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Step-by-step

Comprehensive Budget Planner

Build a detailed personal budget in 4 steps — income, every expense category, and a full breakdown. Takes about 5 minutes.

Household situation

Housing

Main budget goal

How this planner works

Unlike a simple percentage-based calculator, this planner asks you to enter your real income and real expenses — line by line. That friction is intentional. The act of assigning a number to every category is where most people find their first insight.

The 50/30/20 analysis at the end is a reference point, not a rule. Your actual numbers tell you where to look. The personalised tip adjusts based on your profile and goal.

What counts as a need vs a want?

Needs (target: 50%)

  • ·Rent or mortgage payment
  • ·Basic groceries
  • ·Utilities: gas, water, electricity
  • ·Health insurance
  • ·Minimum debt payments
  • ·Essential transport to work
  • ·Childcare required to keep working

Wants (target: 30%)

  • ·Restaurant meals and takeaway
  • ·Streaming services and subscriptions
  • ·Gym membership (if not medically required)
  • ·Clothing beyond the basics
  • ·Holidays and weekend trips
  • ·Hobbies and entertainment
  • ·Upgraded phone or car beyond what you need

Grey areas are normal. A car is a need in a rural area and a want in central Amsterdam. The goal is awareness, not perfection.

What to do with your results

  1. 1.

    Look at the biggest slice: Open the expense breakdown. The largest category is where cuts have the most impact. Small trims on a large category beat eliminating a small one entirely.

  2. 2.

    Check your savings rate first: Before cutting expenses, see your savings rate. Under 10% is a warning sign. Under 5% means the emergency fund conversation is urgent.

  3. 3.

    Fix the leak, not the symptom: If housing is above 35%, that is a housing problem — not a budgeting problem. No amount of cancelled subscriptions fixes a rent that is too high for your income.

  4. 4.

    Automate what you decide: Every spending decision you make manually, you will eventually unmake. Set up standing orders for savings on payday, before you can see the money.

  5. 5.

    Review monthly, adjust quarterly: A budget is not a contract. Revisit it when something changes — new job, new rent, new debt — and tweak the inputs. The numbers should reflect reality.

Not sure what your take-home is?

Your budget starts with net income — what actually lands in your account after tax. If you are entering a gross salary, you will overestimate your income.

Calculate your Dutch net salary →

Resultaten bewaren

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