Start with net income
Use the amount that actually reaches your bank account after tax and deductions. If income varies, use a cautious average or build the core budget around the lower reliable amount.
Gather evidence before estimating
Use recent payslips, bank statements, bills and banking-app categories. Memory tends to miss small frequent purchases and annual costs.
Separate spending into useful groups
Fixed commitments
Rent or mortgage, council tax, contracts, insurance and minimum debt payments.
Variable essentials
Food, energy, transport, medication and other necessary costs that change month to month.
Flexible spending
Eating out, entertainment, non-essential shopping and subscriptions.
Irregular costs
Car servicing, repairs, gifts, holidays and annual premiums. Divide an annual estimate by 12 and include it monthly.
What to do with a deficit
Prioritise housing, utilities, food, essential travel and contractual minimums. Review flexible costs, compare regular bills and avoid replacing an ongoing shortfall with expensive borrowing. If priority payments are at risk, seek free money or debt guidance.
Review, do not restart
Compare the plan with actual spending after one month. Adjust categories instead of treating every difference as failure. A budget becomes more useful as it incorporates real patterns.