Every benchmark cites a public source — explore the Benchmarks hub.
HomeMoney › Budget Calculator

Budget Calculator (50/30/20)

Enter your take-home pay and where it goes. We split it into needs, wants and savings and score it against the popular 50/30/20 budgeting rule.

$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
Savings rate
Needs
Wants
Savings
Unbudgeted / left over
vs 50/30/20

\ud83d\udcb0 Tools to automate saving and investing

Learn more

The 50/30/20 rule

A simple, durable budget framework: aim for about 50% of take-home pay on needs (housing, utilities, groceries, transport, insurance, minimum debt), 30% on wants, and 20% toward savings, investing and extra debt payoff. It is a guideline, not a law — high-cost areas often run higher on needs.

How it’s calculated & sources

Needs = housing + utilities + groceries + transport + insurance + minimum debt; Wants and Savings are your entries; each is shown as a share of take-home pay and compared to 50/30/20.

Benchmark: the 50/30/20 rule of thumb (Elizabeth Warren, All Your Worth).

Results update as you type and are general estimates, not personalized financial or tax advice. Verify with a professional.

Worked example

On $5,000/month with $3,600 needs (72%), $700 wants (14%) and $800 savings (16%), you\u2019d be heavy on needs and a bit light on the 20% savings target.

Frequently asked questions

Is 50/30/20 realistic in a high-cost area?

Often needs run above 50% where housing is expensive. Treat it as a target; even getting savings toward 15–20% is a win.

What counts as a need vs a want?

Needs are essentials you can’t easily skip (housing, utilities, groceries, insurance, minimum debt). Wants are discretionary (dining out, subscriptions, travel).

Where does debt payoff go?

Minimum payments are a need; extra principal payoff counts toward the 20% savings/debt bucket.