January 2011 Monthly Budget

This is my first attempt at posting our monthly budget. Each month our family sets up the budget in an Excel file and that guides our expenses for the month. We do not make any purchases that do not come from expense categories in the budget.

After doing this for a couple of years, we have gotten to the point where this part of our personal finances is largely on auto-pilot. We do adjust the budget, but many months, there are no changes and we just copy the budget from the baseline column I set up for that purpose.

It is definitely recommended for people just starting out with budgeting to have real family budget meetings every month. If you get to the point where you’re used to the budget and your finances are on auto-pilot, that’s great, but don’t try and rush it.

A few discussion points about our budget here since this is the first time:

  • We wanted a file that let us fill out our budget categories the way we wanted to and showed that we were staying within a zero-based budget. Our Excel file automatically tallies up the income and different expense categories and shows a zero sum if we’re doing it correctly.
  • As I mentioned earlier, our budget includes a baseline column which is basically a budget for a typical month. Each month, we start out by copying the baseline budget into the month column, and making whatever adjustments we need to make for the month. After doing this for a few years and squeezing a lot of blood out of the turnip so to speak, few or no adjustments are required.
  • We include many lines for paychecks, which is a legacy format from when we were DINKS (Dual Income No Kids) and had four or more paychecks in a given month, not to mention rental property income.
  • There is an income category for “Found/Carryover”. We realized that the easiest way to keep the budget from getting all screwy with things like store returns, refund checks, or literally found money, was to treat it like an additional paycheck and deposit it on the first of the month, the following month and enter it in the budget as a paycheck.
  • Our emergency fund is fully funded at our current level (6 months of expenses), so that is why that category has $0 allocated to it.
  • We separate out cash envelopes (literally envelopes we carry cash around in that we get from the ATM once a month) and checking envelopes (virtual accounts we keep in Quicken, but use in the exact same way we would use a cash envelope, except that there is no cash.  The current breakdown works the best for us.  Some people use a lot more cash envelopes, and some use none.
  • At the bottom of our budget, I added a little monthly bill checklist which each time I make a payment to one of our monthly bills, I put a little x in the box, so I know where I stand for the month.
  • The debt snowball envelope is a virtual account we use for our Dave Ramsey Debt Snowball debt elimination method. Essentially, it’s all the money we have in the budget that is not budgeted to another expense, and is used to pay down the principal on our existing debt. Since we only have one debt left (the land mortgage) this is the extra amount we are applying to that debt for the month.
  • For the month of January (and most months, since they all have a fairly similar budget) we have $7177.03 in income, $4007.91 in monthly expenses, with a debt snowball of $3169.12, meaning we are living on 55.84% of our income for the month and applying the rest to our debt.
Income Baseline January
Paycheck #1 $3,657.87 $3,519.16
Paycheck #2 $3,657.87 $3,657.87
Paycheck #3 $0.00 $0.00
Paycheck #4 $0.00 $0.00
Paycheck #5 $0.00 $0.00
Found / Carryover $0.00 $0.00
Total $7,315.74 $7,177.03
Savings Funds Baseline January
Emergency Fund $0.00 $0.00
Combined Property Tax $581.00 $581.00
Total $581.00 $581.00
Cash Envelopes Baseline January
Date Money $120.00 $120.00
His Fun Money $60.00 $60.00
Hers Fun Money $60.00 $60.00
Clothing $60.00 $60.00
Groceries $300.00 $300.00
Gift Giving $40.00 $40.00
Misc $60.00 $60.00
Total $700.00 $700.00
Checking Envelopes Baseline January
Land Mortgage $1,287.20 $1,287.20
Sprint $135.00 $135.00
Electric $125.00 $125.00
HOA Dues $50.00 $50.00
Haircuts $50.00 $50.00
Grocery Game $5.00 $5.00
Tolltags $10.00 $10.00
Veterinarian $100.00 $100.00
Automotive $100.00 $100.00
Gasoline $150.00 $150.00
Medical $50.00 $50.00
Natural Gas $75.00 $75.00
Life Insurance $81.38 $81.38
Travelers $218.33 $218.33
Cable/Phone/Internet $160.00 $160.00
Water Company $60.00 $60.00
Vacation $0.00 $0.00
Baby Emergency Fund $0.00 $0.00
Dog Food $40.00 $40.00
Baby $30.00 $30.00
Misc. $100.00 $0.00
Debt Snowball $3,207.83 $3,169.12
Total $6,034.74 $5,896.03
Zero Based Budget January
Income $7,315.74 $7,177.03
Savings Funds ($581.00) ($581.00)
Cash Envelopes ($700.00) ($700.00)
Checking Envelopes ($6,034.74) ($5,896.03)
Total $0.00 $0.00
Monthly Bill Checklist January
Land Mortgage x
Electric Company
Cell Phone Company x
Insurance Company
Life Insurance #1 x
Life Insurance #2 x
Cable/Phone/Internet
Water Company
Gas Company x
This entry was posted in Budgeting. Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>