💰 Personal Finance Tool

Free Monthly Budget Planner

Free online budget planner, personal budget planner and monthly budget calculator. Track income and expenses by category with this free budget tracker. Works as a family budget calculator and income expense calculator with this free budget tracker. Features the 50/30/20 rule calculator, savings goal tracker, visual charts and CSV export. Auto-saves to your browser. No login, 100% private - your data never leaves your device.

50/30/20 rule live overlay 50 30 20 budget rule Savings goal tracker Pie & bar charts Export CSV 100% private
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$0
Monthly Income
$0
Total Expenses
$0
Monthly Surplus
0%
Savings Rate
--
Months to Goal
Income
Expenses
50 / 30 / 20 Rule
50 / 30 / 20 Budget Analysis
Needs 50%
0%
Wants 30%
0%
Savings 20%
0%
Enter income and expenses to see your 50/30/20 analysis. Tag each expense as Need, Want or Saving.
Savings Goal
0% saved Enter a target to see timeline
Visual breakdown
Expenses by category
Income vs Expenses
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50/30/20 Rule

The 50/30/20 Budget Rule Explained

The 50/30/20 rule is a straightforward personal budget framework that divides your after-tax monthly income into three spending categories. This free budget tracker (budget tracker free to use with no account) was built to make the 50/30/20 rule actionable. It was popularised by US Senator Elizabeth Warren in the book All Your Worth: The Ultimate Lifetime Money Plan. The rule gives you a simple target allocation without requiring you to track every individual transaction.

50%
Needs
Essential expenses you cannot avoid: rent or mortgage, utility bills, groceries, minimum debt payments, insurance premiums, and basic transport to work.
30%
Wants
Non-essential spending that improves quality of life: dining out, streaming subscriptions, holidays, hobbies, gym memberships, and upgraded versions of necessities.
20%
Savings & Debt
Savings, investments and above-minimum debt repayments: emergency fund, pension contributions, ISA or 401k, extra mortgage payments, and credit card debt reduction.

How to apply the 50/30/20 rule to your monthly budget

Start with your monthly take-home pay after tax and National Insurance (or equivalent deductions). Multiply by 0.50 to find your needs ceiling, by 0.30 for your wants ceiling, and by 0.20 for your savings floor. If your needs exceed 50%, look for ways to reduce fixed costs — a cheaper flat, refinancing debt, or switching energy provider. If your wants exceed 30%, identify subscriptions or habits to cut. The budget planner above calculates these thresholds automatically and shows colour-coded progress bars so you can see at a glance where you stand.

When the 50/30/20 rule doesn't fit

The rule is a guide, not a law. High-cost cities like London, San Francisco or Sydney often require more than 50% of income on housing alone. Lower-income earners may need a higher proportion of income for needs. Higher earners may be able to save more than 20%. The rule works best as a diagnostic tool — if your needs are consuming 70% of income, the problem and the solution become clear, regardless of whether 50% is achievable right now.

50/30/20 vs zero-based budgeting

Zero-based budgeting assigns every unit of currency to a named purpose until income minus allocations equals zero. It is more granular than 50/30/20 but requires more tracking effort. The 50/30/20 rule is better for people who want a simple, low-maintenance budget structure. Zero-based budgeting is better for people who need complete visibility into every expense category or who have specific short-term financial goals. This budget planner supports both approaches — use the category tags for 50/30/20 analysis, or add as many granular expense lines as you need for zero-based tracking.

Budget categories

Budget Categories: Needs vs Wants vs Savings

Understanding the distinction between needs vs wants is the foundation of the 50/30/20 budget rule. Needs are expenses you cannot avoid; wants are discretionary spending; savings are future-focused allocations.

One of the most common questions when starting a budget is how to classify each expense. Here is a reference guide for the most common budget categories aligned to the 50/30/20 framework:

CategoryTypeExamplesTypical % of income
HousingNeedRent, mortgage, council tax, home insurance, maintenance25-35%
UtilitiesNeedElectricity, gas, water, broadband, mobile phone5-8%
GroceriesNeedSupermarket food shopping, household essentials5-10%
TransportNeedCar payment, fuel, public transport, parking, car insurance5-10%
HealthNeedHealth insurance, prescriptions, essential dental2-5%
Dining & coffeeWantRestaurants, takeaways, cafes, work lunches3-8%
EntertainmentWantNetflix, Spotify, cinema, events, hobbies3-7%
ClothingWantNon-essential clothing and accessories2-5%
HolidaysWantTravel, accommodation, experiences2-8%
Emergency fundSaving3-6 months of expenses in accessible savings5-10%
RetirementSavingPension, 401k, SIPP contributions5-10%
InvestmentsSavingISA, index funds, shares, property deposit5-10%
Debt repaymentSavingCredit card, student loan, personal loan (above minimum)Variable
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

The 50/30/20 rule divides after-tax income into three categories: 50% for needs (rent, utilities, groceries, insurance), 30% for wants (dining, entertainment, subscriptions) and 20% for savings and debt repayment. It is a simple budgeting framework that provides targets without requiring granular tracking of every transaction.
A monthly budget planner helps you track income and expenses over a calendar month. You enter income sources and expense categories with amounts. The planner calculates your total income, total expenses, monthly surplus or deficit and savings rate. This tool also applies the 50/30/20 rule to show whether your spending is balanced across needs, wants and savings.
Yes, completely private. All budget data is stored only in your browser's localStorage on your own device. Nothing is sent to any server. This budget planner does not require an account, email address or login. Your data never leaves your device. Export as CSV for permanent backup since clearing browser data will delete localStorage.
A zero-based budget assigns every pound or dollar of income to a specific category so income minus all allocations equals zero. Unlike the 50/30/20 rule, it requires justifying every expense from scratch each month. It is more granular but gives complete visibility. This planner supports zero-based budgeting through unlimited custom expense rows.
Monthly surplus equals total monthly income minus total monthly expenses. The budget planner calculates this automatically. A positive surplus means you are spending less than you earn. A negative surplus (deficit) means you are overspending and need to reduce expenses or increase income.
Common categories include: Housing (rent, mortgage, utilities), Food (groceries, dining), Transport (car, fuel, public transport), Health, Entertainment, Personal care, Clothing, Education, Savings (emergency fund, pension, investments) and Debt repayment. This planner provides pre-built categories aligned with the 50/30/20 framework plus unlimited custom categories.
Yes. Click Export CSV to download your complete budget as a CSV file with all income and expense items, amounts and categories, openable in Excel or Google Sheets. The Print option opens the browser print dialog for saving as a PDF.
The 50/30/20 rule recommends saving 20% of after-tax income. Financial advisors commonly recommend at least 15-20% for retirement plus a 3-6 month emergency fund. A savings rate above 20% is generally considered strong. Below 10% may be insufficient for long-term financial security. This budget planner shows your current savings rate as a percentage and compares it to the 20% recommendation.
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