Budget Planner

Build Your Monthly Budget
with the 50/30/20 Rule

Enter your income and expenses to see exactly where your money goes, whether you're on track, and how much you're actually saving.

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Monthly Budget

Needs
$2,450 · 41%
Housing (rent/mortgage)
25%
Utilities
3%
Groceries
7%
Transportation
4%
Health Insurance / Medical
2%
Minimum Debt Payments
1%
Wants
$1,050 · 18%
Dining & Restaurants
5%
Entertainment
3%
Subscriptions
1%
Shopping / Clothing
3%
Personal Care
1%
Hobbies & Recreation
2%
Travel
2%
Savings & Debt Payoff
$1,050 · 18%
Emergency Fund
3%
401(k) / IRA
8%
Brokerage / Investing
3%
Extra Debt Payments
2%
Other Savings Goals
2%

Your Budget Overview

Savings Rate
17.5%
$1,050/month saved
Monthly Surplus / Deficit
+$450
Monthly Budget
Needs
$2,450 41%
Wants
$1,050 18%
Savings
$1,050 18%
Unallocated
$450
Needs: 41% (target: ≤50%)

Your essential spending is within the 50% guideline.

Wants: 18% (target: ≤30%)

Your discretionary spending has healthy room.

Savings: 18% (target: ≥20%)

Close! Saving just $/mo more would hit the 20% goal.

Annual Outlook

Annual Income
$72,000
Annual Saved
$12,600
Annual Needs
$29,400
Annual Wants
$12,600
The 50/30/20 rule was popularized by Senator Elizabeth Warren in her book "All Your Worth." It's a guideline, not a rigid law — adjust for your situation. High cost-of-living cities may require more than 50% for needs.
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The 50/30/20 Budget Rule Explained

The 50/30/20 rule is a simple framework for budgeting that divides your after-tax income into three categories: 50% for needs, 30% for wants, and 20% for savings and debt repayment. Popularized by Senator Elizabeth Warren in her book All Your Worth (2005), it's designed to be simple enough to actually use.

What Counts as a "Need"?

Needs are expenses you cannot avoid: rent or mortgage, utilities, groceries, health insurance, minimum debt payments, and essential transportation. The guideline is to keep these under 50% of take-home pay. If you're above 50% — common in high cost-of-living cities — you may need to look at reducing housing costs, refinancing debt, or increasing income before the other categories can work.

What Counts as a "Want"?

Wants are lifestyle choices: dining out, streaming subscriptions, clothing beyond the basics, vacations, hobbies, and entertainment. The 30% allocation is generous — most people who track spending closely discover their wants are far higher than they realized. Subscription creep (Netflix, Spotify, gym, apps) often costs $200–$400/month before you notice.

The 20% Savings Target

The 20% bucket covers retirement savings, emergency fund contributions, extra debt payments beyond minimums, and other financial goals. The order of operations recommended by most financial planners: (1) build a $1,000 emergency buffer, (2) capture any 401(k) employer match (it's an instant 50–100% return), (3) pay off high-interest debt, (4) fully fund a Roth IRA, (5) max the 401(k), (6) invest in a taxable brokerage account.

Adjusting the Rule for Your Situation

The 50/30/20 rule is a starting point, not a rigid law. If you're aggressively paying off debt, you might do 50/10/40. If you're in a HCOL city where 50% barely covers rent, you might live with 65/15/20 while working toward a higher income. What matters more than hitting exact percentages is knowing where your money goes and deliberately choosing how to allocate it.

What's a Good Savings Rate?

The minimum is 10–15% to reach a traditional retirement at 65. To retire early (FIRE movement), aim for 30–50%. The math is stark: a 50% savings rate means you're saving as much as you spend, so you only need to work ~17 years before your portfolio can sustain your lifestyle indefinitely. A 10% savings rate requires ~40 working years.