using YNAB. Even if you don’t have YNAB software, you can still apply YNAB’s budgeting rules and methodology to your own spreadsheet. You can also get a free trial of YNAB.

Today’s post will be best consumed in video form so I can show you how YNAB really works. I’ll still go ahead and briefly explain how it works below, but this post will make much more sense to watch rather than read.

FundYour Budget

When you start your budget in YNAB, you’ll add your accounts to fund your budget. Add any and all accounts that you spend from (or could potentially spend from). Think checking accounts, savings accounts, credit cards, cash, etc.

You will have the choice for each account to be “linked” or “unlinked.” A linked account will automatically import the data from your account like balances and individual transactions. While it may be convenient to have all of your transactions automatically appear for you, there is real value in doing it yourself. You’ll see that this manual entry gives awareness and accountability that you won’t have when it’s done for you automatically.

Since you’re just starting out, all the money will go into the “To be budgeted” number at the top of the budget. In the future, each time you enter income, you will see money appear at the top of your budget, ready to be budgeted.

Setting up Budget Categories

YNAB starts you out with lots of category groups and category suggestions. Go ahead and enter the budget categories you wrote down yesterday. You can divide them into the three areas we discussed: fixed expenses, variable expenses, and periodic expenses. Or if you prefer the way they are set up by YNAB then go with that. Don’t worry they are easy to change later if you want to add or delete something or move the categories around.

In order to organize our budget in the most helpful way getting started, let’s go ahead and put due dates on the categories that have them. So if the mortgage is due on the 1st of each month, we’ll call this category “Mortgage– 1st.”

Since we’re only budgeting money we HAVE, we might not have enough to fund each category completely right now. We will have to prioritize, so order your bills according to their due dates so we can fund them in the order of what is coming up the soonest.

Also, we want to set goals for each of our categories where the amount is the same each month. We aren’t actually assigning money yet, just setting a goal for how much we would like to fund each category with. This is especially helpful when you’re starting out and don’t have enough money to fully fund each category. Having the goal will remind you how much you need to come up with before the bill is due. In actuality you might fund half of your rent with one paycheck and the rest of it with your second paycheck of the month.

Budget the Money You Have

Now that we have money available to budget in our budget and we have our categories all set up, it’s time to fund our budget categories. We want to tell each of our dollars what to do.

Instead of just being a lump of money in your checking account, your money will be earmarked for a specific category. Don’t worry, you’ll be able to change your allocations when you need to (we’ll talk about this next week). You’ll budget down to zero, meaning every dollar in your checking account will have a specific “job” or category that it is assigned to. It’s like a virtual envelope system.

Giving every dollar a job also means that you are only budgeting money that you already have. You’re dealing with money that actually exists, not money that you hope materializes this month. Your budget is a real live animal. It means something!

Start by allocating the money you have in your checking account right now. Decide what you need that money to accomplish before you get paid again. Maybe you’ll need to get groceries and gas, and pay the electric bill before your next paycheck. Maybe there’s a rent payment, groceries, and a wedding gift to purchase. Allocate how much money you think you’ll need to each purchase category. If you have a big payment due later in the month, like rent or a mortgage payment, you will probably want to allocate part of the money you have to that category. You’ll have to prioritize your categories (i.e. fund your “rent” category before your “fun” category).

Maybe you aren’t living paycheck-to-paycheck, so some of the money in your checking account is earmarked for your emergency fund or your life insurance premiums. That’s great. Just put that money in the appropriate category and it will beaccounted for and thereto use when you need it.

Each time you get paid, you will allocate money to your various categories. In order to stop the paycheck-to-paycheck cycle, you’ll want to start setting aside money to build up a “buffer” that will allow you to live on last month’s income. When you have a month’s worth of income saved up, you can budget the entire next month using the sum you saved while you direct all your income during the current month to the following month. Your “available to budget” money will be based on the money you earned the month before. It is a wonderfully freeing feeling to have a buffer.

Spend According to Your Category Balances

With YNAB’s philosophy, you spend according to the balance in your budget categories. Before making a purchase, check your category balances and make sure that there is sufficient money in the category to cover the purchase. Each time you spend money,record your expenditures either on the mobile app or on your desktop.

Each budget account (checking account, savings account, credit card, etc) will have its own register of transactions. To record spending or income, click on the account on the left side to pull up the register.

Since you’ll be adding a category to all of your spending transactions, the expense will be subtracted from the category balance in the budget view. Your category balance will show the real “live” amount of money you have available.

Even if you’re using a credit card to pay for the expense, you will still spend according to the category balances. Then, when your credit card bill comes, you can be absolutely certain that the money will be sitting in the bank waiting for you to apply it to the credit card. Using our YNAB budget has taken the stress away from using credit cardsfor us and left only the benefits.

Safety and Simplicity

There is no need to open specific accounts for special budget goals. You don’t have to fret that your new car savings and your property tax money lives together with your grocery money and utility expenses in your checking account. Your special savings categories are not in danger of being spent because you will no longer consult your checking account before making purchases. Instead you’ll look at the category balances before deciding to make a purchase. As long as you spend according to your categories and track your expenses, you can trust that your money will be safe from accidental (or intentional spending) without having to move your money around between accounts.

