Tag: Emergency fund

  • Conversations to Haver Once Your Teen Starts Earning Money

    Conversations to Haver Once Your Teen Starts Earning Money

    Once your teen starts earning a paycheck, the importance of money conversations should not be overlooked. As a parent or guardian, it’s your job to facilitate money talks and encourage your teen to ask money-related questions when they arise.

    Below, we’ll dive deeper into why money goals are important for teens as well as how to help your teen save and plan for unexpected expenses. We’ll also discuss how to ensure money conversations are a regular part of your teen’s life.

    Key Takeaways:

    • Once teens begin to earn money, it’s vital that they save for short-term goals, long-term goals, and unexpected expenses.
    • Newly employed teenagers should dip their toes into investing.
    • Ongoing money conversations can help your teen avoid common money mistakes and set them up for a healthy financial future.

    The Importance of Setting Money Goals
    Financial goals are milestones you set for your money over specified periods of time. They’re just as important for your teen as they are for you. Encouraging teens to save money and set financial goals will help them learn about the importance of financial literacy and creating healthy habits around their finances.

    Short-Term Savings Goals
    Short-term savings goals are those your teen can achieve in less than a year. Saving for a concert next month is a good example of a short-term savings goal you can help them meet. Sit down with your child and look at how much money they earn on a weekly or monthly basis. Then, ask them about the price of the concert ticket and work together to determine how much they’ll need to save from their paycheck to buy it. Write down this information and hang up the short-term savings plan you create on your fridge or anywhere else your teen will see it often.

    Long-Term Savings Goals
    Long-term savings goals typically take more than a year to accomplish. Your teen may want to buy a car, go on a spring break trip with friends, or pay for college tuition. With long-term goals, it may make sense to introduce a budgeting method, such as: 50/30/20. The 50/30/20 budget method can ensure your teen has enough money for their needs, wants, and savings goals. They allocate 50% of their income to their needs, 30% to their wants, and 20% to their long-term savings goals.

    What Does Saving Look Like?
    Many teens graduate high school and go off to college without a real understanding of saving money and how to spend responsibly. When this happens, they may make financial mistakes that could follow them out of college and into their adult years. Teaching your teen how to budget appropriately and save will help them learn to live within their means when starting their career. To promote saving early on, you can help your teen open a savings account.

    Ideally, you’d choose a savings account at a bank or credit union near your home with digital tools like online banking that your teen will appreciate. Not all savings accounts are created equally, so shop around with your teen to find a no-fee savings account that works well for how they earn, access, and save money.

    Planning for Unexpected Expenses
    Teens should know that planning for unexpected expenses is different from saving for a particular financial goal. Saving for a financial goal, like buying a television, can be completed on a short-term or long-term basis. However, saving money for unexpected expenses helps you maintain financial stability in a job loss, car accident, or medical emergency that medical insurance does not cover. To prepare your teen for unexpected expenses, teach them how to build an emergency fund. Let them know that if their car breaks down, for example, an emergency fund can cover the cost without putting them into debt.

    Put Your Money To Work: Investment Options
    Consider setting up a custodial investment account for your teen. This type of account is set up by an adult for the benefit of a minor and offers the opportunity for parents to teach kids some basic investing skills. You can explain the investment options in your teen’s account and review statements with them.

    Teens may be more inclined to invest if they can put their money toward companies they love. For example, if your child is an athlete and supports Nike products, you can talk to your teen about Nike as a company, track how their stock is doing, and even buy some shares of it together for them to learn.

    Investing Large Money Gifts
    As your teen grows up, they’ll likely receive large monetary gifts from family members for special milestones like their bar or bat mitzvah, sweet sixteen, or graduation. While they may be tempted to spend this money on fun, big-ticket purchases like new furniture or electronics, saving it can make their life easier in the future. Encourage your teen to be smart with large gifts and allocate them toward long-term financial goals, like saving for college.

    What’s the Deal With Taxes?
    Since taxes are a key part of everyone’s finances, teach your teen the basics. Let them know that taxes are deducted from their paychecks, so they’ll pocket less money than they earn. Also, explain that they’ll need to file a tax return every year and can do so with the help of tax software or a tax professional. When you talk to your teen about taxes, keep things simple. Overcomplicating the conversation and telling them more than they need to know may overwhelm them.

     Keeping the Conversation Going
    You should make time to talk to your teen about money whenever they need to. Basic financial literacy is incredibly important because financial mistakes made early in life can change the entire trajectory of one’s economic life circumstances. Teaching teens about finances can save them from making crippling mistakes that haunt them throughout their lives, like starting a working career with debilitating student loan balances.

