I created a budgeting system based on GTD. I have two checking
accounts setup. The first is basicly an allowance account that I do
whatever I want with. It's kind of like throwing money into a
"@spend_this" folder. I have a second checking account that is used to
automatically pay bills and have direct debits. This is sort of a
"@bills" folder. It's all arranged so that you think about your bills
once, and then move them out of your mind. Anyway, I put in the info
up at a website: www.stackbacks.com. Please let me know what you
think.
-Greg
Also, we use our credit cards for everything to get air miles (works
out to about a free flight every year or year and a half to where our
parents live, with only a $35 annual fee, so definitely worth it). I've
tried keeping a page in my planner to track expenses more regularly,
etc., so that I only spend a set amount, but just can't quite make
myself do it. I'm thinking that maybe with this system, the only way
for me to really track what I'm spending on my credit cards is go
online every few days and pay off whatever we've spent, so I can more
easily track what we've spent. Same with bills - I tend to do automatic
bill payment on my credit card instead of debit also for air miles - so
I'm thinking it would be best to use a separate credit card for bill
payments so I can track those separately.
Very nice site.
> Please let me know what you
> think.
Coincidentally, this is almost identical to the system that my fiance and
I just set up about four hours ago. We added savings and investment accounts
into the system (which was what prompted the discussion). Basically, savings
is a fixed bill out of the bill side, and chunks are drawn from it
periodically to an investment account (my father is an estate
manager/investment banker, so it somewhat boils down to "Give Dad Money").
--
Evan "JabberWokky" Edwards
http://www.cheshirehall.org/
It uses three accounts instead of two, but the principle's the same.
The accounts are (from memory, might be off a bit)...
(1) regular monthly expenses -- the "steady drain", if you will.
(2) savings and longer-term periodic expenses
(3) the "unbudgeted" budgeted -- if it's empty, you can't spend anything.
It also provides a tool and a process to help get going. I've found
it worth-while. No relationship to www.thebword.com, other than being
a cautiously optimistic and happy recent adoptee...
- Bryan Ewbank
That seems like a good, simple system for tracking money. The only thing I
wonder about is the
cash part. Cash is hard to track, and it goes so quickly! I like to reserve
cash for those times
when I really can't use my debit/credit card, which creates a record of
spending. Of course,
there's no hard limit, and you can easily overspend. It's not like cash; when
your wallet's empty,
that's it.
-joanie
____________________________________________________________________
I have my system setup with a couple other savings accounts as well. I
just wanted to get the information up there as a simple base system and
see how people reacted. Once you get the base system setup, then
adding a savings account for...
emergency fund
auto fund (i aspire to pay cash for my next car)
vacatation fund
investments
health savings
retirement
etc
Is just a simple as setting up a new auto transfer and treating it like
a bill.
I can definitely see where you're coming from on the married couples
expenses. I'll let you know what I do when I get married :)
As far as the credit cards go, I see both sides of that. I've used the
2% cash back, and I've overspent.
Thank you. I mean, THANK YOU. I am a father who has been struggling
with a piss-poor marriage for years, which ended up with piss-poor
finances, and now I'm getting divorced, and I'll be a single dad. I've
been wracking my brain how to wrangle things back under control so I
and my two boys can get our finances back in line. I'm headed to the
bank in just a few minutes to open my new account.
I CAN DO THIS ONE. How cool is that.
Drew Mills
It's not free (about $30) but it's saved me many times that in
overdraft fees and late fees.
Anyway, it's available at http://www.snowmintcs.com/
I'm not associated with the company, it just worked really well for me
and I wanted to pass it on.
- Emily
It's helped me a lot. I now have an every day account (next action)
that is, almost without fail, empty by the end of the week, but that's
okay because my high-interest internet only savings account (projects,
kind of) is pretty much always quite healthy unless I had to drop a wad
on something I'd already planned for. My managed investment fund
(sometime/maybe) is doing quite nicely. I ignore it, feed it every now
and then, and it seems to take care of itself.
But, yes. I highly recommend 'The Barefoot Investor.' If you're a bit
of a finance buff you might find it a bit too colloquial, but I'm now a
poor arts student with a managed investment fund of her very own, so
it's helped me out!