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How to build a better budget to help reach your financial goals

First, set your financial goals. Then comb that budget to find more money for them this year.

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4 min read |

You鈥檙e not alone if your plans for spending and saving money have taken a detour.

All the more reason to start planning a budget for the year ahead.

Your first step is setting financial goals鈥攁nd prioritizing them:

  • Short-term goals: six months to five years
  • Mid-term goals: five to 10 years
  • Long-term goals: more than 10 years

Photo of two men setting financial goals.

Read: "5 steps to setting your yearly financial goals."

Then complete our鈥.


Make note of the current savings you鈥檝e put toward each. If you鈥檙e short money for a goal, how do you fund that?

Yes, the dreaded 鈥渂鈥 word. (Budget.) Where can you cut back? What are your priorities? When you can 鈥渇ind鈥 extra money to save and invest (and potentially grow), goals can become more attainable.

鈥楤ack in鈥 to your budget.

鈥淪ome people resist doing a budget because they think it鈥檚 going to restrict them from spending the way they want,鈥 says Stanley Poorman, a financial professional with 麻豆最新出品. The reality is that most of us overspend just because we don鈥檛 have a focused plan.

Think of a budget as a tool that organizes your monthly cash flow to include your saving and investing goals. To 鈥渂ack in鈥 to it, pay critical expenses first, and then decide what to do with the rest.

That鈥檚 a shift in thinking, Poorman says. Rather than treating a budget like it鈥檚 a starvation diet, you鈥檙e putting yourself in control of an organized financial plan.

How to make a budget in 5 steps

  1. Download our and plug in what鈥檚 coming in, and what's going out. Look at recent bills plus bank and credit card statements to give you the facts.
  2. Adjust. Prioritize. Revise.
    • Fixed expenses = bills you鈥檙e committed to paying, like a mortgage, car payment, or utilities.
    • Discretionary expenses = those you have more control over, like clothing or hobbies.
  3. Calculate. Subtract your new/revised budget from your monthly take-home pay. See what鈥檚 left to put toward your goals.
  4. Check in on your goals. For each, see whether it鈥檚 fulfilled or needs more funding, and if it鈥檚 critical.
  5. Allocate leftover funds. Decide how much of the extra money you鈥檝e found could be put toward your critical short-, mid- and long-term goals. Log it on the worksheet. Once you鈥檝e made good progress toward your critical goals, start tackling the rest.

Is your budget still coming up short?

Don鈥檛 panic. You can look for ways to adjust your spending and saving throughout the year. For example, a good next step would be to focus on tax planning.

Of course, more income may mean faster progress, too. Depending on your circumstances, you may consider ways to increase what鈥檚 coming in, such as a side hustle. Just be conscious of whether you鈥檙e using any additional money to simply increase your standard of living or to meet your specific goals.

Next steps

Does your budget leave room to pay yourself first? 鈥痶o see how you鈥檙e doing. Don鈥檛 have an employer-sponsored retirement account? We can help you鈥set up your own retirement savings with an IRA or Roth IRA account.