I Kept An Expense Journal For A Week To Be A Better Budgeter (2024)

Budgeting. That life skill you don’t learn in school but are supposed to just do as a responsible adult. “Know your fixed expenses versus your flexible expenses,” they say. “Don’t you want to save for a house someday?” they say. Well, easier SAID than done, amirite?

I recently asked my highly organized mom when she first started budgeting, and she replied, “When I was in my late twenties, living in New York City, recently married, and starting to think about what the next stage of my life had in store.” I know she was being honest, but she was also totally giving me a big ol’ hint. Because that life sitch she described is, Hi! Me rn! And, beyond keeping an eye on my checking account and credit cards to make sure I’m not in a financial danger zone, I’ve never taken the time to really track what I’m spending on a day-to-day, week-to-week, or month-to-month basis.

I’m beyond thankful I’ve been in a financial situation where I haven’t had to track every penny. My parents paid for my college education, and my steady paychecks in publishing and media have allowed me to pay rent, eat, and even have some fun in the Big Apple. Now that I’m married, my salary combined with my husband, Mike’s, has us doing pretty well for ourselves, and I am very, very grateful for that.

That said, I’m not a frivolous spender. I love to cook, and I DON’T love to shop. By NYC standards, my rent is cheap. I’ve been lucky to be able to take some really cool trips, but I’m not constantly jet-setting. I buy my loved ones birthday gifts and wedding gifts, all within reason. Oh, and baby gifts. So many babies poppin’ out of my friends and into my life.

Well, in due time, I also want to start a family. And buy a house. And send my kids to college. All while also saving for my retirement. You get the picture. I decided it was time to get a better sense of my spending and figure out this whole budget thing.

But I wasn't done. My week of journaling involved lots of writing and thoughts and colors and doodles — but up until this point, minimal math. Party time was over. I took a deep breath and whipped out my calculator (app) to accomplish four things:

1. Calculate my total spending for the week in each category to see how I'm currently allocating my money.

2. Multiply those numbers by four and add in other monthly expenses to calculate the general amount I spend in a given month.

3. Compare that total monthly cost to my monthly income to see how much I'm currently saving.

4. Use the category totals, as well as the notes I jotted down, to create a budget with set dollar amounts for each category. Goal: to ensure I'm actively saving toward impending life expenses while maintaining a lifestyle I'm comfortable with and enjoy.

Steps 1–3: At first, the Food category total was higher than my rent, which made my jaw drop because I thought I was pretty frugal with food! But then I realized meals out/wine for parties should be in the Social Life category instead, not grouped with food essentials like groceries. So I shifted those numbers and got Home as my highest cost (including rent, utilities, internet, cell phone, laundry, and apartment necessities), followed by:

  • Food and Social Life
  • Transportation (including my monthly subway card and cabs)
  • Gifts
  • Clothing & Beauty
  • Hobbies

That order seemed reasonable to me...but as I went to add 'em all up and compare to my monthly income, I prepared for the worst.

But, surprise, even with my current spending exactly as is, I was saving! Saving about 17% of my income! TOTALLY more than I expected. But...was it enough?

Step 4: For that answer, I turned to the interwebs and found a lot of resources citing the 50-20-30 rule. Fifty percent of your net income should be on fixed, essential expenses, 20% should go to financial goals like savings, and 30% should be on flexible "wants" (lifestyle expenses).

My fixed and flexible expenses were at pretty much the right ratio when I grouped them, so I decided to cut a bit from each to get my savings up to 20%. Looking back through my journal notes, I sliced some $ off the totals for Food (adios, insanely overpriced salads and bodega yogurts), Home (cheaper toilet paper and no more phone data overages), and Social Life (two movies in a week was an exception, and Mike and I don't do an expensive dinner every week). I made sure all my new totals had me saving 20%, and — voilà! — they became my new spending rules!

And that's it, folks. I tracked my expenses and made a sweet, sweet budget — and you can, too, with as much or as little color-coding, notes to self, or doodles as you want! (The math part is not optional though, sorry.)

I decided to share the news with my mom to show her that I took her not-so-subtle hint. In return, I got four baby-with-pacifier emojis.

What other response should I really have expected, tbh? Tracking and budgeting was the easy part; my work has just begun.

Getting a handle on your spending doesn’t have to be stressful, and neither does doing your taxes! File them online quickly, easily, and for free with H&R Block. See hrblock.com for details.

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Photos by Lauren Zaser / © BuzzFeed

I Kept An Expense Journal For A Week To Be A Better Budgeter (2024)
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