A monthly budget worksheet works by comparing your total take-home income against every planned expense and savings contribution — and the result tells you whether you have a surplus (save or invest it) or a deficit (something must change). Most people who start tracking discover 2–3 categories where spending significantly exceeds what they believed.

This guide provides a complete monthly budget worksheet structure, the most effective budgeting methods, and guidance on which expenses to cut first.

Monthly Budget Worksheet Template

Copy this structure into a spreadsheet (Google Sheets or Excel) and fill in your actual numbers:

Section 1: Monthly Income

Income Source Amount
Primary job take-home pay $
Spouse/partner take-home pay $
Freelance / side income $
Rental income $
Other income $
Total Monthly Income $

Use after-tax, take-home amounts for all income.

Section 2: Fixed Expenses

Fixed expenses are the same every month and cannot be easily changed in the short term.

Fixed Expense Monthly Amount
Rent or mortgage $
Renter’s or homeowner’s insurance $
Car payment $
Car insurance $
Health insurance premium (if not pre-tax) $
Life insurance $
Subscriptions (Netflix, Spotify, gym, etc.) $
Phone bill $
Internet $
Student loan payments $
Minimum credit card payments $
Other fixed (alimony, child support, etc.) $
Total Fixed Expenses $

Section 3: Variable Expenses

Variable expenses fluctuate month to month. Use a 3-month average for the most accurate estimate.

Variable Expense Monthly Budget Last Month Actual
Groceries $ $
Gas / transportation $ $
Dining out / takeout $ $
Entertainment (movies, events) $ $
Clothing / personal care $ $
Home supplies / household goods $ $
Medical / pharmacy $ $
Pet expenses $ $
Children’s activities / childcare $ $
Gifts / donations $ $
Miscellaneous $ $
Total Variable Expenses $ $

Section 4: Savings and Debt Payoff

Goal Monthly Contribution
Emergency fund $
Retirement (IRA, additional 401k beyond match) $
Down payment / home purchase fund $
Vacation fund $
Car replacement fund $
Extra credit card debt payoff (above minimum) $
Extra student loan payoff $
Other savings goal $
Total Savings / Extra Debt Payments $

Section 5: Budget Summary

Amount
Total Monthly Income $
− Total Fixed Expenses $
− Total Variable Expenses $
− Total Savings / Extra Debt Payments $
= Monthly Surplus or Deficit $

Target: $0 (zero-based) or a positive number that you then deliberately assign to a savings goal.

Which Budgeting Method to Use

The 50/30/20 Rule

The simplest framework for a starting budget:

  • 50% Needs: Housing, food, utilities, transportation, insurance, minimum debt payments
  • 30% Wants: Dining, entertainment, subscriptions, clothing beyond basics
  • 20% Savings + Extra Debt Payoff: Emergency fund, retirement, goals

Example on $5,000/month take-home:

  • Needs: $2,500 maximum
  • Wants: $1,500 maximum
  • Savings: $1,000 minimum

Zero-Based Budgeting

Every dollar is assigned: income minus all allocated spending and saving = $0. Surplus goes to a specific category (extra debt payoff, next month’s irregular expenses, etc.). Best for people who want maximum control.

Pay Yourself First

Automatically transfer savings contributions on payday before spending anything. Whatever is left covers expenses. Removes savings from the decision-making process entirely — the most effective approach for people who struggle to save.

Average US Household Budget (2026 Benchmark)

Based on Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Expenditure Survey data, adjusted for 2026 inflation.

Where to Cut First

When the budget shows a deficit or savings rate is below target, this is the order to review:

  1. Subscriptions — The average US household pays for 4–6 streaming services and multiple app subscriptions. Audit and cancel unused ones; consider sharing family plans.

  2. Dining out — Typically the most controllable variable expense. Reducing restaurant spending by $100/month frees $1,200/year with no lifestyle sacrifice other than cooking more.

  3. Phone bill — Switching from a major carrier to an MVNO (Mint Mobile, Visible) saves $40–$80/month for most households. See Cheap Cell Phone Plans.

  4. Insurance — Getting competing quotes on auto and home insurance annually reduces costs for most households. Bundling policies often provides a 10–15% discount.

  5. Groceries — Using cashback apps (Ibotta), store loyalty digital coupons, and planning meals around weekly sales reduces grocery spending 8–15%.

WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

The content on Wealthvieu is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, tax, or investment advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions. Full disclaimer · Editorial policy