Ask the Readers: But HOW Do You Track Every Penny You Spend?
Published on - July 8th, 2011 (by J.D. Roth) It’s tough to dig out of debt (or make other changes to your spending habits) if you don’t know where your money goes. I tried for years to turn things around, but was unsuccessful until I started tracking every penny I spent. Armed with info about my actual spending habits (instead of perceived patterns), I was able to make a realistic budget.
But getting started with expense tracking can be overwhelming. There’s so much data! Where do you begin? That’s what Crystal wants to know. She writes:
I’m a little confused. How do you track every penny you spend? Isn’t that what receipts are for? I’m confused (or maybe I’m overthinking it). Let me explain.
Say I stop at a gas station and spend $30 on gas, $2.15 for a Red Bull, and $4.10 for a gas treatment. My receipt already says that, so why rewrite it?
Or at the grocery store, what do you do here? $X on dairy, $X on meat, $X on lunch stuff, and so on? Do I count eating with co-workers as networking? What about fast food that I buy because I’m too lazy to cook? Should this be lumped into the food category or separated out?
How do you actually track your spending? Could you or your readers share some examples?
This is yet another question for which there’s no one right answer. Different people need to track their spending in different ways. That said, I can offer some general guidelines.
First, a tracking system is only effective if you actually use it. You can design the greatest tracking system in the world, and it doesn’t matter a whit if you never enter your expenses. Because of this, you need to do what works for you. By that I mean that Crystal should try a system that seems promising and if that doesn’t work, try something else. Don’t give up if the first method doesn’t work. There’s always another method that might do the trick.
From talking with GRS readers, it seems clear that the more complex a system gets — the more detailed the tracking — the more likely it is to break down. I’ve certainly found this to be true in my own life.
I like the idea of breaking my food category into subcategories like:
- Meat
- Dairy
- Produce
- Beverages
- Junk Food
- Entertaining
- Restaurants
In reality, though, tracking this level of detail makes my head hurt. It makes me not want to do my finances. Instead, I track just two food categories: Groceries and Dining Out. That’s enough detail for me to spot trends and to make changes. By tracking only a couple of dozen categories, I’m able to spot trouble without being overwhelmed by unimportant stuff.
This leads us to the cardinal rule of expense tracking: Track the stuff that matters. Decide which categories you need the most information about and track them. For me, that means tracking how much money goes to books and comic books. I know these are my weak spots, so I have to monitor myself. Each person will track different categories. For instance:
- If you don’t care how much you spend on books, don’t have a separate category for them. Lump them into your general Entertainment category.
- But if you want more detail about a category, create a subcategory. For instance, you might want to know how much you’re spending on iTunes; if so, create an iTunes subcategory in your Entertainment category.
In general, it’s best to start with broad categories and add detail as needed.
It’s also important to record your expenses often. If you set aside a few minutes every day (or maybe half an hour every weekend), it’s vastly easier to track your spending than if you have tackle the task only once a month. In my own case, I’ve found it’s best to designate an hour a week for “doing my finances”. At this time, I record the week’s transactions and pay my bills. This is what works for me.
Lastly: Why doesn’t it work to just use your receipts for expense tracking? Well, for some people it might, but I suspect those folks are few and far between. I know that for me, just having the receipts doesn’t accomplish anything. Yes, I could look at them to see how much I spent, but there’s no way to organize this data or to get an overview of my spending habits unless I categorize it somehow. Receipts are a temporary record of your spending; for this information to be useful, you need to store it in a more permanent way. (In the olden days, this meant using some sort of ledger book. Nowadays that means using a spreadsheet, a software program like Quicken, or an online tool like Mint.)
What about you? Do you track your expenses? If so, how? What level of detail do you go to? What categories do you use? Have your methods changed over the years? Or do you find expense tracking just too much overkill? What words of wisdom can you offer Crystal?
