Michael West Financials LLC · Est. 2024
Tool · Foundation

A budget that survives the month.

A budget isn't a list of things you can't do. It's permission to spend money on the things you enjoy without second-guessing every purchase. Take-home pay, real categories, one rule: every dollar gets a job. Saved to your browser only — nothing is sent to a server.

Saved to this browser only · clearing site data wipes it
$ / mo
Need

Essentials

Survival. If income stops, these still go out.

$0 0%
Want

Lifestyle

Quality of life — restaurants, subscriptions, hobbies.

$0 0%
Save

Savings & goals

Future you — emergency fund, retirement, debt payoff above minimums.

$0 0%
Saved locally
Income
Spent
Left over
50 / 30 / 20 reference
Needs ≤ 50%
Wants ≤ 30%
Savings ≥ 20%
You have unassigned. In zero-based budgeting, every dollar gets a job — push it into savings or a goal so it doesn't drift into spending.
Every dollar has a job. Spend the "wants" line guilt-free — that's what permission looks like in practice.
You're over by . Either trim a line, raise income, or this gets covered by debt — which sends you backwards.

Saved to your browser only. Nothing is sent to a server. Clearing site data will erase the entries — for a permanent copy, screenshot or export the values manually. The 50/30/20 reference is a rough guide popularized by Senator Elizabeth Warren — not a rule, just a starting point. Real budgets vary by city, life stage, and stage in the order of operations.

The one rule

Every dollar gets a job.

This is zero-based budgeting in one sentence: income minus assignments equals zero. Not because you spend everything — but because every dollar is consciously routed somewhere. Savings is a job. Debt payoff is a job. Sinking fund for car maintenance is a job. The dollars you don't assign quietly drift into spending.

  • Needs. Survival — rent, groceries, utilities, transportation, insurance, minimum debt payments. The things that still happen if income stops.
  • Wants. Quality-of-life. Dining out, subscriptions, hobbies, shopping. Cuts here are the fastest way to fix a tight budget.
  • Savings & goals. Future you. Emergency fund, retirement, debt payoff above the minimum. The category most often skipped — and the one that compounds.
Plain English

A budget gives you permission to spend money on the things you enjoy. Once a category has a number, you can spend that number without second-guessing — the guilt is what happens when you don't decide in advance, not when you do.

50 / 30 / 20

A reference, not a rule.

The 50/30/20 split — 50% needs, 30% wants, 20% savings — is a useful starting point, popularized by Senator Elizabeth Warren. It's not gospel. Real budgets vary with city, life stage, and which step of the order of operations you're on.

  • High cost-of-living city? Needs may push toward 60–70%. The fix is usually to cut wants, not savings — but if savings drops below 10%, that's a sign the housing math doesn't work long-term.
  • Aggressive debt payoff? Savings line is doing double duty as debt payoff. That's fine. Push it well above 20% temporarily, accept lower wants, and ride it out.
  • Saving for a house? Mid-term goals (3–10 years out) live in the savings bucket. A real house savings line in here keeps the timeline honest.
  • Just starting? If 20% to savings is impossible right now, start at 5%, automate it, and bump it 1% every raise. The habit compounds faster than the dollars.
Where it fits

Budget feeds the order of operations.

A budget is the engine; the order of operations is the destination. The savings line in here is what funds Steps 2 (starter buffer), 3 (debt payoff), 4 (emergency fund), 5 (Roth + HSA), and 6 (15% retirement). Get the engine running, then point it.

  • Step 1. Capture the full 401(k) employer match (this happens via paycheck deduction, before take-home).
  • Step 2. $1,000 starter buffer — savings line until you cross it.
  • Step 3. High-interest debt — savings line redirects to extra debt payments. Run the payoff calculator.
  • Step 4. 3–6 month emergency fund — savings line builds the cushion.
  • Step 5. Roth IRA + HSA — savings line splits between those.
Caveats

Where this estimate is rough.

  • Take-home pay is post-tax. What hits your bank account, after federal/state/FICA and any pre-tax deductions (401(k), HSA, health insurance).
  • Irregular income? Build the budget for your worst plausible month. Anything above that is bonus — push it into savings or debt payoff.
  • Annual expenses need monthly slots. Car insurance, holiday gifts, registration fees — divide the annual cost by 12 and add it as a savings line. That's a sinking fund.
  • The numbers will be wrong at first. Track for one or two months, see what your actual spend is, then revise. Real budgets are a few iterations in.
  • Saved locally. The data lives in your browser. Clearing site data, switching browsers, or using a different device wipes it. Screenshot for a permanent copy.
Next step

Once the budget runs, the order takes over.

A working budget points dollars at the right step in the order of operations. See where each saved dollar should go first, second, and ninth — and the reasons behind the order.