What to Do with Your First Salary — A Beginner's Guide

Your first salary is a moment to establish good financial habits. Learn how to wisely manage your first paycheck and start building wealth.

7 min czytania

First Salary — Why It Matters?

Your first salary isn't just money. It's the moment when your financial habits for years to come are shaped. People who save even a small amount from the beginning statistically build more wealth than those who "will start saving when they earn more."

The compound interest effect means that 100 PLN invested at age 23 is worth more than 200 PLN invested at age 35.

First Salary Plan — 7 Steps

1. Celebrate (But Don't Go Overboard)

Seriously — celebrate. Spend 5–10% of your first salary on something that brings you joy. Dinner, a gift for yourself, going out with friends. Money should also bring happiness.

2. Pay Your Bills

Rent, utilities, phone, transportation. This is absolute priority. Falling behind on bills from the first month is the worst start.

3. Create an Emergency Fund

Open a separate savings account and transfer at least 10% of your salary to it. Goal: collect the equivalent of 3 months of expenses. This is your protection against surprises — car breakdown, dentist visit, job loss.

4. Pay Off Debt (If You Have Any)

If you have debt — e.g., student loan, family loan — establish a repayment plan. Pay off high-interest debt (credit cards, payday loans) first.

5. Set Up Automatic Saving

On payday, set up a standing order:

  • 10–20% to savings account (emergency fund)
  • When emergency fund is ready → redirect to investment account

Automation eliminates the temptation to spend everything.

6. Open IKE or IKZE (Polish Tax-Advantaged Accounts)

Even if you only contribute 100 PLN monthly — start. IKE and IKZE provide tax benefits, and time works in your favor:

  • 100 PLN/month for 40 years at 8% annually = about 349,000 PLN
  • 200 PLN/month for 30 years at 8% annually = about 298,000 PLN

Starting 10 years earlier with a smaller amount, you have more.

7. Start Tracking Expenses

For the first 3 months, record all expenses. Not to restrict yourself — but to know where the money goes. Most people are shocked when they see the real breakdown of their spending.

What NOT to Do with Your First Salary

  • Don't buy a car on credit — use public transport, save for a car with cash
  • Don't get a credit card "just in case" — it's a trap for 80% of young people
  • Don't compare yourself to others — colleague bought a new iPhone on installments? That's their problem, not your goal
  • Don't postpone saving "for later" — there's no perfect moment, there's only now
  • Don't ignore Social Security and taxes — especially on contract work or B2B

Sample Budget — First Salary 4,500 PLN Net

Category Amount %
Rent + utilities 1,800 PLN 40%
Food 700 PLN 16%
Transportation 130 PLN 3%
Emergency fund 450 PLN 10%
IKE/investments 200 PLN 4%
Phone, internet 80 PLN 2%
Entertainment and "fun money" 500 PLN 11%
Clothes, cosmetics 300 PLN 7%
Reserve 340 PLN 7%

Habits Worth Developing from Your First Salary

  1. Pay yourself first — savings are a fixed "bill," not what's left at month-end
  2. Wait 48h before big purchases — most impulse purchases disappear after 2 days
  3. Check your account once a week — financial awareness is the first step to control
  4. Educate yourself — one finance article per week will change your approach within a year

How Freenance Can Help

Freenance is the perfect companion for your first salary:

  • Automatic expense categorization — see where your money goes
  • Emergency fund tracking — how many months of Runway you've saved
  • Savings goal — set an amount and track progress
  • Financial education built into the app

👉 Start managing finances from your first salary — freenance.io

Want full control over your finances?

Try Freenance for free
Start today

Your path to financial freedomstarts here

Join thousands of investors who use Freenance to manage their personal finances.

Start for free
14 days free
No credit card
256-bit encryption