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Quicken. It’s indispensable, for those of us who truly have very little time. (in our case, 4 kids, 2 careers, homeschooling … but would work for anyone similarly time-stretched
)
We run everything through a credit card and it’s all automatically downloaded into Quicken daily.
Transactions are ready for review after daily download. I just hit “Approve All”, after verifying that Quicken has categorized everything correctly. If we shop at a new place, Quicken won’t know how to categorize it, so I enter the category. Then it guesses that category next time we have a transaction at that place.
Limitations: yes, we use broad categories. If we buy something big like a computer at Costco, I break that out manually using the Costco receipt. But generally, everything bought at Costco automatically goes to Food:Groceries.
All our bank accounts, 401(k), kids’ college funds, credit cards, just about everything is downloaded automatically. I just go and edit for errors or brand-new transactions. Our goal is to have stuff automated as much as possible, as far as the technical *recording* function.
We want the time we allocate to finances to be spent on analysis, decisions and planning.
(Could just as easily do this with a debit card, I’m sure. We use a credit card that we pay ahead so there’s always a credit … because my husband has researched it and maintains credit cards have more protection against identity theft loss than debit cards … it works for us.)
P.S. Great blog, JD. You have helped our family with your tips on ING savings accounts, British Airways VISA deals, etc. Thank you!
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I use a recycled envelope to keep a month’s receipts on magnetic clip on our fridge. Every receipt goes in. At the end of the month, I separate out gas, groceries, work related (for tax deduction), entertainment (including meals out), and household. Add them up, and stick them in my tax accordion file (I’m old school), where I add them to the previous months’ accumulations. Our accordion file also includes catergories like insurance, property taxes, medical expenses, car expenses, but those tend to be more intermittent, many only once a year. Takes about an hour at most, works for us.
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I use Excel. The categories for my Living Expenses are:
Rent
Utilities
Internet
Phone
Food
-Groceries
-Breakfast
-Lunch
-Dinner
-Treats
-Other
Car
-Gas
-Insurance
-Maintenance
Medical
-Doctor
-Prescriptions/OTC
Home
-Toiletries
-Household
-Other
Entertainment
Gifts
Laundry
Clothes
Student Loan
Girlfriend
Travel
Miscellaneous
With Food, Car, Medical, and Home broken down. My categories for Debt/Saving Expenses are:
Student Loan (extra payments)
Roth IRA
Invest
My Income categoreies are:
Job
MRA
Gifts
CC Rebates
Interest
Misc.
Each one is deducted/added to the proper source: Cash, Checking, Chase BP, Target Card. This gives me a complete overview of where I stand. I also have sheets for Retirement, Investments, Student Loan, Net Worth, etc. Since I’m single it takes about 2 minutes to update everyday, and about 45 minutes every six months to transition to a new spreadsheet. It is definitely worth it though to see the cash and net worth charts going up and up every month.
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I think it’s funny that you have a “Girlfiend” category – lol – that’s so cute! Talk about do what works for you!
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I am really horrible at staying motivated enough to track every penny via budgeting. I follow the strategy given below.
– All our savings go first either via payroll deductions (401k etc.)
– Automatic deductions from our bank (IRAs, savings goals).
– The mortgage and other regular bills are set to auto pay.
– Utilities and other variable bills are set to go the day after payday.
– We put all our spending on credit cards (for rewards) and this is paid in full the day after payday.
Whatever is left is for us to spend monthly. We do live frugally. This works for us.
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I use my iPhone camera to capture the receipt. About twice a month, I go through all the images in my receipts album and key them into the various categories. I love watching the running totals and how they compare to the previous month.
I totally agree on keeping the categories broad – sometimes you can really over-engineer a solution!
Like most things, the process is only effective if applied consistently, and if there are some metrics or goals around it, e.g., reduce entertainment expenses by 10% next month.
Great post. Thanks for sharing to all commenters!!
