What Is the Envelope Budgeting System and Is It Right for You?

RonBailey / Getty Images/iStockphoto
RonBailey / Getty Images/iStockphoto

During these times when everyone pays with a credit card ā€” or even their phone ā€” budgeting money can be difficult to master. Having to come up with a budget that actually works is hard enough, but it can be especially challenging with tempting debit and credit card rewards, and solutions like Apple Pay, which allows you to spend the money in your savings account without even seeing or touching it.

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When the advances of mobile banking start breaking apart your finances, something has to change. Dave Ramsey, personal finance expert and creator of the Financial Peace University, advocates a budgeting method that was used in simpler times: the envelope system. Itā€™s what could help you pay off debt and stay on track.

What Is the Envelope System?

From the get-go, the idea of using something so outdated as a paper envelope ā€” after all, texting or Snapchatting is so much more efficient ā€” to stay within your budget seems a bit too simple. But thatā€™s exactly the point: Saving money has to be simple in order for you to stick with it long-term.

The envelope system uses labeled envelopes as a way of allocating various budgets throughout the month. For example, one envelope is labeled ā€œGroceries,ā€ while another envelope is labeled ā€œGas,ā€ and so on. There is no limit to the number of budgets, or money envelopes, you can have.

Once youā€™ve determined what your budget categories are, itā€™s time to crunch some hard numbers and establish how much physical cash to put into each. Yes, thatā€™s right: cash. Youā€™ll probably have to head to a bank ATM and take some out. Once you decide on the amount for your budgeted envelopes, thatā€™s the only fund you can use for the entire month; if you run out of cash, thereā€™s no using a debit or credit card as a backup.

Dave Ramsey explained that using cash only when making purchases triggers a pain response in your mind that naturally deters you from overspending. Youā€™re more conscious of what youā€™re spending if youā€™re handing over physical cash and not just a credit card; itā€™s psychological. It might be a bit unnerving to know that youā€™re deliberately participating in an act that is meant to be painful, but the point is to condition yourself to have greater awareness of what it really means to spend money.

4 Ways to Save Money Using the Envelope Budgeting System

Like any other strategy, learning how to budget using the envelope system requires you to set yourself up for success from day one to see the savings results you want. Here are a few tips to help you stay on track using cash only.

1. Maintain a Zero-Based Budget

The most boring part of any process is often the most important. When determining how much to allow in each budget, accounting for every expenditure is essential. This is called zero budgeting.

Whatā€™s also important is calculating how much youā€™ll need in each budget by adding up how much youā€™ve spent in the past on bills, such as utilities and groceries ā€” to the penny. Be accurate; rough estimations from the depths of your memory will only harm your ability to budget accurately.

2. Budget Your Money Realistically

You might have big savings goals, but being unrealistic with each budget will be your own worst enemy. If you know you spend $200 on gas every month, which primarily goes toward your daily work commute, donā€™t set your budget to $150.

In this particular scenario, youā€™ve already set yourself up for failure since spending $200 to get to work is non-negotiable in most cases.

3. Leave Plastic at Home

When going out on supermarket runs or to a restaurant, a key component to saving money with the envelope system is to leave any debit cards or credit cards at home. Doing this prevents your willpower from buckling at checkout.

If you absolutely must pay for something urgent and unexpected thatā€™s beyond your budget, you can adjust how youā€™ve divided up your money by pulling money from a more flexible budget, like groceries. At the end of the month, you would have still kept within your total spending budget anyway.

4. Allow Yourself to Have Fun

Too much restriction for the sake of saving money can set you up for failure with the envelope system. For this reason, give yourself permission to set up an ā€œEntertainmentā€ or ā€œWeekendā€ budget for a few fun activities you can indulge in throughout the month. Soon enough, you wonā€™t even feel like youā€™re wanting when it comes expenses like treating yourself to a night out with friends.

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Jamie Young contributed to the reporting for this article.

This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: What Is the Envelope Budgeting System and Is It Right for You?

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