The 50/30/20 rule is the simplest budget that actually works. Half your take home pay covers needs, 30 percent goes to wants, and 20 percent goes to saving and paying down debt. Enter your monthly take home pay and see your three numbers instantly.
Needs are the bills you cannot skip, such as housing, utilities, groceries, insurance, and minimum debt payments. Wants are everything that makes life nicer but could be cut in a pinch, like dining out, streaming, and travel. The final 20 percent builds your future through savings and extra debt payments.
Treat the percentages as a starting point rather than a law. In expensive cities needs can swallow 60 percent or more, and that is fine. The habit that matters most is paying your savings slice first, before the month gets a chance to spend it for you.
Both live in the same bucket. Minimum debt payments count as needs, while anything extra you throw at debt counts toward the 20 percent, since it builds your net worth the same way saving does.
Take home pay, meaning what actually lands in your account after taxes and payroll deductions. If your employer already takes 401k contributions out, you can count those toward your 20 percent.
You are far from alone, especially in high cost areas. Shrink the wants bucket before touching the savings bucket, and treat the 50 percent line as a goal to work toward over time.
One smart money idea each week, charts included. Join free and get the printable 2026 Money Calendar in your welcome email.