thread: Tell me about your budget!

  1. #1
    Registered User

    Dec 2007
    Sunny Qld
    14,682

    Tell me about your budget!

    Ok - now I've made the "responsible" decision of getting rid of all debt except for the mortgage....

    How do you guys budget? What do you normally allow for everything? Last time I had to budget was back in 2002, when my exH and I had to live on $27,000pa combined (cos I was a student) and we had to pay rent of $140 a week, and a car loan of $125. I got by on $50 a week for food for the two of us. I can't even comprehend HOW I did that now, considering its hard getting it under $300 a week for us now.

    So what does everyone put aside for their electricity, phone, and everything else that pops up? I was putting away $80 a week for everything (other than food) and it just wasn't enough, so obviously I stuffed up somewhere!!!

    I'm wanting to do this properly - and I know that we will follow a budget cos we're not that irresponsible (yes, totally skimming past the fact that I just got rid of $17,000 worth of debt!) but there were a couple of big ticket items in there that we HAD to get and we didn't have the money and the credit card was a lifesaver at the time.

    Anyhoo - sorry.. off the track a bit.

    How do you guys budget? How much?
    TIA!!

  2. #2
    2013 BellyBelly RAK Recipient.

    May 2007
    Brisbane
    5,310

    Ok, so I pay rent first.

    Put aside $150 a week for food.

    -phone bill is about $300 a month (net, both mobiles, landline and foxtel)
    -electricity is about $80-90 a month
    So I put aside $100 a week for those.

    For rego I put aside about $20 a week for regos.
    $50 for fuel.

    All that usually takes up Shels pay.

    Then we pay loans and CC with my account. Pretty much as much as we can with leaving a little bit for just in case measures through the week.

    The hardest thing for us to keeping our weekly shopping down, its usually $100 but the extra 50 is for during the week when we go OOPS forgot this, that and something else.

    At the end of the week/fortnight I do like an inventory, and work out how much left over I have and thats our play money. Usually only $100 in a fortnight but enough to have maccas, me to have coffee with my BB girls and spend a little at big w LOL.

    We are pretty tight. As in tightass lol. It's saved us MANY a time!

  3. #3
    Registered User

    Aug 2007
    3,526

    My DH would be the one to talk to about this - he is FANTASTIC with money!!!!

    Bascially we have a VLOC - so everything goes in that (u have to be very careful with it and strict)- we also have a credit card in which we pay for everything on and at the end of the month we pay it off completly so we dont have to pay interest or anything - and the points we get from our credit card we use to pay the yearly fee or whatever it is for the card - so really our card costs us nothing!
    Also we have $50 each a fortnight spending money just for the little things like if he is at work and wants to buy a drink or a chocolate etc.... and i use mine for when i go out to coffee with BB ladies!

    Also when the bills come in we always round them up - so its a little less next time!

  4. #4
    Registered User

    Dec 2007
    Sunny Qld
    14,682

    Thanks Leash... I have to start being a tight ass with you... LOL

    Thanks HJ - I know DH likes to round things up too - although I never normally bother too - but its a great suggestion - thanks!!!

    Ok.. best go work out how much money I pay out for things.. christ. that COULD be scary..

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Sep 2008
    1,350

    Arimeh..

    If you go onto one of the banks website's they have budget planners on there, that you can download and save. Excel has a good one as well .. all for free

    I looked at all our past bills,rates, rego, phone etc, and figured out how much I needed to pay each week. I like working in a weekly budget, and I bpay the money on the bills before the bills arrive, so when they do arrive I dont owe anything.

    I found if I put the money into a saving account, we would dip into it, something would always come up.

    You have to be so diciplined, let us know how you go ...

    Mine and DH'd big discussion is " how much play money he should have each week" ... he thinks $150.00 a week after petrol and lunches, is fine.. I think its insanely over the TOP !!! What do you guys think..

    And how much do your significant others and yourselves allow for your "play money" ?

