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    11 Budget-Planning Mistakes to Avoid

    Budget Planner Mistakes to Avoid

    By: Ann-Marie Murphy, Quizzle.com

    Whether you're living paycheck to paycheck or you have a surplus of savings built up, learning to budget your money - and maintaining an ongoing budget planner - is vital to proper money management.

    There's no one right way to budget your money. Some people like to jot income and expenses down on paper, others keep a sophisticated budget spreadsheet and still others prefer using a free, online budget planner that does most of the work for you. It doesn't really matter how you keep your personal budget so much as picking a method that makes sense to you and one that you will maintain regularly.

    To make sure your budget does what it's supposed to, be sure to avoid these 11 budget planning mistakes:

    1. Not keeping a
    budget planner at all.

    If you have no semblance of a budget planner and never write your income and expenses down, how do you know the state of your finances? How can you be sure you're not spending more than you're making? If you don't manage your money, it will manage you - in the form of debt, interest charges, bad credit and other unpleasant consequences.

    2. Thinking short-term.

    A monthly budget is a great first start, but it's difficult to account for less regular expenses that way. Think ahead at least a year and budget one-time items and other events - like holidays and birthdays - so your personal finances aren't turned upside-down by a single occasion or large purchase.

    3. Being unrealistic.


    If your budget planner never matches up with reality, what's the point of keeping it? The ideal personal budget tracks real income and expense patterns, and allows you to plan for the future. If your estimates are always off, however, your future finances are no more than a guess. To help keep it real, estimate what your expenses will be for the next month. Then, keep track of your actual expenses and at the end of that month, compare the estimates with the actuals. That way, you'll learn how you are really using your money so you can make better estimates for the future.

    4. Spending more than you earn.


    This may seem like an obvious error to avoid, but with U.S. consumer debt reaching $2.45 trillion at the end of 2009, according to the Federal Reserve, it may not be obvious enough. Keeping an ongoing personal budget will help you to track what's coming in and what's going out - and to make sure the first number is higher than the second one.

    5. Saving too little.

    Savings shouldn't be an after-thought; it should be budgeted just like everything else. Traditional thinking holds that you should save 10 percent of your income. Whatever number you choose, add it to your budget planner and stick with it. Set up a direct deposit from your paycheck into a savings account, if possible, to make it automatic.

    6. Neglecting to plan for a rainy day.

    Aside from your savings, you should budget for a rainy day - an emergency situation for which you can't necessarily prepare, like an unexpected medical expense, house or car repair, or job loss. Like your general savings, there should be a place for these funds in your budget planner rather than pulling from whatever might be left over at the end of the month.

    7. Keeping an overly elaborate budget.


    If you're a budget nerd who prefers an incredibly detailed spreadsheet, kudos to you! But if you're like most people, making your budget planner too labor-intensive and overly detailed will likely lead to budget abandonment. Everyone requires a different level of detail; find yours and stick with it. If you're just getting started, begin with a high-level budget and add more detail as you need it.

    8. Allowing your checking account balance to go too low.

    When you near $0 with your checking account - or main bank account - you're flirting with unnecessary fees and frustration. Budget yourself out of this predicament by setting a new zero. If you view an amount - let's say, $100 - as the new absolute minimum, you'll prevent yourself from losing any money. Plus, you'll have a safety net in place if you ever make a budgeting error.

    9. Relying completely on bank and credit card statements to get it right.


    Don't assume that what's on your bank statement or credit card statement is 100 percent correct. Banks and creditors make mistakes too and if you don't at least occasionally double-check with receipts, you may be forfeiting your hard-earned cash.

    10. Never adjusting your
    budget planner.

    Your personal financial situation is bound to change. Update your personal budget with new sources of income and new expenses, and make sure to adjust your budget to align with your spending habits. Keeping an archive of your budgets is a good idea too, as it allows you to look back and determine spending patterns and what adjustments you should make.

    11. Not accounting for interest.


    Neglecting interest charges on credit cards and loans in your budget planner will likely lead to a budgeting shortfall, especially if you're paying hefty sums in interest each month. You don't have to get the amount of interest exactly right in your budget, but it's smart to make a best guess. Estimating interest will allow you to really see how much you're paying to borrow money from creditors and lenders, and will help ensure that you have enough money budgeted to cover these payments.

    For more tips and tools to help you manage your home, money and credit - including a free budget planner, free credit report and score - visit Quizzle.com.

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    121 comments

    • Dr. DuBury MiDung, M.D.  •  2 years 0 months ago
      YOU DUMB BASS TURDS!
    • navybean  •  2 years 0 months ago
      DYKE FLUFFER: What about this article has you so hostile?
    • Gotu  •  2 years 0 months ago
      Or just be smart and ask if you really need something before you buy it. I'm a married with one kid college student with no budget. All I do is pay bills first (I have no idea what they amount to each month) then put at least half of what's left in savings. If there's a once a year expense then I put less in savings. If there's an emergency then i dip into savings if I have to. just don't be dumb, that's all you have to do.
    • CB  •  2 years 0 months ago
      I break #1, never kept a budget planner, never will. I have managed so far by being 1) frugal and 2) not stupid. By following those simple rules, I've put two kids through college, own my home outright (OK it's a condo but it's in Hawai`i) and I've been able to do the occasional fun, expensive thing without borrowing money. This has served me well for the past half-century, no reason to change now.
    • DEBBIE  •  2 years 0 months ago
      ok....i was in credit card debt 25K over a 10 year period...but i've been a single mom for 18 yrs. and average 10 an hour...
      have 2 vehicle 91' toyota & 01 Chev truck and 10 acres w/a mobile home that i have had since 82...lucky me....i turned over my land for a loan and got out of that problem.

