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How To Make And Follow A Monthly Budget

By Frugaling 3 Comments

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How to make and follow a monthly budget. Creating a monthly budget goes back to basic accounting skills. It's a simple equation: What you spend must be less than you take in.

You’ve heard about budgets. You’ve seen budgets. You’ve been told to make a monthly budget. It’s a tragic irony, but after all that, most can’t. Despite the ease of conceptualizing a budget, complying tests a different skillset: self–control.

Mint.com is an incredible development in money management, but it’s just the start. These services aid in the monitoring of spending, but don’t manufacture self-control. To create and follow a monthly budget, behavioral restructuring must take place. Over the course of this article, I’ll help you create a budget and then change your decision-making to follow that new plan.

How to Create a Monthly Budget

Creating a monthly budget goes back to basic accounting skills. It’s a simple equation: What you spend must be less than you take in. But despite the brevity, it’s the most important foundation to revolutionizing your bottom line. In 5 short steps, you’ll have your budget ready.

1. Where is your money going?

This can be the most time-consuming part. Track your expenses and write down the totals. For me, my tracking is all online, which makes the process relatively effortless.

A couple months ago, before I started this site, I was eating out far too much. The realization and behavioral restructuring to pack lunches saved me about $300 a month. Just looking at where your money is flowing is the first step to success.

2. Pick your poison program

Whether you choose to use Excel or Google Drive/Docs for spreadsheets, it won’t matter that much. My recommendation is to store it with Google because the portability and accessibility allows me to check how I’m doing on the go.

Get comfortable with the basic functions of spreadsheet apps. Most offer powerful mathematical tools that few know how to use. Totaling numbers and columns can make your budget update automatically and respond instantly to changes each month. Again, this is why a strong budget is essential to balancing the spending. (Here’s what formulas look like: =(B21+B22-B19))

3. List the monthly essentials

By examining your monthly spending, some basic categories should emerge. Follow these and remember what your regular bills are. For me, this includes rent, food, car loan, debt repayment (student loans), utilities, car insurance, health insurance, dental insurance, tuition (graduate school), and gas. To better understand how my money flows, I include tax withholding at the state and federal levels, but this is hardly necessary if you know your total take-home pay.

4. Input values from last month

Now that you’ve created the basic categories and totaled the dollar amounts for each, just input them into the spreadsheet. Create a spreadsheet function that totals this new column of costs.

5. Input expected income and subtract costs to establish budget

Like I said, I put total income here (before tax withholding). Whatever you choose, this number should be subtracted by the associated costs from step 4. Now you have the basic surplus or deficit. The questions about cutting costs or becoming more frugal in some parts of your life are up to you. The key to abolishing your debt is not only balancing the budget, but creating conditions for a surplus.

How to Follow a Monthly Budget

If you made it this far, you’re well on your way to saving more. The key now is to change your traditional spending patterns. Unfortunately, this is where most people falter.

There’s a form of therapy called CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy). Essentially, this enables thought and action changes in direction. That’s what will be doing. Following any sort of behavioral change requires significant preparation and work. These are 3 important tips for following that new budget.

1. Where do you splurge, slip up, etc.?

Be honest: Where are the holes in your budget? When you actually ask what’s necessary versus desired, there’s usually a gap. Closing this gap is key to living the frugal life. Maybe you can’t change your apartment rent, but you likely can eat out less. By the end of this search, you should have identified at least one action you want to accomplish.

2. What positive action can replace this?

When I want to eat out for lunch, I must find a positive alternative. This is key to modifying behavior. What can I do that allays the desire to eat out? This action will differ for everyone, but the common root is preparation. The times that I wanted to eat out, I was hungry. By suppressing my hunger, I can effectively reduce the urge to splurge. The solution? Now I carry energy bars nearly everywhere I go.

3. What positive punishments can be established to prevent future spending?

Preparative accountability is also important. Who will hold you accountable for the actions you make? As social creatures, this should encourage healthier behavior and spending prevention when the right people are requested for your help. Ask a trusted friend to become a benefactor to your bad behavior. For instance, I could ask a friend to hold me accountable for eating out. Their reward? If I slip up, I owe them $10 (about the cost of another lunch). This punishment and social accountability is key to changing behaviors.

