Finance Fridays

Chad and I have been sticking to a strict budget around here since last February.  We budget to zero every month so we know where all of our money is going, and we use cash for many of our purchases. Budgeting has been a rewarding, challenging, learning journey.

One tool that has helped me stay on top of the budget is Finance Fridays.

Finance Fridays is just a fancy name for scheduling one day a week to review the budget and finances. By designating a specific day and calendaring the time in, I am more likely to keep current with our receipts, bills, budget, and accounts.  And since I homeschool Elle, she participates in Finance Fridays as well.

I love that she gets to see money management in real life, in real time, in real application.

Every Finance Friday looks different, but here are some of the tasks that we may do on a typical Friday:

Go to the bank.

Deposit money in savings account.

Pay tithing.

Record receipts on budget spreadsheet.

Pay bills.

File bills.

Pay allowance.

Balance this month’s budget.

Set next month’s budget.

Settle i.o.u’s.

Review account transactions.

Write checks.  (Is there anything more fun when you are an 11 year old girl?)

Square Elle’s money*

*Finance Fridays are when Elle settles her money as well.  When she gets paid for babysitting or other jobs, she stores her money in her homeschooling binder in her pencil pouch.  Then on Fridays we settle it.  At this time, she pays 10 percent to tithing, 20 percent to long-term savings, and she divides up the rest between “fun” and “short term savings” depending on her own goals at the time. If she has an item she is saving for specifically, usually most of the leftover money goes into “short term savings” jar.

bike saving jar

I don’t like to settle her money any time she earns money because that usually requires change to be made or large bills to be broken. I like her to save up all her money for Friday so I only have to pull out the family bank once a week.

Finance Fridays save me time, keep me honest, and help me stay on top of our family finances.  But I appreciate them more because they help Elle develop valuable life skills.  She is getting financial experience and knowledge as a child that I didn’t get until well into adulthood.

 

 

 

1 thought on “Finance Fridays”

  1. Tiffany, It’s starting to be a bit spooky to me how much our minds think alike! It appears that I have slowly, over the course of this past year, been walking down this same family budget path as you, (but starting from the VERY beginning of having no plan at all), and making the same kinds of realizations over the course of many months. Realizations like using Fridays to work out my budget stuff, recording receipts on a spreadsheet (I’ve had 4 different versions), balancing to zero, etc. These have all been very incremental, painstaking, this-isn’t-working-how-can-I-do-this-better changes. You’ve now just filled me in on the rest of what I hadn’t gotten to yet. So thanks for making this post when you did! I’ll be referring to it to help me speed along to the end of the path, which is… I don’t know, feeling like I’m totally on top of my family finances(?) Anyways, thanks for the free ride!

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