  6. #6
    Registered User

    Dec 2006
    In my own private paradise
    15,272

    electricity - ring the company and ask them to average your bill over the year and then just pay that. i pay fortnightly and it doesn't phase me seeing that money go out of the bank cos it's automatic. being on mains gas (if you have gas) you should be able to do the same (we're on bottled, so have to budget for it)

    water, you can kinda work out yourself and pay it off like that. just have a look at a water bill, work out how much it is weekly or fortnightly, and pay that out

    phone - same thing - just work out what your average bill is and pay that portion when you get paid. for us, it's about 120 a fortnight for house phone and mobiles (but we have high mobile plans given our living situation with DH being away so much)

    set up a seperate account for money for rates and rego - smooth it over a year and put that much per fortnight into the account. IF you have to dip into it for something before that money is due to be paid out (last resort) work out how much you've taken out, and then you have to pay more back into it until those bills come due

    fuel, work out your average fortnight and then add AT LEAST 20% to cover fluctuations. if you dont use it, save it - there will always be stuff that crops up that you need to get to or pay for, so that extra is a godsend. our fuel when i'm working is about $100 a fortnight (as you know, i live in the sticks, so no choice but to travel) - we budget $150 a fortnight from my pay to fork out for fuel - the normal expenses come out of that, the extra $50 is for incidentals like the trips we were doing for IVF or are now doing for hospital. if you can, put extra aside for services. work out how much the average service is, how often, put it aside

    insurance - not sure if you have PHI or not, but a lot of companies will, for both PHI and your car/home/contents allow you to pay by the month (or we've lucked into fortnightly payments) - i have an account that money goes into just for this. have never missed a payment, never been without insurance cover in the 11 years since i first got cover.

    groceries are hard to budget cos your needs and things vary depending on the time of year and whether kids are eating solids. work out an average bill, and budget an extra amount (as Leasha said, the extra $50 is her safety net) - buy in BULK where you can. it seems a lot at the time, but the long term savings are huge!

    one REALLY important thing - budget "play money" for you and DH - doesn't need to be much, really depends on your lifestyle - but ALWAYS allow an amount each week or fortnight that you don't need to justify. it might be the money for takeaway when you're out, might be money you spend on getting your hair done - but it's money you don't have to include in your justifications - it's simply $30 a week (as an example) that either of you have to spend that you don't have to try to explain. if it goes on chocolate, so be it - if you go out to lunch, so be it. it takes the "stigma" off living on a budget if you have money to play with. if you don't spend it, put it in a money box (i really do this!) at the end of the week and it's your own little emergency fund. mine lives in a glasses case and last count there was about $60 in shrapnel that i hadn't put in our savings money boxes - it is MY safety net if something is needed kwim?

    good luck

    BG

  7. #7
    2013 BellyBelly RAK Recipient.

    May 2007
    Brisbane
    5,310

    I agree with BG, play money is really important. It's like a diet raelly, if you cut something out completely you're gonna end up going over the top with it eventually. If you don't budget for play money, if you're too strict, you'll blow the whole budget and be back where you started (or worse, if you have a buying binge).

  8. #8
    Registered User

    Dec 2007
    Sunny Qld
    14,682

    This is what I've got so far

    Outgoings
    Mortgage payment 388
    Food 250
    Electricity 25
    Phone 55
    Petrol 50
    Rates 37
    Insurance 30
    NIB 39
    child care 78
    foxtel 15
    World Vision 10
    Miscellaneous 98
    Rego 20

    That takes basically ALL our weekly pays.. arghh!! like, all but 50c !!!!

  9. #9
    Registered User

    Nov 2004
    WA
    414

    I'm thinking that your food bill is fairly high...this may be a place you can cut $$ out - do you meal plan??

  10. #10
    mybabylove Guest

    we dont budget but think we may have to start as i will not be working soon.

  11. #11
    Registered User

    Dec 2007
    Sunny Qld
    14,682

    I'm thinking that your food bill is fairly high...this may be a place you can cut $$ out - do you meal plan??
    Umm yeah we do meal plan. DS is on oats milk - which is exxy.. and soy yoghurt - again, exxy. DD is on soy formula - which is about $25 a tin. So its about $50 a week just for those 3 things....

  12. #12
    Registered User

    Nov 2004
    Melbourne VIC
    1,733

    We budget $200pw for food and petrol and I averaged out all of our bills (utilities, insurances, rates etc) over the year which works out at $225 pw and put that away separately so whenever a bill comes in I just pay it. Play money is a definite necessity. Some weeks we can have $50 each, some weeks $50 between us, but it's something.

  13. #13
    Registered User

    Dec 2008
    1,431

    Today is my first day of maternity leave and I have sat down and set up a budget in Excel. I didn't realise just how much our monthly out-goings were. Its been a real eye-opener. And now we're down to one income....I really need to get a handle on things!