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I would love to use a program like Quicken however just have not been able to afford computer software as of yet. What I do is simply keep a notebook for now as I tend to lose reciepts. One page logs income for the month and the sources of income. Then I keep a running tab where I mark the date and how much was spent on what. Food is broken down to Food, Dining out, Personal Products and Spices. I keep a seperate catagory for spices simply because technically they are not a food item and when one loves to cook, spices can get out of hand when not kept track of how much I spend in this area! At the end of the month I break everything down into the catagories that work for us for tabulations, adding everything up, usually I am right on the money but sometimes i do forget to log something and come up with up to $30 unaccounted for. Once I have the tabulations done, I go to the WALL CHART I use that is a 2 year graph that charts, income, expenses and investments. The Wall chart has the whole family involved and knowing where we are and my 13 and 10 year old kids are the first ones in line watching me do the graphing to see how we did for the month! I use a green line for income, a red line for expenses and a black line for investments. I am much more aware of our spending habits and weaker areas doing it this way and it helps me keep the discipline for reaching our goals!
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Quicken Online and Mint.com are both free software programs that might suit your needs. You should check them out if that’s the things holding you back from purchasing.
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We have a conscious record of what we spend and on what. We do have auto-pay on some of the items below, but we also keep a hand-written record as a backup system and divide it into these categories-
-MAC (debit which includes food and gas)
-doctor
-mortgage
-utilities
-Life Ins
-HOA fees
Other expenses like kids clothing/shoes/car repair/home maintenance goes onto credit card and that gets paid off monthly.
The bank has an 800 number that can be dialed to get a balance of the account but we find that the balance is not always 100% accurate. I found that out the hard way after overdrawing and ended up paying $35 overdraft fees. With the system we have now (conscious spending + writing things down), we have not had an issue.
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I approach the problem from the other end. I do not track each penny that I spend. There is a simpler method – track each penny that is invested and saved.
I invest and save heavily. I’m building wealth at a rate $17k per year, on a 48k annual income. Where the rest of it goes doesn’t matter.
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I use a program called ledger, which lets me track my finances in a simple, no fuss text file and then run reports on it. I track every penny that goes through my checking, savings, and investment accounts. Generally I don’t track cash, treating it as a big black hole where money goes to die (i.e. “Expenses:Cash”). I have a bunch of tools that I’ve worked up around ledger, too, including a reporting tool that I just blogged about:
http://bugsplat.info/2011-07-09-program-your-finances-reporting-for-fun-and-profit.html
Ledger probably is only a good fit for you if you’re already comfortable with the command line and plain text files, but if those two fit you then you’ll get a lot out of it.
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I talk a lot about this free itunes app called Spending Lite on my blog. The link is below here for anyone interested, but it is a simple way of tracking income and expenses. Expenses have categories such as food, bills, and transportation which get split into subcategories such as groceries, restaurants, electricity, gas, planes or taxi.
http://thesmartnickel.blogspot.com/2011/05/budgeting-app-spendinglite.html
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Regardless of how you decide to break down your categories, and I just stick with the default categories in Quicken, it’s important to find a system that you can stick with over time. For example, if you start out breaking down food into many categories and then switch to a generic category of “food”, it becomes very difficult to compare spending habits over time. You need to keep things consistant to get any comparison value. Personally, I find monitoring changes over time to be one of the primary reasons for tracking expenses. That way you can see if the changes you are making are working. In one sense it’s not really important if you call a lunch out with a colleague “dining” or “networking” as long as you treat it the same way every time. I also don’t bother tracking cash expenses down to the last penny. I usually round it up to the next dollar or two and that helps compensate for the inevitable forgotten item.
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My name is Jenn and I track every penny. There, that feels better.
