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Creating a Home Budget Step by Step![]() Navigation: Main page » Personal Finance Real Estate With No Credit Checks! Author: Jesse Mecham Article source: http://www.moonsome.net/. Used with author's permission. The other day I received an email from a guy who was looking for some help with his budget. What he really wanted was to run his family like a business. While I think it's a great idea to have the mindset that your family does operate with a bottom-line (that can't or shouldn't be masked by credit cards and borrowing beyond your means), you also need to remember that creating a home budget needs to be simple - and stay simple. This guy wanted to know if a personal budget should allow him to do accruals. Heavens no! An accrual is basically where you might pay for an expense (such as car insurance) every six months, let's say it's $300. But you know that the expense really applies to the next six months. So you would spread that $300 over the six months - recognizing the expense on a month-by-month basis. Sound confusing? It's really not too bad. Businesses do it all the time because it gives a more realistic picture to their net income. (Imagine if a company had a big expense relating to the prior year that happened just after the new fiscal year started. It would understate that prior year's expenses. As a family, if your home is being foreclosed on, does the lender care that your net income looks good if you don't have any cash to make the mortgage payment? Of course not. Families need to operate on a cash basis. Cash is, really, all that mattersi in the end (financially speaking of course). Your First Step in Creating a Home Budget Some people get after me on this and say they want to begin budgeting right now. Well, you are. Recording your expenses is at least half of your budget. The other half is planning what those expenses will be. Actual Creating Begins Here Now that you have your fixed expenses, brainstorm all of your variable expenses. These might be electricity, gasoline, groceries, toiletries, gifts, entertainment, restaurant (you can fix this amount at zero if you're working on getting one month's expenses saved with the Primer Budget), etc. Add both your monthly fixed and variable expenses together. That's where your money is going. You've used what you've written down to help you be realistic about what these expenses really are. Allocating the Budget When you first create a home budget you're kind of stepping into the darkness a little bit. That's okay. Just don't expect to be able to predict every expense the first, second, third, or even fourth month. If you're abiding by Rule #4 of YNAB then you just roll with the punches when it comes to accidentally overspending. Resolve to do a little bit better each month. Sticking with Your Home Budget For more of his writing, you can check out the You Need A Budget Blog. |
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