Are you living on a budget? Check out these great tips to
save your budget week by week! These tips will help you have a great financial year. You can learn more at
Kiplinger.
--Keep
your budget and your goals simple. What is the one thing that you most
want to accomplish? See where your money is going? Pay off credit card
debt? Find spare cash to start a college fund for the kids? Zeroing in
on your main objective will help you stay on course.
--Know your
plastic personality. Do you prefer using a debit card or a credit card?
Each has its advantages (and disadvantages), and there’s no right or
wrong answer for everyone, as long as you know which suits your spending
habits.
--Don’t discount cash. Along with debit cards, hard
currency has gained fans post-recession because it literally helps you
stay in touch with your spending -- when it’s gone, it’s gone. In fact,
studies show that when no physical currency changes hands, consumers are
likely to spend more and have less sense of buyer’s remorse.
--Limit your trips to the ATM. To make sure you don’t lose track of
all that cash, make just one ATM withdrawal per week, and make your
money last till the next time. Another trick: Pay with the small bills
first; it’s painful to break the big ones.
--Track your spending. It doesn’t have to be time-consuming, and you
don’t have to do it indefinitely. Tracking it even for a month or two
should be enlightening. Use your debit and credit card statements as
guides, and toss cash receipts into a container in your kitchen or
office.
--Pinpoint the one area where you’re leaking cash. Maybe
it’s restaurant meals, the computer store or, as in the case of a friend
of mine, something as mundane as dry-cleaning bills. My friend
habitually neglected to hang up her suits after work, so she was racking
up a big tab sending them to the cleaners to have them pressed.
--Use
any budgeting tool that works for you. It could be one of the top
budgeting Web sites, such as Mint.com, an Excel spreadsheet, or even
paper and pencil. And don’t dismiss that old standby, the envelope
system: Divvy up your cash, and put the amount for each expense into a
separate envelope.
--Give yourself a grace period to pay your
bills. This trick comes courtesy of the father of one of my co-workers,
who makes it a habit to pay his bills ten days in advance of when
they’re actually due. He’s always on time, and never incurs a late fee.
--Don’t
shop alone. If you lack self-discipline, go with a list, a plan, a
buddy -- anything that will make it tougher for you to spend
impulsively. And leave the credit or debit card at home, or carry a
limited amount of cash. I once interviewed a self-employed young woman
who carried an American Express card that she paid off every month and
left her other credit cards with her accountants. “If I want to use one,
they ask me if I really want to spend the money. That makes me stop and
think.”
--Be positive. Don’t think of a budget as a straitjacket
that limits your spending and takes the joy out of life. Think of it as
a way to control small expenses now so that you can buy bigger stuff --
and have more fun -- in the future. Allow yourself a little splurge. If
you decide to brown-bag your lunch at work, treat yourself to a
fast-food Friday.
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