Household budget — how to start managing and not abandon after a month
How to run a household budget? Practical guide — budgeting methods, tools, templates and tips how to maintain financial discipline longer.
11 min czytaniaWhy run a household budget?
Most people don't know how much they spend. Seriously. The question "how much do you spend monthly?" confuses even people with good earnings. And without this knowledge, you can't effectively save, invest or plan the future.
Household budget is not about limiting yourself. It's about awareness — you know where your money flows and you decide yourself if you want to change it.
3 budgeting methods
1. 50/30/20 method
Simplest and most popular:
- 50% of income → needs (rent, bills, food, transport)
- 30% of income → wants (entertainment, restaurants, hobbies, shopping)
- 20% of income → savings and investments
Example with 7,000 PLN net:
- Needs: 3,500 PLN
- Wants: 2,100 PLN
- Savings: 1,400 PLN
Pros: Simplicity. You don't have to track every penny. Cons: Doesn't work when needs eat more than 50% (e.g. in expensive city).
2. Envelope method (envelope budgeting)
You divide income into categories and assign each a specific amount. Traditionally — cash in envelopes. Today — virtual "envelopes" in app.
Categories:
- Housing: 2,500 PLN
- Food: 1,200 PLN
- Transport: 500 PLN
- Entertainment: 600 PLN
- Clothes: 300 PLN
- Savings: 1,400 PLN
- Reserve: 500 PLN
When envelope empties — stop. You don't borrow from other envelopes (or do it consciously).
Pros: Disciplines. You see limit in each category. Cons: Requires tracking. Can be frustrating.
3. "Zero-based budgeting" method
Every PLN of income has assigned task. Income minus all expenses = 0. This doesn't mean you spend everything — "savings" and "investments" are also categories.
7,000 PLN income:
- Rent: 2,200 PLN
- Food: 1,000 PLN
- Transport: 400 PLN
- Bills: 400 PLN
- Entertainment: 500 PLN
- Clothes: 200 PLN
- Savings: 1,000 PLN
- ETF (IKE): 1,000 PLN
- Reserve: 300 PLN = 0 PLN unassigned
Pros: Maximum control. Nothing "escapes". Cons: Time-consuming. Requires advance planning.
How to start — step by step
Step 1: Collect data (week 1)
Download bank statements from last 3 months. Group expenses into categories. Most banks (mBank, ING, PKO) enable CSV export.
Step 2: Calculate averages (week 1)
Calculate average monthly expense in each category. You'll be surprised. Typical "discoveries":
- Subscriptions you forgot about (200-400 PLN/month)
- Eating out (more than you thought)
- Small online purchases (death by thousand cuts)
Step 3: Set budget (week 2)
Choose method (50/30/20 for start). Assign amounts to categories. Be realistic — drastic cuts don't last long. Better start with 5-10% reduction and gradually increase.
Step 4: Track expenses (daily)
This is the hardest part. Options:
- App — Freenance, Wallet, Money Manager
- Spreadsheet — Google Sheets with budget template
- Notebook — analog, but works
Best system is one you'll actually use.
Step 5: Monthly review (30 minutes)
Once a month (e.g. first day) compare plan with reality:
- Which categories did you exceed?
- Where was underspent?
- Did savings rate improve?
Adjust budget for next month. It's an iterative process.
Why people abandon budget (and how to avoid it)
Problem: Too restrictive budget
Solution: Leave 5-10% for "fun money" without category. Spend on whatever you want, guilt-free.
Problem: Forgetting to track
Solution: Automate. Bank transaction import, automatic categorization, notifications.
Problem: Unexpected expenses
Solution: "Buffer" category (5% of income) for surprises. Repair, car fix, gift — it's not exception, it's norm.
Problem: Feeling of limitation
Solution: Change perspective. Budget doesn't say "you can't". It says "I choose what to spend on". It's freedom, not limitation.
Household budget for couples and families
Running budget as a couple requires communication:
- Agree on common financial goals
- Decide if you have joint budget, separate or hybrid
- Each should have "own envelope" for personal expenses
- Regular budget meetings (once a month, 30 min) prevent conflicts
Budgeting tools
| Tool | Cost | For whom |
|---|---|---|
| Freenance | Free/Premium | Budget + investments + net worth |
| Google Sheets | Free | DIY, full control |
| YNAB | ~50 PLN/month | Zero-based budgeting fans |
| Wallet | Free/Premium | Simple expense tracking |
How Freenance can help
Freenance combines budgeting with holistic financial view. You import transactions from bank (mBank, ING, PKO, Revolut), and app automatically categorizes expenses and calculates savings rate.
But more importantly — you see how your budget affects net worth, financial runway and road to FIRE. It's not another expense tracking app. It's your finance dashboard.
Want full control over your finances?
Try Freenance for free