      what pisses me off is the people that washed there credit card debt off as bankruptcy and the people that have food stamps that are buying drink pops and candy in a convient store. oh and did you know that if you dont insert your straw into the fountain drink that you can purchase it with the food stamp card....go figure....why cant the goverment regulate the items w/modern technology, that shouldnt be impossible

      .....sometimes you just want to give up on the rat race....
    • joanne r  •  2 years 0 months ago
      about the time I get a few bucks in a good interest paying CD either the city or county r state or federal government raise some more tax program either higher license fee or water bill orlight bill or a toll road. so WHY DON'T THEES ENITITES TAKE SOME OF THE SURPLUS FUNDS THESE PEOPLE GET AND LET THEM WORRY HOW T MAKE MORE THAN THE BEST OFFICE OR THE BEST LOCATION.
      it seems to me they are real easy to forget just who is paying their vast expense accounts
    • thatgirl  •  2 years 0 months ago
      I am so thankful to have listened to my grandfather's wise words for many years. He told me to 'save for a rainy day.' I believed him, because he had it happen to his family when my grandmother was admitted to a hospital extremely ill with no health insurance. He had to sell the land next to their house. He bought the huge lot so he could build twin homes for his two daughters. That day never came. The money from the sale of the lot paid hospital bills. Today, our rainy day has come. Fortunately, we had some money saved and have been living on that for the past two years. It's great owning a business, but workers need to be paid before yourself. Also, we cannot collect unemployment even though my husband still has to pay into it. This US government makes no sense.
    • quizbob55  •  2 years 0 months ago
      Pretty good info, but for practical reason many people are just unable to get started. Take baby steps and soon you will be walking.
      My advice is start out by tracking your spending. Begin with just a simple sheet, an excel spreadsheet is ideal but if you are not able to do this just write it down. Start out with your basic expenses like car payment, utilities, insurance. Items that you know you have to pay each month. This will begin to tell you what you are spending. You can then start tracking variable expenses such as groceries, eating out, gasoline and such. Then you can start looking at ways to cut costs. Do you really need your premium channels on your cable? Do you really need your data package on your cell phone? If you have a cell phone, do you need a land line? You will amazed at how cutting $20 here and $30 there will add up for you.
      Saving is very hard for many people and again, you should start out with baby steps. Set up a savings account wherever you have your checking account. You can set up an automatic transfer from your checking account at whatever intervals work for you. START OUT SMALL. $10-$25 every Monday works well. You will find that you can afford this. Let this work for you for a few moths until you are comfortable, then you will find you might increase your transfer amount by another $5 or $10. Use theis methodology and I think before too long you will have trained yourself to actually put a little away for emergencies.
    • 2Smooth  •  2 years 0 months ago
      Does anybody have a dollar I can borrow until pay day?
    • J  •  2 years 0 months ago
      you people that claim to be living paycheck to paycheck are morons. You all have computers and internet access. Neither of which are necessities. I bet you all have cable tv and dvr's and cell phones too. right there you have at least $200 a month in savings. Get real and be honest.
    • anony  •  2 years 0 months ago
      The dumbest article I ever read. Waste of time. Who is this foolish writer. And how Yahoo is allowing him to write. Fire him.
    • BigAl  •  2 years 0 months ago
      I fall under one of those who spend uneeded wants. And I always give my kids money when they want. And I live paycheck to paycheck, help!
    • Snowmanco  •  2 years 0 months ago
      how much did this article cost quzzle?
    • andrea  •  2 years 0 months ago
      With regards on living paycheck to paycheck and saving, it is possible. Just not in the monetary amount that most others are able to. I'm a mother, student and work in retail (for a lot less than $11, consider yourselves lucky to the previous people that have posted) but I still set aside a little bit from each paycheck and from each purchase I make by rounding up (when subtracting it in my balancing bok) to the nearest whole dollar on small purchases and the nearest $5 when making larger purchases. It may not seem like much then but it all adds up.
    • What_Huh_REALLY  •  2 years 0 months ago
      I've got news for the person who wrote this....if you are living paycheck to paycheck a more realistic "new zero" number is $10, not $100. If you have $100 left over in your account at the end everything then you aren't living paycheck to paycheck.

      That's the problem with so much of this "practical" advice....it isn't. Not in the 'real' world.
    • Dr. DuBury MiDung, M.D.  •  2 years 0 months ago
      YOU DUMB BASS TURDS!
    • Iluvsnoopy  •  2 years 0 months ago
      While this is common sense advice, there are rainy days for which no one can fully plan ahead. My family was hit with the double whamy of medical expenses and loss of job hours. The reality is not everyone experiencing financial difficulty is a result of irresponsibility. We tried to do all the right things: budgeting, saving, investing for the future, etc. Sometimes, it just rains longer and harder than anyone expects.
    • mb the cat lady  •  2 years 0 months ago
      "Necessities" are in the eye of the beholder. Some, that aren't really needed include:

      manicures
      $60 hair cuts
      cell phones
      cable television
      prepared food (including eating out or lunches out)
      air conditioning
      internet access
      movie rentals or going to the movies/theater
      purchased gifts (especially extravagant ones)
      subscriptions of any kind

      It's easier if you let someone ELSE trim your living expenses for you.
    • Naruto  •  2 years 0 months ago
      I thought capitalism was about spending and borrowing as much money as possible, that it will come back to you if you spend as much as you can ;)
    • Esley  •  2 years 0 months ago
      Is that 10% of Gross Pay or Net Pay? I've never seen anyone specify.

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