๐Ÿงพ Budget Planning Tool

Budget Calculator

Build a simple monthly budget, calculate leftover cash, compare your savings rate, and check your spending against a 50/30/20 reference.

Your numbers

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Affiliate / Template Placement

Turn this estimate into a plan.

Use this placement for a budgeting template, real estate checklist, investing tracker, or financial planning worksheet.

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Budget calculator guide

This calculator breaks monthly income into spending, leftover cash, savings rate, and a simple 50/30/20 budget comparison. It is designed to show whether your current spending pattern supports your financial goals.

How to use it

  • Enter monthly take-home income or the income number you want to budget from.
  • Fill in major spending categories.
  • Set a target savings rate and compare it with your actual leftover amount.
  • Use the result to identify which category has the most room for improvement.

Calculation method

Savings rate = leftover cash รท monthly income

Needs are estimated as housing, food, transportation, utilities, debt, and insurance. Wants are estimated as lifestyle and other flexible spending.

Example scenario

With $5,000 of monthly income and $4,050 of expenses, the budget leaves $950. That equals a 19% savings rate, which is close to a 20% target.

What to watch

This is not a bank-connected tracker. It is a planning calculator. For accuracy, compare the inputs with your actual card and bank statements.

FAQ

Should I use gross or net income?

Use net income if you want a practical monthly spending plan. Use gross income only if you are comparing broad personal finance ratios.

Is 50/30/20 always right?

No. It is a simple reference point. High-rent cities, debt payoff periods, and FIRE goals may require a different split.

What is a good savings rate?

It depends on your goal. FIRE planning often needs much higher savings rates than a standard household budget.