    I too have added up all the regular bills & expenses and averaged them over the year to come up with a weekly figure that I have to put aside into a separate "Bills" bank account. I have set this up as an automatic transfer when DH gets paid.

    We pay a bit extra on our mortgage and hopefully will continue to do that, even a small amount regularly cuts down the length of the loan so I'm happy to keep that up and skimp somewhere else.

    We have take-away once a week, so I should pop that into the budget now that I'm thinking about it.

    Tell you what, its a good thing I'm a good cook, can make a meal from nothing and can do 1001 things with mince!

    ETA: What do you think I have to think about with the arrival of a new baby? What sort of things do I need to add to the budget? I am going down the MCN & breastfeeding (fingerscrossed) paths so hopefull its just little things like creams and clothes?

    PS Sorry for hijicking Arimeh!!
    Last edited by Winter; February 23rd, 2009 at 04:22 PM. : Baby questions

  14. #14
    BellyBelly Member

    Jan 2005
    Brisbane
    1,300

    Arimeh,

    I do the budgeting in our household and i think i have it down pat now, each week when DH gets paid i bpay our bills straight away....we pay extra on the mortgage, electricity and rates each week then on alternate weeks i will also pay a bit of the mobile account, this basically means that when those bills (elect,rates,mobile) do come in they are at a very minimum if anything at all -although having said that in Dec i received a bill from optus saying we owed them xxx amount of dollars when i had already paid it on bpay but the three payments went missing!

    Our budget is something like this:
    Home loan $650
    Pre-school $130
    Fuel (two cars) $100
    Food $250
    Parking (Dh's work) $30
    Extra's(play money) $100
    Rates $50
    Electricity $50
    CC $150
    Savings $200

    This is an average week, it does change as DH gets paid different each week depending on what shift he does...so the above list is what we do on his highest paid week. The lowest week is pretty much the same except for CC and Savings they arent as much and sometimes not at all.
    Last edited by westy; February 23rd, 2009 at 05:00 PM.

  15. #15
    Registered User

    Feb 2006
    NSW Central Coast
    5,301

    Per week, though we work fortnightly usually, since we get paid fortnightly, so everything is about double.And if we don't use the money, it gets put towards the mortgage for redraw monthly.

    Savings- 50
    Strata- 30
    Rates- 17
    Water- 10
    Electricity- 15
    Gas- 15
    Phone/mobile/net- 45
    Car insurance- 12
    Groceries- 150
    Miscellaneous(play money)- 100
    Personal loan- 155
    Mortgage- 515
    Car rego- 19
    Health- 15
    Childcare- 50

    This is the minimum weekly earnings that we get. Some weeks DH and I earn more if I work an extra few hours a week and if he does more night shifts. In that case, the extra just gets put into savings for the kids or in the 'just in case' place, lol!! I like to have a bit of money on hand for 'justin'...

  16. #16
    Registered User

    Feb 2006
    NSW Central Coast
    5,301

    Per week, though we work fortnightly usually, since we get paid fortnightly, so everything is about double.And if we don't use the money, it gets put towards the mortgage for redraw monthly.

    Savings- 50
    Strata- 30
    Rates- 17
    Water- 10
    Electricity- 15
    Gas- 15
    Phone/mobile/net- 45
    Car insurance- 12
    Groceries- 150
    Miscellaneous(play money)- 100
    Personal loan- 155
    Mortgage- 515
    Car rego- 19
    Health- 15
    Childcare- 50

    This is the minimum weekly earnings that we get. Some weeks DH and I earn more if I work an extra few hours a week and if he does more night shifts. In that case, the extra just gets put into savings for the kids or in the 'just in case' place, lol!! I like to have a bit of money on hand for 'justin'...

  17. #17
    Registered User

    Feb 2009
    2,031

    I don't write a budget. I find that its much like a diet. One self indulgent splurge and you are back at square one. The budget/diet itself tends to be the cause of that self indulgent splurge because it feels so restrictive, and you need to feel freedom.

    When the money comes in, I pay by priority. What I NEED is prioritised over what I want. When you have recognised exactly what you need it starts making things much easier. I *need* the internet for my DHs business. I *want* pay tv. You can imagine which bill gets paid first if I can only do one.

    It works much more extensivly to that too. I *need* a mobile phone. I *don't* need it to take photos. I - and my sister - go into more detail on this on my mothers "You can make an Impact" blog. But its and extremely liberating philsophy. I feel chuffed when I buy a $12 DVD at the big movie sales, because its not something I needed, its something I wanted.