    Keep the money conversation going organically. In short, it’s important to create opportunities for children, adolescents, and teens to use money — saving it, spending it, and even making mistakes with it. And, when possible, to invite children, adolescents, and teens to participate in household financial decision making, like drafting a grocery list given a budget.

  • 5 Good Financial Habits to Bring Into the New Year

    5 Good Financial Habits to Bring Into the New Year

    When the New Year bells ring, finances are typically at the top of the resolutions list. It can be exciting and empowering to want to achieve your financial goals once and for all. However, what most people fail to realize is that you must strengthen those financial muscles first. It’s just like setting a fitness goal: you don’t set out to run a marathon without also changing your eating habits, sleeping habits, and workout habits. It’s the shift in these small habits that gets you prepared and moving towards your goal. The same is true for finances. If you intend to pay off your debts or save for that home in the coming year, you need to ensure that you are making changes to your everyday financial habits as well.

    1. Create a Budget
    It might be hard to hear this, but creating a budget is one of the best financial habits that you can have. Managing your money starts with knowing where your money is going, and without having a proper budget it can be quite easy to lose track of your monthly spending. How many times have you asked yourself, ‘Where did my money go?’ Creating a budget provides the clarity and control you need to stay on top of your finances.

    Keeping a budget ‘in your head’ is not wise. We can hardly remember what we did last week, so how do you expect to remember all the places where your money has gone? Create a well-formed budget by pulling together at least the last 6 months of all banking transactions. Use that data as a basis for how you would like to spend your money going forward. Be sure to include your savings goals and debt repayment goals within your budget as well. A budget is meant to capture your entire financial picture and should show how all your monthly income is being allocated.

    2. Check in With Your Money
    Having a budget is one thing, but using it is another. Most people fall into the trap of only looking at their finances at the end of the month, which makes it difficult to adjust spending before it’s too late. As with any major plan or project, there are check-in points. The same is true for your finances. Setting up weekly money meetings is important to ensure you stick to your budget and achieve your financial goals. Set up a time each week to track your spending and review it against your budget. Have you ordered delivery meals one too many times this week? Did you order another thing online that was not planned? Put a plan in place for the upcoming week of the changes that need to be made to avoid running over your budget.

    Having a pulse on your finances also allows you to be financially proactive instead of reactive. By knowing how your money is allocated, you can easily adjust and adapt in the event of any unexpected circumstance. This is how you remain in financial control.

    3. Say No
    This might be one of the hardest habits to develop, but it’s the most powerful. If you have gotten into the habit of saying yes to you, your kids, and your family, it might be time to release that habit now. Achieving your financial dreams starts with being financially responsible and that means sticking to your plan, living within your means, and saying ‘No’ to anything that is outside of your plan.

    Don’t go on this journey alone. Make sure you have communicated your new financial focus to your family. Have a family meeting to discuss your financial goals and priorities, share your budget and let your family know upfront that spending will be different this year. Tell a trusted friend about your commitment and ask them to keep you accountable. And, when you find yourself tempted to give in, remember why you started on this journey to begin with.

    4. Build Your Emergency Fund
    If there is anything that is certain, it’s that life is uncertain. You never know when life might send you on an unexpected path, so you must always ensure you are financially ready and prepared. This is where having an adequate emergency fund can help you to maintain financial security. Whether it’s losing a job, the car breaks down or the furnace needs to be prepared, life always seems to happen. In these circumstances, most people use their credit cards or line of credit to make it through but having an emergency fund ensures you avoid this debt spiral.

    The goal should be to have 6 to 12 months of your income saved in an emergency fund. Calculate how much that would be for you and your family and then develop the habit of savings towards this goal each month. You can create your own financial security if you prioritize this one important financial habit.

    5. Stop Celebrating the Minimums
    Paying the minimums on your credit cards is no reason to celebrate. If you are serious about getting out of debt, you will need to create the habit of paying more than what is due. If becoming debt-free is a meaningful goal for you, then you must take it a step further and create a debt repayment plan. A goal without a plan is only a wish, and wishing your debts away is not going to cut it. Look at your budget and see how much excess cash you have after all your expenses. Reduce or eliminate any unnecessary expenses. Determine how much money you can put towards your debts each month and then create a plan to do just that. To ensure you stick to the plan, set up automatic monthly debt payments so that the money is actually paid to your debts before you can spend it.

    And while we are on the topic, also make sure you pay all your debts on time. This can greatly impact your credit score which needs to remain intact should you ever wish to leverage credit for significant purchases such as a home or a car.

