Budget killers

Determining your budget killers can help you make smarter spending moves.

Figuring out a monthly budget is one of the best ways to take control of your finances. Determining how much you spend and on what can help you devise a saving and investing plan that can help you achieve your future financial goals. Once you look at your spending habits, you can determine what you are doing right and where you might need to make some changes. Below are some tips for isolating some budget killers so you can better manage your finances.

Kick the habit
Are you a compulsive music downloader? Do you stop in the coffee shop a few times a week? Do you buy your lunch instead of bringing it from home? These seemingly small indulgences can make your budget especially tight. Try cutting back to one visit to the coffee shop per week and see how much extra money you have. Also tally up your receipts from your lunches out and determine how much you spend a month and how much you can save by bringing your lunch to work instead. Breaking some bad spending habits can help you save and invest for your financial future.

Simplify your utilities
Do you have an alarm system that you never set? 500 channels of cable television? A home phone that you never use? Carefully examining your utility bills and cancelling or cutting back on the services you don’t need and don’t use can help you free up some money in your monthly budget. Also take a look at your habits. If you leave the water running while you brush your teeth, only wash a few pieces of laundry at a time or keep the lights on while you are at work, you are probably wasting money that could be better spent within the budget you have created for yourself.

Avoid impulse buys
Do you have to buy the newest electronics, even if your current ones are working properly? Do you buy food at the grocery store that you don’t know how to prepare? Do you go to the mall and shop aimlessly? Buying things on a whim can be a real budget killer, especially if you don’t end up using your purchases. And when you put your impulse buys on your credit card and you can’t afford to pay it off, your purchases end up costing even more than their ticket price due to interest rates. To avoid making impulse buys make a list of things you need before you go to a store. It can also be a good idea to look into some other activities that don’t tempt you to spend money so you have something to fall back on other than shopping when you are bored.

 

Published on January 22, 2007

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