Buying - Budgeting
A budget is a plan that lays out your income and expenses as precisely as possible. Budgets and spending plans are crucial to using credit wisely and to meeting financial goals, such as saving for your down payment or making a monthly mortgage payment. With the tips provided here, you will uncover your spending patterns and discover places where you can save. Creating a budget now can help you reach your down payment goal faster and help you determine whether you will be able to manage your mortgage payment as well as your current expenses when you are a homeowner.
Budget your way to a better standard of living
One reason why most attempts at budgeting fail, is the “you must cut expenses until it hurts” mentality. When establishing a budget, it’s easy to look only superficially at expenses and start slashing. For most households, the biggest or most obvious expenses are mortgage or rent payments, utilities, food, transportation, clothing and entertainment.
- Move to a less expensive neighborhood
- Drive a less expensive automobile
- Cut down on your home’s heating and cooling cost
- If close enough to work - Walk or ride a bike
- Avoid excessive clothing purchases
- Avoid spending on unnecessary things (impulse buying)
- Cut down or eliminate entertainment expenses
- Cut down on vacations and if you charge the fees to your credit card – pay it off in full
Adhering to such a budget would certainly amount to enormous savings, but what would it do to your quality of life? You need a budget that will help you guide your spending so that you can enjoy your life.
Budgeting
Tips for completing your Monthly Budget Worksheet
Tips for successful budgeting
Talk with other members of your family: Consider each person’s needs and wants so that all family members feel they are a part of the plan. If everybody realizes the rewards, they may work harder to make the budget succeed and be less inclined to overspend. When families don’t talk about money matters, it is unlikely that they will budget successfully.
Be specific: If goals are vague, objectives may never be met, and you and other household members may have different ideas of what the end-result should be.
Be prepared to compromise: If, for example, one person wants to pay cash for things and the other prefers to buy on credit, they will need to discuss the pros and cons of both methods and decide on a middle ground each can accept. A plan cannot succeed unless there is a financial partnership.
Set realistic goals and objectives: Setting the bar too high may lead to frustrations that could cause you to abandon your plan altogether.
Exercise will power:
Try not to overspend – opportunities to do so will occur daily. Each family member needs to encourage the others to stick to the plan.
Be flexible:
Your plan will require adjustments to keep up with your changing lifestyle and financial situation. Don’t make a budget that is so rigid that each new development requires an entirely new plan.
Develop a good record-keeping system:
You’ll need to keep a record of what you spend. This will show how well you are following the plan and will allow you to adjust your spending to meet your goals.
Aiello & Associates is committed to helping potential home-buyers to better understand the home purchase and mortgage process and to help them overcome the single greatest hurdle in home-ownership – the down payment!
Download our Monthly Budget Worksheet