    Implementing these habits will create a more stable and secure financial future for you and your family.

     

  • Where Does Your Paycheque Go?

    Where Does Your Paycheque Go?

    10 Budgeting Tips to Help You Stay on Track

    A monthly budget is like Google Maps for your finances: you follow it because you don’t know where you’re going without it. If you’re new to budgeting, don’t be discouraged by a few — or many — wrong turns and closed roads along the way. The longer you stick with it, the better you get. With a few simple budgeting tips, you can be well on your way before you know it.

    1. Set Your Goals Before You Make Your Budget
    Without a goal, a budget is just a spreadsheet that tells you to have less fun. Think about what you want in the next 5 to 10 years and figure out what financial situation you need to get there. Whatever your goals are, know that any sound financial foundation starts with an emergency fund. You might then want to pay off debt, save for a down payment on a home, or increase your savings.

    Decide where you want to be financially next year and the year after. Knowing what you want to do with your money will guide you as you figure out how to budget, and it will greatly increase the likelihood that you’ll stick to it.

    2. There’s No One Size-Fits-All Budget — Find a Plan That Works for You
    There are so many budgeting methods out there, and every guru says theirs is the best. But ultimately you have to choose the one that works for you.

    If you’ve got an ambitious goal, we recommend trying a zero-based budget first. To make a zero-based budget, start by prioritizing your expenses from essential to nonessential. Then, assign every dollar in your paycheck a “job” on the list until you run out. The most important things — housing, food, minimum debt payments — get taken care of first, and you can disburse the remaining money for your goals and fun in their order of importance to you. Zero-based budgeting is great for ‘Type A’ planners.

    If you prefer to be a little more loosey-goosey, a 50/20/30 budget is a great option. With this approach, you don’t have to think too much about your expenses. You just allocate 50% of your income to your needs, 20% to savings and 30% to wants.

    3. Use a Budget App or Envelope System to Track Your Spending
    It’s hard to lug around your laptop or binder to keep up with each budget category, so a budgeting app is a great tool for updating your budget on the go. There are many out there, whether you like to enter each transaction manually or see everything updated automatically.

    If your goal is to take an intense look at your spending, manually tracking your transactions is going to work best. Once you’ve been budgeting for a while and you’ve got a grasp on your spending, syncing transactions automatically works fine. If you still can’t stick to your budget, the envelope system can help you succeed without so much emphasis on constant tracking.

    After you decide how much money goes toward each of your expenses, put the money you’ll spend for each expense in a given week into separate envelopes and carry them with you. Once an envelope is empty, you’re done spending in that category. You can keep receipts in the envelope and examine your purchases later.

    Envelopes are best for categories you’re prone to overspending on. You probably don’t need envelopes for things like gas and utilities because you’re not likely to go on a gas-buying spree. Popular categories for envelopes are restaurants, groceries, clothes, and entertainment.

    4. Use the Past to Predict Your Future Income & Expenses
    Whether you choose a zero-based budget, 50/20/30 budget, or some other method, you’re going to have to calculate your income and the amount of money you want to put toward every category or individual expense.

    Salaried employees will get off easy when they calculate their incomes. If you have a variable income or side hustles, you’ll need to do some digging. Look back at your income from the past six months, or as far back as you can if you’ve been at your current job for less time. Then find your average monthly income and the average amount of each paycheck.

    Expenses like utilities can also be unpredictable. Check your online statements to see which months were higher versus which were lower so you can make future budgets. You may not be able to take that impromptu weekend getaway the month your electric bill will be $300, but it might be totally feasible during a month it’s going to be $75.

    5. Don’t Confuse Infrequent Expenses with Emergencies
    These aren’t the unexpected expenses that you’d cover with your miscellaneous or emergency categories. Infrequent expenses are the charges that come up once or twice a year — but we always seem to forget will happen. Like when it’s December 23 and you’re still not done with your holiday shopping. Who could’ve predicted Christmas would be on December 25 again?!

    Keep a chart that includes your semi-annual and annual expenses to determine what you need to save every month to cover them. Open a separate checking account or savings account where you put money every month to cover these expenses.

    6. Remember the Obvious: You Need to Spend Less
    Count this among the budgeting tips no one wants to hear. Once the planning is done, it’s time for the hardest part: sticking to your plan. If you’re in the habit of spending more than you make, your first priority is to find ways to save money. We don’t mean you need to find better sales and clip more coupons. The most important thing you can do is buy and spend less.