It started 4yrs ago when my husband was laid off and I didn’t have a good sense of what our very basic expenses were and how much was discretionary. Kind of important to know when you go from two incomes to one. I only intended to track everything for a month or two to see how much panicing over the layoff was warranted. To my surprise and disgust I learned our absolute basics (assuming we stayed in our current home) were covered by 55-60% of our income and the rest was not officially allocated. Kind of disturbing to find out how much we were wasting without thinking about it. With a year+ of severance pay he received, of course we were fine, but the exercise of analyzing our in/out flow of cash was life changing moment in our lives. Ever since I’ve had an endless running list down an Excel spreadsheet (4 years in and I haven’t reached the limit on the number of rows in a spreadsheet). I list out the expected essentials for every week for the next year. As the weeks pass I replace the plug number with the actual expense. Virtually everything is paid on our VISA for the flight mileage and every Friday after the pay is received, I pay off all the charges that have been processed (view my VISA account online). Then I transfer out any money in the account over $1000 and contribute to our retirement accounts or make an extra mortgage payment. Because we live so far under our means (by choice) there is always excess at the end of the week. If we spend on anything that was not listed as a planned essential we just have that much less “excess” to transfer out that week. If we want/need to plan for a big expense (take a vacation, replace a car, redo the roof etc) we just don’t do those weekly transfers and let the excess accumulate. Because we’re so used to spending only the essentials there is no temptation to spend the money sitting there. In our minds it’s all tagged for a specific purpose and we consider it already spent.
Having our entire year of essential spending mapped out in advance means I can see how much extra we’ll potentially have if we do absolutely nothing extra. Of course that won’t happen. Sooner or later we will actually eat in a restaurant, but because we don’t plan to do it and enter it in a a budgetted item, we don’t feel like we’re supposed to, or that we’ve already given ourselves permission. Same with adult allowances. If we want something and feel it’s worth the price we get it. I am absolutely sure if we allocated ourselves $X per week we would spend it. Because there is nothing extra in the plan, every purchase gets the proper consideration before we do it. We buy 3yr old cars, always pay cash and drive them until they go to the dump at 10-11yrs old. We don’t have cable or satelite, we eat out maybe 6 times a year on birthdays. To someone who lives to go out that would sound like torture, but those things couldn’t be less important to us. Instead we spend wildly (according to a vocal and critical aunt) on our vacations. It’s our one splurge in an otherwise frugal lifestyle and I wouldn’t have it anyother way. We intend to retire early and other a big trip every other year (eg month in Europe) we life a very simple lifestyle. I love reading about how others track their spending, but the bottom line is the less you spend the less there is to track…
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We failed with Quicken. We found YNAB (You Need A Budget) and that is the tool that we use. It’s simple and effective. We established categories on the budget page and then we assign each expense to the correct category. The budget always reads $0 if it is done correctly– every dollar is assigned so that we are not just tracking what we spent, but where it is going to go. In other words, we don’t just look back at what we did, we use our budget to plan for the future, short and long term.
We have our household, utilities, food, vehicle, pets, savings, travel, and kids as categories. receipts are placed by the computer and the budget software allows us to download from our checking accounts. we are then able to quickly click through debits and assign the category. If there is not enough money in that category, the balance goes red and we have to cover it within the budget. I like this software because it is easy to split a transaction into several categories by just clicking on them. Very nice.
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Forgive me if this has already been said in the comments–I haven’t read all of them. But in the past, we have tried saving our receipts and making an excel sheet and seeing how much we spend in categories. But we would always fall behind with a back-log of receipts, or DH would forget to bring in receipts, etc. Then we tried just writing them down in a spiral notebook at the end of each day (or as soon as we could), but inevitably we’d forget, or something. I think for us anyway, it has to be something that is instant…as soon as we make a purchase, logging it. This post got me thinking—I wish there was an app for that! LOL So I looked, and sure enough there ARE apps for tracking your expenses. Some cost up to $5, but there were several for free. I’m downloading one now and plan to try it out!
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We used Microsoft Money for years and, now that it has been discontinued, we’ve moved to using Mint. We just couldn’t get used to Quicken (and yeah, I know Quicken owns Mint now).
