Submitted by BraveCheesecake6090 t3_zxayvm in personalfinance
FerrociousButtn t1_j1z9nv4 wrote
Reply to comment by BraveCheesecake6090 in How to incorporate credit into budget? by BraveCheesecake6090
I think what they were saying is that you should create your budget independent of your credit. E.g. your income of $x,xxx with $xxx going into savings, $xxx for expenses, etc. The only time your credit comes into play is using it to pay for those already budgeted expenses. I cannot stress enough that you should only put what you can pay off immediately on your credit card to avoid carrying a balance and creating debt. Even by putting small purchases on your card will build credit if you pay it off in full at the end of the cycle.
BraveCheesecake6090 OP t1_j1zcb1w wrote
Ok I think I understand, I thought the wisdom was to keep the balance to what you can pay by the end of the month. I’m not suggesting I increase my budget for x BECAUSE of credit but rather suggesting if it would be a wise choice to “replace” my usage of the “variable” debit card with the credit card so that by the end of the month I have a full pay check stashed away to use to pay off the credit card amount RATHER than the current system when I have half a paycheck every 2 weeks, with the first “2 weeks” having a fair portion going immediately to bills. Obviously there are ways to budget around this so it doesn’t feel like I have significantly more money in the second half of the month than I do in the first half but I wonder if it would be easier to think and plan around those expenses using a credit card — although perhaps just moving all my utilities into the card all together would be easier? And then just using the $200 or so saved on the “static” account to go towards the credit balance EOM ?
DeluxeXL t1_j1ze8mk wrote
Based on your comment, you still have the mindset of someone living paycheck to paycheck.
Once you have a one-month buffer in your checking account, when you get paid and when expenses are paid no longer matters.
BraveCheesecake6090 OP t1_j1zf4pv wrote
Hm i wonder if that’s a symptom of how I have my finances organized. I’m in the process of turning my 1 month buffer I currently have into a healthy 3-6 month emergency fund. It’s a little juvenile but it keeps all the bills paid on time, a consistent amount going into savings, kitchen stocked, etc. but does keep me perhaps overly wary of larger purchases like new (and needed) furniture.
DeluxeXL t1_j1zfrjc wrote
> I’m in the process of turning my 1 month buffer I currently have into a healthy 3-6 month emergency fund
They are not the same thing. You should put the emergency fund in a separate savings account. Your one-month buffer stays in the main checking account.
Open a 3rd account to save for short term needs, like furniture and sinking funds.
BraveCheesecake6090 OP t1_j1zgp7p wrote
Ah ok! This was something I had been thinking of doing once I hit 3 months in the emergency fund. (Holiday spending might have set me back a bit but I should be to that point by the end of February or so)
This is my first job out of college and I was basically broke once I took it after paying for associated moving expenses so savings has been a little slow.
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