The Commercial Appeal

Automated budget can be nearly painless

- Liz Weston Columnist

Budgeting is a pain. But what’s more painful is a bill you can’t easily pay, debt that costs a fortune or not having enough money to retire.

Fortunatel­y, you can have a useful, working budget without watching every penny. Automation, technology and a few simple guidelines can keep you on track.

The following approach works best if you have reasonably steady income that comfortabl­y exceeds your basic expenses. If your income isn’t steady or doesn’t cover much more than the basics, you may need to track your spending more closely.

Also, no budget in the world can fix a true income shortfall, where there’s not enough coming in to cover your basic bills. If that’s the case, you need more income, fewer expenses or outside help. One place to start your search for aid is 211.org, which provides links to charitable and government resources in many communitie­s.

Otherwise, though, you can craft a spending plan with the following steps.

Start with your must-haves

Must-have costs include housing, utilities, food, transporta­tion, insurance, minimum debt payments and child care that allows you to work. Using the 50/ 30/20 budget, these costs ideally would consume no more than 50% of your after-tax income. That leaves 30% for wants (entertainm­ent, clothes, vacations, eating out and so on) and 20% for savings and extra debt payments.

A budgeting app or your last few credit card and bank statements can help you determine your musthave costs. The more these expenses exceed that 50% mark, the harder you may find it to make ends meet. For now, you can compensate by reducing what you spend on wants. Eventually, you can look for ways to reduce some of those basic expenses, boost your income or both.

“After tax,” by the way, means your income minus the taxes you pay. If other expenses are deducted from your paycheck, such as health insurance premiums or 401(k) contributi­ons, add those amounts to your takehome pay to determine your after-tax income.

If you don’t have a steady job or are self-employed, forecastin­g your after-tax income can be tougher. You can use a previous year’s tax return or make an educated guess about the minimum income you expect to make this year. A withholdin­g calculator can help you determine what you’re likely to have left after taxes.

Automate what you can

Automatic transfers can put many financial tasks on autopilot, reducing the effort needed to achieve goals. If you don’t automate anything else, automate your retirement savings to ensure you’re saving consistent­ly.

Also consider saving money in separate accounts – often called “savings buckets” – to cover big, nonmonthly expenses such as insurance premiums, vacations and car repairs

. Online banks typically allow you to set up multiple savings accounts without requiring minimum balances or charging fees.

You can name these accounts for different goals, and automate transfers into those accounts so the money is ready when you need it.

My family typically has eight to 12 of these savings accounts at our online bank.

I figure out how much I want to have saved by a certain date, divide by the number of months until that date and send the resulting amount, via automated monthly transfers, from our checking account.

Managing what’s left

Return to your after-tax monthly income figure. Subtract your must-have expenses, your contributi­ons to retirement and savings accounts, and any extra debt payments you plan to make consistent­ly. What’s left is your spending money for the month. (Nothing left?

Try winnowing some of those must-haves or set less ambitious savings or debt pay-down goals.)

In the olden days, you might have put cash in an envelope and used it for your spending money.

Once the envelope was empty, you were supposed to stop spending. Some people still do that, but in today’s digital, contactles­s world, you might prefer other approaches.

The easiest would be to put all your spending on a single credit card that’s dedicated to this purpose and paid in full every month.

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