Being able to see all your purchases in pretty much real time is great – especially since there’s an iPhone app for Mint. If I had to record every purchase by hand or even in other software, I’d never do it.
But reviewing purchases a couple of times per day? No problem.
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I used to track EVERYTHING in Quicken back in the day but never really budgeted or anything. In recent times I found myself on the wrong side of trouble and dusted off Quicken but found I needed something other than Quicken’s 20:20 hindsight.
Day to day I was tracking expenses in a pocket notebook. I am using YNAB software to budget for the month ahead and entered the expenses here. I gifted myself the YNAB iphone app as I carry an ipod ‘everywhere’, I enter expenses in this now and sync it with the YNAB software.
I could let go of the obsessive tracking that Quicken enabled or maybe I’ve loosened up a little. YNAB works for me best when I track the bottom line of my paycheck and not include any of the deductions.
Cash expenses I round upwards, so if a bill is €11.36, I enter it as €12.00 and at the end of the day put coins in a jar, which I will cash in coming up to Christmas and it never fails to astonish me as to how much it adds up to.
I budget using the GRS / All You’re Worth ‘Balance Money Formula’
There are three main categories of Needs, Wants and Savings. Keep it simple sub-categories – Rent, Bills, Charity, Holidays, Savings, etc. To me all expenses matter so I track them all but a simple system matters more so I have broad categories for those expenses.
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I use excel. I import credit card and bank transactions and categorize them in 11 basic categories (similar to what others have already shared)
I am wondering, however, if there is any place that would allow me to see how my spending compares to the national average. I like to think I’m a frugal person (80% of my food expense is for groceries/cooking at home, 20% is for dining out), and definitely within my budget… But is under $600 for food for 2 adults high or low? Am in the San Francisco (California) area and probably buy about 75-85% organic groceries. Of course, my groceries includes both food I plan to cook/eat now, and stocking up non-perishable items when they go on sale. I could probably eat for weeks out of my pantry and I will stock up when organic beans are on sale at 0.89 each (I have 20 cans of organic chickpeas in the pantry right now)
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While a few people have recommended using a notebook, or setting aside time each week to track expenses, I couldn’t be bothered with that.
For me, the single best way to keep accurate records is, after every purchase, make a note in my smartphone’s notepad function. I keep a file for each month, and assign my categories at the end of the month in an excel file. I barely even think about it now – after paying, all it takes is a glance at my receipt and I’ll enter the information in shorthand into my phone.
Bonus, nobody will ever ask what you are doing/look at you strangely, and just assume you are sending a message.
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I completely agree that the more complicated you make, the more work it is and the less likely you will continue to track everything.
My wife and I both have accounting backgrounds so our budget is already a bit more complicated than the average person’s budget. But even we only have two categories for food; groceries and eating out (actual our eating out is combined with out ‘entertainment’ category.
However now that it is in my head, I am curious how much we spend soley on ice cream! Usually it just gets lumped in with groceries.
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I started tracking my income, expenses, and investments just over 2 years ago. Financially speaking, it is probably one of the best investments I made.
I am using a personal finance software, similar to Quicken. I used to break my expenses down to the most detailed level (e.g. vegetables, meat, etc.), but in the end I found this very irrelevant. Now, I categorized my expenses according to its purpose, or function. For example, I use a category “Food and Beverage”, which I split into ‘Groceries’ for the necessary food I buy in the supermarket, and “To Go”, which is food and drinks that I buy quickly on the go.
My restaurant expenses, on the other hand, are categorized under “Sports & Leisure”, just as Cafes and Bars, as well as Cinema or Health Clubs.
My main purpose is not to track exactly WHAT I spend my money on, but HOW I spend my money, which pretty much reflects my mood, or how lazy I am in a given month. For example, when I am single, I spend less time in restaurants and more time in bars. Being in a relationship, my restaurant expenses have gone up.
I usually do not use budgets for individual categories, since I do not want to limit myself too much. However, the software will tell me my expenses during any given time in the month. Thus, I set an expense limit for each month, and stick to that, while being flexible how I spread it over the different categories.
