If you have a balance on your credit card that you are paying off, you
should use a bucket like "Debt Repayment" and flow your outgoing
payment (transfer) through that. This way you'll have to flow money
from your Salary bucket to that expense bucket.
If you purchase something on the credit card and that purchase gets
assigned to a bucket and you have filled that bucket with money from
the Salary bucket, then your payment (transfer) doesn't need to be
assigned to any outgoing bucket because you are just moving money from
one account to another and the categorizing of that payment was done
with the purchase.
So in summary:
1. Payments on credit cards for existing balances need to be
assigned to an expense bucket because they are not for a current
purchase, whereas…
2. Payments on credit cards for current purchases do not need a
bucket assignment because the purchase is tracking the cash flow.
Peace,
Kevin Hoctor
ke...@nothirst.com
No Thirst Software LLC
http://nothirst.com
http://kevinhoctor.blogspot.com
> Ah, that's it. No, you don't assign a bucket on the cc side. I don't
> mind that my payment on the credit card side is unassigned as I know
> those round numbers are a CC payment. I assign a bucket when the
> purchase is made. You're not as confused as you think. ;-)
Karen is right and I think this is all getting too complicated.
If I buy an gas with my credit card, then I assign that transaction in
my credit card account to my automobile bucket. When I pay that off
with my checking account (using a transfer assuming I track both
accounts), I don't assign a bucket to either side of the transfer. If
I did, I'd be spending the same amount twice.
If I have a balance on my credit card when I start using MoneyWell,
then I assign a bucket (mine is Debt Repayment) only to the
transaction on the checking account side. This is done because I am
spending the money on debt reduction.
The simple rule is that you assign a bucket when you are dealing with
the final recipient of the cash. In the first example, the gas station
was the end of the transaction. In the second, the credit card company
was the end. It's just one step to assign a bucket.
I hope this helps.
Peace,
Kevin Hoctor
ke...@nothirst.com
> I think I might be being a little dense.... When you pay for your gas
> with a credit card, doesn't that amount come out of your "Gas" (or
> whichever) bucket and that's that? When you make the cc payment from
> your checking account, that amount goes towards the "Debt Repayment,"
> doesn't it? Why would you need to split?
Karen,
I think that's because I said the debt repayment part of a credit card
payment does have a bucket assignment but the gas purchase does not so
he's splitting the two portions up.