Submitted by Temujin_123 t3_zzcf8z in personalfinance
Curious what things people do at the EOY related to personal finances.
Here's what my rituals look like:
- Early in the last quarter I take a look at all of my investment contributions: 401k, ROTH, HSA to make sure I'm on track to hit my targets and adjust contributions if necessary. I also look at how things are performing - this year is brutal but, hey, we're buying things while they are on sale.
- I then create a spreadsheet of expected EOY bonus and create a plan for what I will do with the money (e.g., I-Bonds, additional contributions to 401k/ROTH/HSA, 6mo emergency fund, purchases, charities, etc).
- As I get into November/early-December I meet with my financial advisor and share updates on accounts as well as plans for how to invest EOY money.
- Mid-late December I go into Mint, audit/correct spending categorization, then export data and build a sankey diagram showing income & expenses by categories/subcategories. I go audit things maybe several times during the year, but don't build a sankey diagram until EOY.
- Based on the monthly spending from Mint, I take the inner quartile of average spending during the year and use that as my basis for my monthly spending for my 6mo emergency fund. With 4 kids (3 teens) this has risen so basing this on data vs a hunch is helpful. I then figure out where to put the EF (which can be sizable for family of 6). For the coming year, my balance is 56% I-Bonds (purchasing some more but already having some liquid past their 1-year mark), 13% T-bills (laddered), 17% Money Market, and 14% cash.
- I analyze the sankey diagram to make sure the percentages I'm spending on categories are in-line with my budgets and averages recommended by experts. This gives me a feel for whether I am staying within budgets and provides a check for me to adjust habits if something is amiss. This one is big for me. I highly value not worrying about money day in and day out and so this provides a way for me to keep myself honest but also not have to stress out over money. I realize this is a privilege afforded by the income level I have, but I also appreciate it in part because I spent so many years living paycheck to paycheck so liberation from that is very valuable to me. The risk here is by only doing this annually I may go months before correcting a habit. But my wife and I have pretty well-established habits that have kept in-line with our goals, so I don't worry about it much.
- I then look at things I may have put off and take the time to fix things, book appointments for repairs/maintenance, order needed items (do a bit of inventory on emergency preps), etc. and take care of some of this. This is something I'm spending a bit more on this year as global supply chains seem to be increasingly shaky so I'm purchasing things now while parts and products are still widely available. For example, I spent money on a home power backup (went with battery I can also charge from my EVs) and interlock kit to weather power outages.
No_Possibility_8393 t1_j2armqs wrote
I update the net worth spreadsheet and hope it went up.