Cheers,
Alex
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I use Mint to categorize just about every purchase that shows up but leave cash as is. I also only budget for rent, bills, income and everything else.
I used to budget in much further detail but realized that it didn’t matter what I was spending it on as long as it was within my budget. If I want more details I can use the other features Mint provides (trends, etc).
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Oooooh, great question! I’ve been tracking my spending for many years and have found a system that works well for me. Here’s what I do:
1) Payment Type: I try to put everything possible on plastic (either credit or debit – usually credit). Obviously it goes without saying that I pay my CC bill in full every month.
2) Adding it up: At the end of the month I take a look at my accounts and total everything up using a spreadsheet I created in Excel. I especially like doing my CC trx because I can export them and then use the magic of pivot tables to cut down my work.
3) Bill splitting: For me, the total bill gets attributed to one category. So if I bought a packet of transit passes at the grocery store along with my groceries, it goes into the grocery category instead of the public transit category. I go by the motto “the perfect is the enemy of the good!” (Wonder where I heard that
) I’d prefer if everything was perfect, but it’s good enough.
4) Receipts: I don’t use receipts. Receipts are bulky and annoying. I don’t save them and don’t rely on them for record keeping.
5) Cash: I don’t track spending in cash, instead I simply track ATM withdrawls and deposits. I have a general idea of what I spend cash on and can confirm that I use very little of it via my “ATM withdrawal” and “ATM Deposit” categories.
6) Choosing categories: My categories have evolved logically over time. They include things like Rent, Utilities, Groceries, Dining Out, Shopping, Entertainment/books/music, Travel, Liquor, Salon/Spa, Gas, Car Expenses, Public Transit, Charity, Gifts…and so on. When the need arises I create a new category and use it going forward. Just like JD, I try to keep it simple and only drill down when I find I’m not getting the information that I need (that’s how Car Expenses became distinct from Gas).
7) Electronic Tools: I don’t use tools like Mint.come to track my spending because I feel too far detached from the information when I do. However, I think this is a great option for people who don’t enjoy the process like I do. I do use a few electronic tools though to make things easier. I used to use a spreadsheet in Goggle Docs, but eventually it became slow because there was too much info in the sheet. At that time I switched back to Excel (delightful, full featured Excel!) and store the document in my Dropbox so that I can access it in a variety of locations. And of course I have all electronic accounts and statements to make gathering the info easier.
Hope this is helpful to you! I now have years worth of spending tracked and it’s been very valuable for me. I’m constantly surprised by how few people do this. But then, I’m weird and I genuinely enjoy completing the task.
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Regarding the literal writing down of expenses, I use a pocketmod (pocketmod.com), tucked into a pocket in my purse. It’s a nifty sheet you customize and print out, and then fold into a little book. I use a few pages for a to-do list, and the rest for expenses. I generally use one a month. I agree with the above comment about notebooks and such being easier for women to carry around due to the ubiquitous nature of purses, but this is just a folded sheet of paper so it can easily fit in a pocket too. Though I’d imagine that laundry days would be fairly hazardous for your tracking endeavor!
While I try to write stuff down as soon as I spend anything, often I find myself going over my credit card statements to fill in the gaps every few days.
For overall tracking, I have a Google spreadsheet so that I can access and update it from anywhere with internet access. My categories are pretty broad. Note that I’m only tracking MY spending right now, not our shared spending as a couple and a household. Oh, and they’re in totally random order:
-joint contribution (what I put into the account we share for bills and such)
-personal savings account
-car maintenance
-student loan
-credit cards (old debt I’m paying off)
-gas
-commuting (I’m in a vanpool)
-medical expenses
-entertainment
-eating out
-household
-wedding (tracking expenses for our upcoming wedding; the darn things are expensive!)