    Some of good tips to cut spending are:

    • Make a meal plan and stick to your grocery list
    • Prep meals on Sundays so you’re less likely to eat out during the week
    • Treat yourself to a coffee once a week instead of daily or cut them out completely
    • Opt for free events in your area instead of pricy activities or bars
    • Try running and body-weight workouts instead of paying for a gym membership

    There are countless ways to save money. Do everything you can to resist the temptation to make impulse purchases or spend beyond your budget. An easy way to do this: Leave your credit card at home and use cash envelopes or a debit card.

    7. Use the 30-Day Rule to Stop Impulse Shopping
    If you still need to curb impulse shopping, follow the 30-day rule: When you want to buy something that’s not in your budget, make note of the item in question for next month’s budget and revisit it in 30 days. If you still want it, you can consider buying it if you can afford it.

    8. Negotiate Your Bills to Save Money
    People often take for granted that what they’re paying for their phone, internet and insurance is what they have to pay. By contacting your providers to negotiate your bills, you could lower your bills once or twice every year.

    9. Remember That Things Will Go Wrong
    Student loans and credit cards aren’t paid off overnight. And the perfect budget isn’t made in a day. Things will change and go wrong. Impulse purchases will be made, and budgets will get obliterated by life’s little surprises. The most important tip for budgeting is to not give up. When things go wrong, alter your budget to compensate. Move money from one category to another, put less in savings, or try a side hustle to add some wiggle room. And know that sometimes you’ll find yourself ripping up the entire budget and starting again from scratch in the middle of the month. Eventually, you’ll get this whole budgeting thing down. But it’s going to start with some bumps in the road.

    10. Have an Income-Sinking Fund for When Your Income is Lower
    Living off tips, sales commissions or freelance work can make for a flexible lifestyle, but it also makes it hard to budget. When you have an inconsistent income, you can follow all the budgeting tips above, but having this additional category may help.

    When you calculate your income and get your monthly average, compare it with your income each month throughout the year. In months you expect to make more than average, take the difference, and transfer it to your income-sinking fund. It’s a separate account where you put money you plan to take out in the near future for a specific purpose, such as supplementing your income on low-earning months. During months when you expect to make less, you can withdraw up to your monthly average to help with expenses.

    The key to any good budget is consistency!

  • Start an Emergency Fund

    Start an Emergency Fund

    We never know what the future holds for us, so it’s always best to be prepared.  Having an emergency fund is extremely important so you’re always prepared to deal with what life brings—good or bad.  It’s a good idea to make an emergency fund one of your highest savings priorities.  Put $20 a week in an emergency fund and your account will grow to over $1,000 in just one year.  That’s often enough to cover a repair bill or emergency travel.  An emergency fund can also shield you from the high cost of borrowing and keep you from sinking into debt.  Follow these five tips to help you set goals and take steps toward starting an emergency fund:

    Chart your monthly income & expenses. Grab a piece of paper and write down how much money your earn and how much you spend for each month. Be sure to include recurring expenses such as your rent or mortgage, utility bills, childcare, and estimates of other out-of-pocket expenses for things you might buy such as movie tickets, dinner out and clothing.

    Set your emergency savings goal. An emergency fund should cover three to six months’ worth of realistic living expenses. If you feel your income is stable or have access to home equity or other forms of credit to use if needed, then you may be able to plan for the lower figure.  If your credit is near its limit and your income outlook is less secure, you might want to save more.

    Develop a plan to start saving. Setting a goal and developing a plan to achieve those goals go hand-in-hand. Part of your plan may include specific and measurable targets to work toward.  For example, one specific goal may be to save an extra $300 over the next six months to put into an emergency fund.

    Put your emergency fund in an accessible place. The best place for your emergency fund is in a liquid account (accounts where your cash is easily accessible). A liquid account might be a regular savings account at a bank or credit union that provides some return on your deposit and from which your funds can be withdrawn at any time without penalty.  If you consider other options, like a certificate of deposit, money market fund or mutual fund, be sure to figure out how accessible your money will be in an emergency.

    Stick to your plan. Once you’ve created your plan, make sure you stick to it. This can sometimes be the hardest part of saving for an emergency fund or any financial goal in general.  If your goals are realistic and attainable, sticking to the plan will be much easier.  A good way to stay on track is to save automatically.  Set up a systematic transfer from your regular checking or savings account at your bank.  Be sure to keep your rainy-day funds separate from your other accounts, and label it “for emergency use only.”  Just writing down an account’s purpose can keep you from spending the money for any other reason.

    Starting an emergency fund is a necessary building block for long term financial stability.  Anyone can do it; you just need the right plan.