Add your monthly income and expenses to get a remaining balance and a 50/30/20 breakdown.
Add your monthly income and expenses to get a remaining balance and a 50/30/20 breakdown.
Remaining
1,450.00
Needs are 50% of income (50% target)
Available after expenses
Use the remainder for savings, extra debt payments, or goals.
With $3,500.00 in monthly income and $2,050.00 in expenses, compare your needs/wants split to the guideline below.
50/30/20 Check
Actual spending compared with common targets.
50% target
30% target
20% target
Top Expenses
50/30/20 Check
Actual spending compared with common targets.
50% target
30% target
20% target
Top Expenses
This budget calculator compares your monthly take-home income against everything you spend. Required card and loan minimums are shared with the Debt-to-Income Calculator and count as needs; other expenses are sorted into needs, wants, or savings and extra debt payoff. The result shows what is left and how your split compares with the 50/30/20 guideline.
Use your net (after-tax) income, not your salary. Your paycheck after taxes, insurance premiums, and retirement deductions is the money you actually have to allocate, and budgeting with the gross number is the most common reason budgets fail. If your income varies month to month, use your lowest typical month so the plan still works in a slow month.
The 50/30/20 rule is a starting point, not a grade. In high-rent cities, needs can easily exceed 50% — that does not mean you are doing anything wrong. What matters is knowing your real numbers: once you can see that, say, $340 a month goes to subscriptions and delivery, you can make a deliberate choice instead of wondering where the money went.
Example: $4,200 take-home pay, $1,800 rent, $400 groceries, $350 car payment, and $200 in subscriptions leaves $1,450 before savings. If you classify rent, groceries, and the car as needs ($2,550), wants as $200, and put $1,450 toward savings, your split is roughly 61/5/34 — high on needs because of rent, not because the math is wrong. The calculator shows that gap clearly so you can decide what to adjust.
Use net (take-home) income — the amount that actually lands in your bank account after taxes, insurance, and retirement deductions. Budgeting with your gross salary overstates what you can spend by 20–30% for most people.
A simple guideline that splits take-home pay into 50% needs (including minimum debt payments), 30% wants, and 20% savings or extra debt payoff. It is a benchmark, not a rule you must hit exactly.
A need is something you would face real consequences for skipping: rent, utilities, groceries, insurance, minimum loan payments. A want is everything you choose for enjoyment — dining out, subscriptions, travel. Some categories split: basic groceries are a need, daily delivery is a want.
A common order: build a small emergency fund first ($500–$1,000), then pay down high-interest debt like credit cards, then grow the emergency fund to 3–6 months of expenses, then put extra toward goals like retirement or a down payment.
This tool uses the numbers you enter and does not pull bank data. It also cannot predict irregular bills, medical costs, or income swings. Use it as a planning snapshot, then update it when your income or major bills change.