What Is the Monthly Budget Planner?
A monthly budget planner lines up your income against your major expense categories to show what is left to save. It turns vague money stress into a clear, actionable plan you can adjust in seconds.
How to use this calculator
Type your numbers into the fields above. The results change the moment you edit any input, so you can try one scenario after another and see exactly what moves. Most calculators show a short summary of the key figures, a line-by-line breakdown underneath, and β where it applies β a year-by-year schedule you can export to a spreadsheet. Everything runs in your browser; nothing is stored or sent anywhere. Treat the output as a planning estimate, not as final word on a real decision.
The Formula
Total expenses = housing + food + transport + other. Surplus = income β total expenses. The savings rate is surplus Γ· income. A positive surplus means you are living within your means; a negative one signals a gap to close.
Worked Example
With $5,000 of income and $3,300 of expenses (housing $1,500, food $600, transport $300, other $900), you have a $1,700 surplus β a 34% savings rate, well above the 20% guideline.
Tips for the Most Accurate Estimate
- Give every dollar a job so nothing is unassigned.
- Trim the largest category (often housing) for the biggest impact.
- Automate savings on payday before spending.
- Review the plan monthly and adjust for real life.
- Build a small buffer for irregular expenses.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What if I show a deficit?
Cut discretionary categories first, then look at housing or transport. A lasting deficit means debt will grow, so act quickly.
Q: How much should I save?
Aim for at least 20% of income, split between emergency savings, retirement, and other goals.
Q: Should irregular expenses be included?
Yes β annualize them (divide yearly cost by 12) and include as a monthly line so they do not blow the plan.