The 50/30/20 rule is a budgeting framework that divides take-home pay into three categories: 50% for needs (rent, utilities, groceries, transportation, insurance), 30% for wants (clothes, entertainment, dining out, subscriptions), and 20% for savings and investing (emergency funds, retirement, debt repayment). This guideline helps individuals align spending with their values and goals, though it should be adjusted based on individual circumstances and income levels.
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You need to know the 50/30/20 rule.Añadido:
As a black woman, you're too smart not to have heard of the 50/30/20 rule. So, I'm going to explain it for you so you can budget better in the future. Sit down, listen, and write this down. I'm a six-figure financial advisor, not your financial advisor.
Yet. And the 50/30/20 rule is one of the simplest tools I give clients to take control of their money. Most of you know I don't teach budgeting from a place of restriction, but more so from a place of intention. When your spending aligns with your values and your goals, the guilt kind of disappears and the progress speeds up. The 50/30/20 rule is a budgeting framework that helps you organize your spending into three buckets: needs, wants, and savings. This framework works best when you're honest with yourself about what truly is a need versus what you've upgraded into a lifestyle habit. 50% of your take-home pay is supposed to go towards needs.
Rent, mortgage, utilities, groceries, transportation, insurance, and other essentials. 30% of your take-home pay should go towards wants, whether it be clothes, concerts, trips, dining out, subscriptions, and any other non-essentials. 20% of your take-home pay should go towards savings and investing. Emergency funds, down payments on a home, retirement, and any other future goals. If you're carrying high-interest debt, a portion of this 20% may need to focus on paying that down first so it stops stealing from your future. These percentages are guidelines. They're not handcuffs.
Please don't stress yourself out about being 51% paying towards needs. That's normal. But if you're consistently spending 65, 70% on living expenses, that's a sign to pause and make adjustments because it leaves very little room for wealth building. At that point, a solution usually isn't budgeting harder. It's more like increasing your income or reducing your fixed costs, or both. I know incomes vary wildly, so this rule won't fit everyone perfectly. But if you're in a position to apply it, even loosely, it can create structure, clarity, and momentum towards your financial goals.
The goal isn't perfection. The goal is more so consistency and awareness.
I hope this helps.
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