In case you want to learn more about the research and support behind this, watch Professor Dan Ariely explain behavioral modification for better self-control:

Filed Under: Save Money

5 Frugal Apps for International Travel

By Frugaling 3 Comments

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5 FRUGAL APPS FOR INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL he following 5 frugal apps will help you save when traveling.

Summer travel is well under way. In fact, I just came back from a brief trip to Costa Rica. Nary a map or concrete plan between my girlfriend and I, we embarked on a five day adventure through the ecologically-beautiful landscape. As we wrapped up the journey, we learned that it helps to come prepared – digitally.

In my past, failing at frugality, I purchased an iPhone 5 shortly after its release. Now, traveling abroad, it was a tremendous resource for staying frugal and on course. The irony.

For my girlfriend and I, neither of us had any cell service. Landing at the airport terminal and turning on our phones to “No Service” was a freeing feeling.Finally, we were disconnected – how rare! But that doesn’t mean we didn’t use our phones.

Smartphones are tremendous resources and can be savers while traveling – even without service. The following 5 frugal apps will help you save when traveling. Important tip: Download them to your phone and become accustom to them before travel. Some require offline packages for proper use (must be downloaded to phones).

1. Wi-Fi Finder (Free)

This is the holy grail of Wi-Fi! Despite having no cell service and little money, you should be able to find free hotspots across the globe. The Jiwire app includes an offline directory of Wi-Fi locations that are free and paid. No matter where you go, you should be able to find something (within reason). Make sure to download the ~40MB offline database for access on the go. Then, you can be in the middle of Jaco, Costa Rica and still find a free spot.

2. Google Maps (Free)

Google has been the map leader for quite some time. It should be no surprise that their app (on both Android and iPhone) is the best choice you have. On Android, you can actually save maps for offline use right to your phone. iPhone users don’t have it as good, but can still search for directions within Wi-Fi locations and use them offline. As with many apps, there’s a word of caution: Small towns and some international travel zones may not have clearly marked roads. If you don’t have an active GPS or map, you may miss turns. Always be ready to break out a real, paper map (have you heard of these?).

3. Free Spanish English Dictionary (Free Version/$9.99)

This will be language-dependent, but choose one of the free translation dictionaries if you’re not a fluent speaker. These can provide you some basic phrases and words for conversational use. One word of warning: The free versions can be a bit limited. Despite their limitations, they function offline, which is key to traveling well.

4. XE Currency (Free)

Everyone needs a currency converter when traveling abroad. They keep you in the know, and prevent you from making a purchase that is highly unfavorable. Down in Costa Rica, I get about 500 colones for every US dollar. Knowing this helped us save money and make sure prices were fair. As with all of these, there are offline capabilities; albeit, currency fluctuations will obviously not be reflected.

5. Kayak (Free/$0.99)

This company leads price aggregation for hotels, airfare, and much more. I constantly use the app to track and book flights. As a frugal traveler, it’s hard to know what places are the most affordable and highly rated. Fortunately, Kayak does all the work. Each time we needed a hotel, we found a Wi-Fi signal, searched the hotels nearest us, and went walking up to the reception desk. Seeing the prices on Kayak kept the employees fair, as well.

What apps do you use to save while traveling internationally?

Filed Under: Save Money

Travel Budgets

By Frugaling 2 Comments

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You can research currency rates and read travel guides, but the costs always seem to fluctuate. Travel budgets can be challenging.

One mountainside divides us from a cloud forest preserve in Monteverde, Costa Rica. The ninety degree weather has finally abated, and we’re sitting in the cool shade of our hostel. A rural city center provides an oasis of Internet and food. It’s here that I look at my budget, login into Mint, and choke at the refreshed results. Traveling hasn’t been friendly to my bank accounts.

A few months ago, my partner and I decided we would take a summer trip to Costa Rica. I’m fortunate to have flight benefits, which made it $40 roundtrip (pays for airport, state, and federal taxes). With this shocking price tag and a propensity for travel, I couldn’t contain my excitement.

As we landed in Costa Rica, a couple thoughts coursed through my mind: one, I only have $150 in cash; two, we have no plans – enter panic here. We were funneled out of customs and immigration with ease – straight to a rental car that was supposed to cost $55 for five days. Instead, switching between Spanish and English, the attendant assured us that price was incorrect. The bill was nearly $200. This was to be the first of many monetary mix ups.


