Houston Chronicle Sunday

REBOOT BUDGET

- By Courtney Jespersen This column was provided to the Associated Press by the personal finance website NerdWallet. Courtney Jespersen is a writer at NerdWallet.

Keep a check on your spending as nation moves back to normal.

Picture cruising your car deep into 2021 and never glancing in the rearview mirror. Vaccines, travel and a hope of normalcy are finally on the horizon.

With so much to look forward to in the future, it’s understand­able to not want to look back.

But returning to typical day-today life will be a transition. And from a financial standpoint, you’ll want to assess your past budgeting behavior to prepare for more normal days ahead.

Review spending

Last year’s spending didn’t look like 2019. And 2021 won’t look like either 2020 or 2019. But you’ll need this historical insight to inform your future spending, especially as you start reintroduc­ing expenses that used to be ordinary, such as concert tickets, plane tickets and so forth.

Some people’s spending decreased dramatical­ly last year (either from necessity or choice). But others faced comparable expenses, says Molly Laughter, a certified financial planner and founder of Laughter Financial

LLC in Dallas.

Remember that jungle gym for the kids to play on in the backyard? Or the Xbox for long nights of playing video games? They may have been great ways to keep you occupied and comfortabl­e at home, but now you’ll need to find a way to balance these newer expenses with your past spending on the activities you hope to

return to.

Because many of us are already taking a close look at our finances right now as we file taxes, Laughter suggests using this opportunit­y to review year-end financial summaries from your credit cards and bank accounts.

Size up each category. How much did you spend? Was it worth that amount? Would you want to continue spending that much?

Play favorites

Ever since COVID-19 became part of our vocabulary, there’s been talk that life would never return to normal. Laughter expects that your future spending will be a “new normal.” Sure, you may introduce dinners out — and possibly even a trip — to the mix, but expect to continue paying for

quarantine life staples such as deliveries and at-home activities.

According to Vid Ponnapalli, CFP and owner of Unique Financial Advisors, based in Holmdel, N.J., “There is going to be a paradigm shift with respect to how budgeting in the future will be compared to how it was preCOVID.”

This new balance means you’ll need to play favorites with your finances. After all, you can’t keep up the amount you’ve been dropping on at-home entertainm­ent and food deliveries while also upping the amount you spend on indoor dining and live shows. It just won’t all fit in the budget. Select the expenses you benefit from most.

To make the necessary adjustment­s, Laughter suggests looking at the big picture. Don’t

get too caught up in specific line items. (For example, if you’re spending 25 percent less on grocery orders, you don’t have to redirect that exact amount to dinners out.)

Instead, once your needs and savings are accounted for, set a dollar figure you can afford each month for discretion­ary expenses, then spend it on whatever you want. You may never add back in some things you used to spend money on.

As Ponnapalli says, we’ve all figured out new ways to spend less money and still have fun. Dropping thousands of dollars on concert tickets may not feel worth it anymore when you compare it with watching a (much cheaper) livestream at home.

Life hasn’t returned to normal by any means. But for many Americans, the prospect of getting a vaccine is mere weeks or months away. Use the time between now and then to prepare for what’s to come.

‘Start your clock’

Laughter says to think of it like advance notice.

“The vaccines aren’t getting out as quickly as we’d like,” she said. “So start your clock.” Begin setting aside a certain amount monthly to accomplish a goal when it’s all said and done.

For example, if you want to travel again by a certain date, use the next few months to funnel funds into a designated savings account. If your student loan payment is on hold, make a plan for how you’ll strategica­lly spend those extra funds in the meantime. And prepare for that added bill when it’s reintroduc­ed.

Whatever financial decisions you make, remember, whether we’re in a pandemic or not, the fundamenta­ls of finances don’t go away. Spread your money between things you need, things you want and savings.

Your allocation­s may change, but “the name of the game is the same as it was before: budgeting, budgeting, budgeting,” Ponnapalli said.

Here’s to better days and better budgets ahead.

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 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? Life after COVID may mean playing favorites with finances. You can’t keep up the amount for at-home entertainm­ent and food deliveries while spending more on indoor dining and live shows.
Associated Press file photo Life after COVID may mean playing favorites with finances. You can’t keep up the amount for at-home entertainm­ent and food deliveries while spending more on indoor dining and live shows.

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