Spin off Budget Ideas

Updated on March 15, 2012
C.Z. asks from Manning, IA
5 answers

What do you save for your car/ what are your payments?
What do you put away for future doc bills?
How much "play" money would you allow yourself after you pay your bills?

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J.V.

answers from Chicago on

Our car payment is $415 a month, we put aside $515 and make 4 extra payments a year. When this car is paid off, we will have two cars we own outright. I am planning on putting aside the $500 a month. My car should last another 10 years, hubby's 8 or so. Next car we will be buying with cash.

We do a high deductible medical plan. $450 a month goes into it, or whatever the tax max is.

We have $150 a month for eating out, and another $100 for whatever. In terms of our budget, we save the bulk of it and try not to spend on silly things. We do travel a bit, and I consider that our play money.

C.M.

answers from St. Louis on

We have one car payment ($410 per month) but we pay $450/month towards it. That being said, we plan on putting that much each month in savings once it's paid off to buy another car once one of ours needs repairs or replacing.

Future doctor bills - we have nothing set aside specifically for the doctors. We try to put as much as we can into savings each month.

Each week hubby and I get $30 to splurge on whatever we want (beer, eating out, clothes). Then we also go on a date night each week and usually get dinner and pay his sister to babysit. So we easily spend $320 a month on entertainment / for ourselves.

F.H.

answers from Phoenix on

This question is hard to answer because it depends on a persons income and what their priorities are. We pay cash for everything. The only debt we have is our mini van. Both of our incomes are 100% commission only, so we don't know how much our monthly checks will be. So we tend to save and stash money when we can because we have months where we are short and have to have money saved to cover the bills. My husbands ex is a hot mess and we've also had to pay 10k for an urgent court hearing we requested and that wiped us out so we are starting over again. We don't have a budget for "play" money, we go out as we wish if money allows.

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N.R.

answers from Des Moines on

We've been married 44 yrs. and budget for everything. We consider some type of savings (vacation, special night out, purchase a special item, etc.) as a regular expense. In otherwords, if you can put only $5 per paycheck into some kind of savings (even an envelope or piggy bank is better than nothing), you will have $25 per month if you are paid weekly. In 4 months you'll have $100. You can spend it then or continue saving it for some special that is more costly. If money is very tight and you're living from paycheck to paycheck, you'll never have money saved for anything if you don't consider savings as something you HAVE TO DO each paycheck. We budget monthly for car insurance, property taxes, etc., in otherwards, for things that need to be paid 3,6, or 12 months into the future. When those come due the money is always there - no stress or borrowing from Peter to pay Paul. We also budget monthly for Christmas expenses, vacations, etc. We don't have "play money" because we budget for everything. Things like eating out, going to movies, date nights, etc., are all budgeted for as Entertainment Expense. In order to get started putting money ahead while paying current bills you will have to not spend extra money for anything for at least a month (maybe longer). During that start-up time you put the extra money into budget accounts that you've determined ahead of time what type and how much. In a couple of months you'll have money available for these expenses sitting there readily available. In order to stay on budget you'll need to continue contributing your paycheck into your budget accounts each paycheck. You can open a savings account and keep track of your budget expenses in a notebook, or our bank actually lets us keep as many savings accounts as we want with no charge. We are even able to name the accounts such as Vacation, Property Taxes, etc. When we receive the bank statements we can see how much is in our budget accounts. For bills you pay monthly, you could just open an account that says "Monthly Expenses".

I have a sister who has been married many years who has never budgeted. Their income is similar to ours. They have lots of debt and always ask for an extension on paying income taxes, utility bills, etc. They are hounded by collection agencies. They do not typically "blow" their money. What happens to them is that whenever they have a month with extra income (they're both self-employed so income isn't consistent) they go out to each more often, stay in a motel for the weekend, buy new clothes, give their 4 adult kids extra gas money, etc. While they deserve all of these things, by not budgeting and setting money aside each month for the next months bills or future expenses, in the months where their income is less than normal they can't pay necessary bills such as utilities, phones, gas for their cars, etc. Therefore, they charge those things to their credit cards and those balances keep climbing until they're maxed out. My sister can't understand why our incomes are similar but we have a perfect credit rating, always pay bills on time, take trips, eat out, and don't stress out over Christmas spending. It's because we set that money side each month so that everything gets paid even when paychecks aren't consistent.

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J.B.

answers from Boston on

We haven't been able to pay cash for a car in years. We always buy used. We have an Infiniti sedan that we got for $7K (because it's an unpopular color it was cheaper than the Maxima, which is what we initially wanted) and a Honda Odyssey that was about $9K. We have one loan for both vehicles and the payment is $270 a month for 60 months. We have other debt at much higher interest rates so we won't accelerate payments on these for at least another year but when we do, we'll hopefully have them paid of in 3.5 -4 years instead of 5 and will then drive payment free for a few years and save up for the next cars.

I pay a fortune for no-deductible heath insurance. If your insurance has a high deductible, then plan on saving up enough throughout the year so that when each new year starts, you have that amount already ready to pay your out-of-pocket expenses immediately and then continue saving up throughout the year for next year's deductible. If your employer offers health savings accounts, you may be able to save up these amounts in a tax-advantaged account and have the savings taken right from your paycheck.

Play money...we have debt and 4 kids so we don't have any of that ;-) We each probably spend $50-$100 per week on average for unexpected things that don't have a regular frequency and can be put off if need be - things like haircuts, going out to dinner with friends, small home and car repairs, un-budgeted clothing, charitable solicitations from friends , etc. For example, my oldest son's hockey stick broke in a game last weekend and he has 8 games left in the playoffs so there goes $100 for a new stick!

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