At the currency exchange, I converted my cash to colones. The exchange rate sat around 500 colones for a dollar, but I was given 430 at the counter (service fee). Upon leaving the hotel and venturing out into the Costa Rican landscape, I quickly learned that most people accepted US dollars as tender. The conversion and fee made no sense, as the places that didn’t accept dollars would usually take a credit card.

There’s only a day and a half of adventure left in Centroamerica. Tomorrow will bring hours of hiking, driving, eating, and fun with my partner. But it also means keeping a watchful eye to what I spend.

Frugaling is limited when you’re stateside. You can research currency rates and read travel guides, but the costs always seem to fluctuate. What you see isn’t always what you get.

If you’re like me (balling on a budget and eager to travel), it’s important to know that travel expenses deserve wiggle room. Humans are prone to budgetary error and spending. This is only compounded when traveling abroad. Talk to as many people as you can, but don’t forget to ask how much it cost them. Budgets vary and affordable adventures are relative.

Filed Under: Save Money, Social Justice

Bargain Breakfasts

By Frugaling 3 Comments

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Nonetheless, these are aimed for those with little time to prepare. Hopefully, these bargain breakfasts can help you save money, keep you healthy, and regain your time.

Whether you’re stressed and busied with work, school, or something in between, it helps to have some quick, healthy options for breakfast. Before I became a hardcore frugaling nut, I was lazy about prioritizing food (Read about “Eating On The Go“). It didn’t mean starvation or malnutrition; instead, it meant fast food runs (arguably more unhealthy than going hungry, at times) and convenience stores. I frequented the Starbucks across the street for a tall coffee (~$1.75) and breakfast sandwich (~$4). Not only would I be pressed for time on these days, but I would also be spending about $5.75 for breakfast alone.

That lifestyle didn’t fit my budget. It was terribly stress-inducing, expensive, and cholesterol-laden. By waking up a bit earlier and going to bed at a more sane hour, I’ve been able to cook breakfast and pack a lunch every morning. If I wake up at 7:15 AM, I can make my traditional breakfast. If I’m beat and need to sleep in, I wakeup at 8:30 AM. The latter leaves me with 30 minutes to get ready and hop on my bus. Thankfully, I have another option for that scenario.

The goal is to circumvent convenience and prioritize healthy, frugal nutrition. Julia Childs would be rolling in her grave if she saw these “recipes.” Nonetheless, these are aimed for those with little time to prepare. Hopefully, these bargain breakfasts can help you save money, keep you healthy, and regain your time.

Option 1: “The Standard” Eggs and Turkey Bacon (10 minutes)

This has been my stalwart meal for about three years. Eggs are a nutritious, wholesome start to your day. One egg has about 70 calories and over 6 grams of protein. Most of all, eggs are incredibly affordable. The one downside is the heightened cholesterol levels. To minimize this arterial risk, I  supplement with egg whites, which are free from cholesterol. Turkey bacon is far cheaper than traditional bacon, and much healthier, too. In fact, the cholesterol levels pale in comparison to pig-bacon. All in all, the meal costs about $0.97 and 10 minutes of my time.

One dozen eggs: $1.50/12 = $0.125 per egg

Turkey bacon (21 strips): $3/21 = $0.143 per strip x 2 = $0.286 for 2 strips

Egg whites (about 20+ eggs per carton): $3.75/20 = $0.188 x 3 = $0.563 for 3 egg whites

Total cost: $0.97

Option 2: Banana Nut Oatmeal (3 minutes)

As a runner, I crave a balanced diet of carbs, protein, and vitamins. The Banana Nut Oatmeal has all three. This is stupid simple, too: grab some instant oats and microwave with water, chop up a banana and throw it on top, and then grab a handful of mixed nuts. In the span of 3 minutes and about $0.64, you’ve got a healthy, no-excuses breakfast.

Oatmeal: $1.99 (for carton) = ~$0.15 in bowl

Banana: $0.24

Mixed Nuts: $0.25

Total cost: $0.64

These are two simple breakfasts that will get your day started off right. Psychologically, I was convinced that there wasn’t enough time to cook and eat. When I compare $5.75 a day at Starbucks to my “standard” breakfast, I save $4.78 each time. The time and money saved pads my wallet and makes me more efficient. I’m no longer cramped for time and scarfing down a Pop-Tart.

What bargain breakfasts do you make?

Filed Under: Save Money Tagged With: bargain, breakfast, Food

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