Traditional budgeting tells you to track every penny, allocate money to categories, and save whatever's left at the end of the month. The problem? There's rarely anything left. Reverse budgeting flips this approach entirely.
Is reverse budgeting the same as the 50/30/20 rule?+
Not exactly. The 50/30/20 rule divides your income into needs (50%), wants (30%), and savings (20%). Reverse budgeting focuses specifically on automating savings first and doesn't require you to categorise the rest of your spending. You can combine both approaches by using 20% as your reverse budget savings target.
What if I can't afford to save 20% of my income?+
Start with whatever you can manage — even £25 a month builds the habit. The power of reverse budgeting is in the automation and consistency, not the amount. Increase your savings rate gradually as your income grows or expenses reduce.
Should I pay off debt or pay myself first?+
If you have high-interest debt (credit cards, overdrafts), prioritise paying that off while maintaining a small emergency fund of £500-£1,000. Once high-interest debt is cleared, redirect those payments into your pay-yourself-first savings.
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