Challenge– Day 7

Set up a budget either in your own spreadsheet, on paper, or give YNAB a try. You’ll use the categories you outlined yesterdaythen use the money you have right now to fund your budget, starting with the most urgent categories. Do your best to spend according to your category balances. Be prepared to continue funding categories when you get paid again.

Building Your YNAB Budget (2024)

FAQs

What is the best way to create a budget answer? ›

Here's how to make a budget in five steps.
  1. List Your Income.
  2. List Your Expenses.
  3. Subtract Expenses From Income.
  4. Track Your Transactions.
  5. Make a New Budget Before the Month Begins.
Jan 4, 2024

What is Rule #2 in YNAB? ›

The second rule of YNAB is, “Embrace Your True Expenses.” True expenses are expenses that you know are going to come up at some point, but they're not necessarily part of your regular monthly bills. For example, Christmas gifts, car repairs, or home maintenance.

What is a good age of money in YNAB? ›

Aim to Age Your Money At Least 30 Days

Well, in YNAB, your budget calculates that number for you. If you're not using YNAB, you can get a rough idea by looking at your account balances, which should hopefully grow each month.

How to build a budget YNAB? ›

How to Create a New Budget
  1. On the web app, click the name of your budget (located at the top of the left sidebar).
  2. Click New Budget from the drop-down menu.
  3. Name your new budget and make any adjustments to the settings (Currency, Number Format, Currency Placement, Date Format, etc.).
  4. Click Create Budget, and presto!
Apr 18, 2024

What is the 60 20 20 rule for debt? ›

If you have a large amount of debt that you need to pay off, you can modify your percentage-based budget and follow the 60/20/20 rule. Put 60% of your income towards your needs (including debts), 20% towards your wants, and 20% towards your savings.

What is the 50/30/20 rule? ›

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 YNAB rule zero? ›

Spend time clarifying what is most important to you. We call this Rule Zero: Decide What's Important. Why zero? It's the step you need to take before you can begin budgeting.

Is YNAB better than mint? ›

Mint also has a more comprehensive overview of your finances whereas YNAB focuses on budgeting. Both apps are excellent personal finance tools that can help you save more money and keep spending on track.

How do I fix overspending in YNAB? ›

Cover the overspending by assigning more to the categories or moving money. Here's how! Option A—Assigning more to the categories: type a number into the Assigned column (or use the inline calculator buttons to increase the amount you've already assigned). This will use funds from Ready to Assign.

What are the 4 rules of YNAB? ›

The YNAB Method: An Overview
  • Rule One: Give Every Dollar a Job ↗️ This rule is key to the YNAB Method. ...
  • Rule Two: Embrace Your True Expenses ↗️ Large, less frequent expenses are the ones that can catch you off guard. ...
  • Rule Three: Roll With the Punches ↗️ Life happens. ...
  • Rule Four: Age Your Money ↗️
Apr 25, 2024

What is the #1 rule of budgeting? ›

The 50/30/20 budget rule states that you should spend up to 50% of your after-tax income on needs and obligations that you must have or must do. The remaining half should be split between savings and debt repayment (20%) and everything else that you might want (30%).

How to make the most of YNAB? ›

Use YNAB's quick budget shortcuts “Auto-Assign” and “Average spent”. These shortcuts make it fast to give every dollar a job—even on your phone—and help keep you honest about how much you really spend in each category. The more realistic your budget is, the easier it will be to stick to.

How does YNAB work for dummies? ›

YNAB refers to its strategy as “giving every dollar a job,” meaning you make a decision before the month begins on what you will do with every dollar you take in. 2 Rather than simply see what you have spent, YNAB requires you to allocate your income to expenses you prioritize.

What does grey mean in YNAB? ›

Gray: This color is used for transactions that haven't cleared your account yet, like Scheduled Transactions ↗️ or Pending Transactions ↗️.

How should I structure my budget? ›

Try a simple budgeting plan. 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.

What is the best way to start a budget? ›

Start budgeting
  1. Make a list of your values. Write down what matters to you and then put your values in order.
  2. Set your goals.
  3. Determine your income. ...
  4. Determine your expenses. ...
  5. Create your budget. ...
  6. Pay yourself first! ...
  7. Be careful with credit cards. ...
  8. Check back periodically.

What is the best way to create a budget in Quizlet? ›

What is the best way to create a budget? Divide your income into categories and plan how much you'll spend on each.

What is the best way to create a budget banzai? ›

Whether or not you have a partner, start your budget by listing all your anticipated monthly expenses. It can be helpful to divide them by how frequently they occur. Insert your monthly income and your monthly and yearly expenses to find out your net monthly and yearly income.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Duane Harber

Last Updated:

Views: 5597

Rating: 4 / 5 (71 voted)

Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Duane Harber

Birthday: 1999-10-17

Address: Apt. 404 9899 Magnolia Roads, Port Royceville, ID 78186

Phone: +186911129794335

Job: Human Hospitality Planner

Hobby: Listening to music, Orienteering, Knapping, Dance, Mountain biking, Fishing, Pottery

Introduction: My name is Duane Harber, I am a modern, clever, handsome, fair, agreeable, inexpensive, beautiful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.