Plan your monthly household budget, track income and expenses, and compare your spending against recommended guidelines for a typical US household.
Educational & estimation purposes only. Budget percentages are general guidelines and may not reflect your personal financial situation, tax obligations, or local cost of living. Seek guidance from a certified financial planner or advisor for advice tailored to your circumstances.
Emergency fund (3–6 mo.), retirement contributions, investments, extra debt payoff
Category
% of Gross Income
Monthly Target Range
Percentages are guidelines based on gross (pre-tax) monthly income. Actual needs vary by location, family size, and individual circumstances.
Source: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, 50/30/20 rule (Elizabeth Warren), and 2026 US household spending research.
How to Build a Monthly Budget in 5 Steps
Calculate your take-home income. Add up all reliable monthly income after taxes — salary, freelance pay, rental income, side work. Use actual net pay (what hits your bank account), not gross. Variable income earners should use a conservative 3-month average.
List every fixed expense. These don't change month to month: rent or mortgage, car payment, insurance premiums, subscriptions, minimum loan payments. Total them first — they're non-negotiable and set the floor for your budget.
Estimate variable expenses. Review 2–3 months of bank or credit card statements to find realistic averages for groceries, dining, gas, utilities, and entertainment. Most people underestimate these categories by 20–30%.
Compare income to expenses and close the gap. Subtract total expenses from income. If you're in the red, identify which variable categories to cut first. If you have a surplus, decide intentionally where it goes — savings, debt payoff, or both.
Automate and track. Set up automatic transfers to savings on payday so the money is moved before you can spend it. Review your budget monthly and adjust as income or expenses change. Small course corrections beat large resets.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much should I save each month?
A widely used starting target is 20% of gross income (the savings slice of the 50/30/20 rule). If that's not immediately achievable, start with whatever you can automate — even 5% — and increase by 1–2% every six months. Prioritize in order: (1) capture any employer 401(k) match (free money), (2) build an emergency fund of 3–6 months of expenses, (3) pay off high-interest debt, (4) invest for the long term.
What's considered a good savings rate?
Financial planners generally consider 15–20% of gross income a strong savings rate for long-term wealth building. The US personal savings rate historically averages 4–8%. A "good" rate depends on your age and goals: at 25, saving 10% may be sufficient; at 45, you may need 25–30% to retire on schedule. The best savings rate is the highest one you can sustain consistently without sacrificing essential quality of life.