-gifts
-food (grocery)
-vacations
-health insurance
-clothing
-other
With such broad categories I used to be bothered by not knowing exactly what the number meant (did I spent that $50 in ‘entertainment money’ on movies or games or what last January?), so I found a compromise that let me retain that information without having to make umpteen little fiddly categories. I’ll have one column for the amounts, and then one next to it for a list of specifics (‘Hoodwinked DVD, Amazon MP3s for ballroom dance, Dungeon Siege III’). I can always make the column small so it doesn’t take up much horizontal space, and then expand it if I get curious. Also, I highly recommend having an ‘other’ category, as long as you can track what actually goes in there. It avoids the existential crisis when you can’t seem to fit a random one-time expense into the existing categories.
Oh, and breaking groceries down by type? Totally too much work. Don’t bother, unless you REALLY groove on it.
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I really liked this article. Great and useful information to use.
On the subject of using receipts; I always keep my receipts for a back up. but once a week I see whats left from my account and make sure the amount deducted adds up to the correct amount. I find it more effient and less time consuming to track expenses on a weekly basis.
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At the moment I have a twenty dollar bill in my wallet. The little post it note stuck on it reads June 5th. Yes, it’s been in there over a month and I don’t see it being spent anytime soon. I put absolutely everything possible on my credit card and then pay it off every Friday after the pay is received. Then I evaluate the balance in the account and transfer out everything over $1000 to my retirement accounts or make an extra mortgage payment.
I use an excel spreadsheet to plan out my spending for a year in advance. Each week I replace the planned amounts with the actual numbers. Saturday I came home from errands and dropped the VISA receipts for groceries and gas on the keyboard. Next time I check emails I’ll take 1 minute to enter the numbers and I’m done. Every Friday I check the online VISA account and pay off the charges that have been processed. Having all our spending planned out a year in advance really allows you to assess what you can afford at any point in time. Whenever I mention my method of planning I always get the same reaction – how can you know now what you will spend 6 months from now? In our lives anyway there are really very few surprises. We buy about the same amount of groceries every week. We each fill our gas tank once a week. The mortgage and property taxes are fixed amounts that are automatically withdrawn from our bank account. Based on previous years (here’s where the detailed tracking helps) I know what our electric bills will be in summer vs winter. I put in $200 for the dog’s annual visit every May. I know the day of the month the phone, cell and internet bills will be charged to the VISA. It’s no surprise, they are all predictable months/years in advance. The unknowns are all the nonessentials in life. Because we live pretty frugally in most ways and earn two good salaries, we have excess income each week. Because we so seldom buy clothes or eat out we don’t even budget for them. It’s too hard to predict when we’ll spend in either category so when it happens it just gets added to the spreadsheet and there’s slightly less excess that week. I don’t bother categorizing our expenses in anyway. I did it years ago just for fun and found that we were well within the recommended guidelines. At first glance we do spend more than the recommended percentage on housing, but that’s because we are paying down our mortgage on an accellerated plan. I also find the recommendations of 10-15% for savings amusing and aim for 30% as a bare minimum. Although when you have no car payments, no debt repayments, and generally live pretty frugally that does free up a lot of cash for other things. At first tracking every cent was a little bit of a pain, but the first few months let us know that we could cover the basis just fine on one income and the other was therefore available for retirement savings, extra mortgage payments and occasionally a terrific trip. If I didn’t know precisely what we “ought” to be spending, I suspect the excess would be wasted on forgettable consumption instead of consciously putting it toward getting us to early retirement and the next great holiday. Those aren’t everyone’s priorities, but once you identify what you are working toward, it sure makes it easy to do the little extra work it takes to monitor your spending to make sure you stay on track.
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I use Quicken to track my expenses. I download them in about once a week. When I am out and about I put the receipts that I get in my wallet and then when my expenses are in quicken I go back and break out the specifics of each purchase. So I do breakdown non grocery items from the grocery store etc. One thing I don’t track is cash, but I budget how much that is allowed to be per month!
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