I've always been terrible with money. I don't think that will ever change now because I am fundamentally terrible with numbers. They simply don't stick in my head. They don't interest me enough to live more than a few seconds in my brain. So I have always overspent - often without realising - and I have never really saved. I have little to show for it, but I have had a good time.
Still, you really can't stay bad at money forever. It puts you in a hole. Being broke is depressing. It's probably much much worse when you just want to retire too. Sooner or later, you have to address things.
I led a profligate and disordered life. I found that tightening my belt and trying to budget always failed. I could get really anal with the budgeting stuff, and spend loads of time figuring stuff out in Excel. It would always go wrong because the numbers I needed to know never stayed in my head and ultimately, would never add up. Sooner or later, I'd be 5-6 pints down and I'd rediscover that generosity of spirit I was trying to suppress. Quiet nights out would turn into epic nights out. Then the car would need a service, home insurance would be due for renewal, and shit, it's my grandmother's birthday. I would reach for the credit card.
I abandoned the more traditional idea of budgeting. It doesn't work for me. My personality rebels against it.
What I discovered and applied was a more general principle for finance. This isn't about budgeting every last penny, or about trying to get rich in monetary terms. It's about a healthy balance. It's about
budgeting for happiness. I don't care about wealth; but I do want to be comfortable and happy and not thinking about dull money shit. This is it, and it's real simple:
50/30/20 splitSpend no more than 50% of your income on needs. For me, this further breaks down to 25% on rent and 25% on regular bills and food. When I started, I was spending maybe 55% of my income on the basic cost of living. I moved house to peg this back to 50% - quite a big change that has actually transformed my life in all sorts of positive ways. It's really useful to know that you should spend no more than 25% of your income on housing too: gives you a sensible price range. It's probably a good indicator of poverty if 25% of your income doesn't cover housing costs at any level.
Save 30% of your income for the future. Or if you have debts (I do) then use 30% of your income to pay the debts off first. I had ended up spending almost 40% of my income simply servicing credit card bills and loans. Gradually, combined with the effects of inflation, my disposable income was squeezed to almost nothing, and that is a massive trap.
Spend 20% of your income on wants. You can also try saving some or all of this 20% for larger items that you need in the short to medium term. Don't want anything? Boring! Save it then, I guess.
This is the really important bit of the budget - the holy grail. You need this for doing the things that you enjoy. If all your money goes on paying bills and surviving, your life will likely be a fairly grim affair. Going out, socialising, taking trips, and the like are essential. Unless you are exceptionally disciplined, disregarding this stuff will always make you miserable and will always lead to any financial planning based on spending all your money on necessities and repayments ending in failure.
It has taken a fair bit of effort to achieve this balance, but the net result after approx 18 months has been quite impressive for me. I still have no savings, and those lovely bank stocks are still utterly worthless (
) but I should be entirely debt-free in roughly 2 years, at which point I can start saving for the long-term. All my bills are automated, and disappear from my account the day after I get paid. I have no money worries, and I have reclaimed that vital 20% disposable income that allows me to enjoy life.