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Guides

Budgeting Methods

15 budgeting approaches explained - with step-by-step setup guides for Google Sheets. Each method works differently, so the right one depends on your habits, income, and goals.

Zero-Based Budget

Give every dollar a purpose. A zero-based budget assigns all income to spending, saving, or debt repayment - until you reach exactly zero.

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50/30/20 Budget

Split your income into three clear buckets. The 50/30/20 rule allocates 50% to needs, 30% to wants, and 20% to savings and debt repayment.

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80/20 Budget

Save first, spend the rest. The 80/20 budget sets aside 20% for savings and gives full flexibility with the remaining 80%.

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60/20/20 Budget

A realistic split for higher expenses. The 60/20/20 budget gives 60% to needs, 20% to wants, and 20% to savings - better suited for those whose essentials cost more.

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Envelope Budget - Digital

Allocate funds to virtual envelopes for each spending category. When an envelope is empty, spending in that category stops - a clear, visual way to stay within limits.

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Pay Yourself First

Prioritize savings before anything else. Pay yourself first means setting aside money for goals the moment income arrives - then covering expenses with what remains.

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Reverse Budget

Budget backwards - handle savings and bills first, then spend freely. The reverse budget automates the important stuff so discretionary spending takes care of itself.

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Bare Bones / Survival Budget

A budget for when every dollar counts. The bare bones budget strips spending to absolute essentials - shelter, food, utilities, and transportation - designed for tight financial periods.

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Kakeibo Method

A mindful approach to money from Japan. Kakeibo (pronounced "kah-keh-boh") uses four simple spending categories and reflective journaling to build awareness of where money goes.

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Anti-Budget

For people who hate budgeting. The anti-budget automates savings and bills, then lets you spend the rest without categories, envelopes, or tracking every purchase.

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Values-Based Budget

Spend according to what matters most. A values-based budget starts with personal priorities and builds spending categories around them - so money flows toward what genuinely matters.

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Biweekly Budget

Budget by paycheck, not by month. A biweekly budget aligns spending plans with your every-two-weeks pay schedule - matching your budget to how money actually arrives.

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Weekly Budget

Break spending into weekly chunks. A weekly budget divides monthly income into four weekly allowances, making it easier to manage cash flow and catch overspending early.

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Sinking Funds

Save gradually for predictable expenses. Sinking funds set aside small amounts monthly for large, expected costs - so annual insurance, holidays, and car repairs never hit all at once.

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Cash Stuffing - Digital Version

The TikTok-famous cash envelope method - adapted for digital life. Cash stuffing allocates every dollar to labeled categories, creating tangible spending limits without physical cash.

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