Free budget planner

Budget Planner: Build a Monthly Budget That Fits Your Money

Use this free monthly budget planner to see whether your take-home income can cover bills, minimum debt payments, savings goals, flexible spending, and an irregular-expense buffer before the month starts.

Short answer

A monthly budget works when required costs, minimum debt payments, and a small buffer are protected first. This planner separates minimum debt payments from extra debt payments so you can see whether extra payoff money is realistic, not just hopeful.

Free to use No signup required Debt-payment aware Mobile friendly
Sample take-home income $5,200
Sample split
Needs
66%
Wants
13%
Progress
8%
Planned spending$4,570
Leftover$630
What you will see

Your monthly leftover, your needs/wants/progress split, and a plain-English next step based on your numbers.

Monthly budget calculator

Check whether this month can actually work.

Enter your best monthly estimates. Required costs and minimum debt payments are treated as protection categories. Savings and extra debt payments are treated as progress categories.

Plan the month before it happens

Use dollars and monthly amounts. No numbers are pre-filled. Add your own estimates, then press calculate.

Use money that actually lands in your account.
Rent, mortgage, or basic housing payments.
Power, water, phone, internet, and basic services.
Groceries, toiletries, cleaning items, and regular basics.
Fuel, transit, parking, car payment, or required insurance.
Childcare, prescriptions, health costs, and regular care.
Required minimums on cards, loans, or other debts.
Car repairs, annual bills, gifts, school costs, or medical surprises.
Dining out, subscriptions, shopping, hobbies, and convenience spending.
Emergency fund, sinking funds, and future goals.
Money above required minimum debt payments.
Anything required that does not fit above.
How to use it

Start with the month you are actually trying to make work.

A useful monthly budget is not a wish list. It is a pressure test. It should show whether rent or mortgage payments, groceries, transport, minimum debt payments, irregular bills, savings goals, and flexible spending can all fit inside the income that actually arrives.

Use take-home income

Use the amount that reaches your bank account after taxes and payroll deductions. If your income changes, use a conservative monthly average or the lower amount you can usually rely on.

Separate minimum debt payments from extra payments

Minimum debt payments are required costs. Extra debt payments are progress payments. Keeping those numbers separate is the difference between protecting the month and only looking aggressive on paper.

Budget Beyond rule: A budget is working when it protects the month, keeps required payments current, and gives the next spare dollar a clear job.
Example budget

A realistic monthly budget example.

This example leaves about $630. It is not a perfect 50/30/20 budget because needs are high, but the month is workable.

Income$5,200

Monthly take-home pay.

Needs$3,450

Housing, bills, groceries, transport, minimum debt, and buffer.

Wants$700

Flexible spending and subscriptions.

Progress$420

Emergency savings plus extra debt payment.

Result guide

What your result means.

Budget signalWhat it usually meansNext useful move
Monthly shortfallPlanned costs are higher than income.Protect essentials and minimum debt payments, pause extra debt payments, then review flexible spending and adjustable bills.
Very tight budgetThe budget balances, but there is little room for timing problems or surprise costs.Build a small buffer before increasing savings goals or extra debt payments.
Monthly surplusThe month has money left over after planned costs.Give the leftover one clear job: buffer, debt, savings, or a planned expense.

On a small screen, scroll the table sideways if needed.

Debt connection

How to connect your budget to debt payoff.

Debt payoff starts inside the monthly budget. Before sending extra money to a credit card or loan, check whether essentials, minimum payments, and a small buffer are covered.

EstimateTest extra payments

Use the Debt Payoff Calculator to estimate payoff time and interest.

PrioritizeChoose the first debt

Use Which Debt Should I Pay Off First? to pick a target.

ProtectBuild a small buffer

Use the Emergency Fund guide to choose a starter cushion.

ImproveReview payoff steps

Read How to Pay Off Debt Faster for practical next steps.

Next decision

Turn the budget result into one clear money move.

After you know your monthly leftover, choose where that money should go first: a small emergency buffer, an extra debt payment, a savings goal, or a planned expense.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What is a monthly budget planner?

A monthly budget planner helps you compare take-home income with bills, minimum debt payments, flexible spending, savings goals, extra debt payments, and irregular expenses.

Should I use gross income or take-home income?

Take-home income is usually better because it shows the money you actually have available after taxes and payroll deductions.

What if my budget shows a shortfall?

A shortfall means the expenses entered are higher than income. Protect essentials and minimum debt payments first, then review flexible spending and adjustable bills.

Should extra debt payments count as savings?

Minimum debt payments should be treated as required costs. Extra debt payments can be grouped with savings as progress money.

Can this budget planner replace financial advice?

No. This planner provides educational estimates only. It does not provide personalised financial, legal, tax, or investment advice.

Last updated: June 2026 – Written and edited by Budget Beyond.

Educational disclaimer: Budget Beyond provides educational information and calculator estimates only. This page does not provide personalised financial, legal, tax, or investment advice. See our affiliate disclosure and methodology for more.