Here are the budgeting forms from Dave Ramsey to help you get started with your budgeting process!
Create a budget, manage money, and track spending on the go with the EveryDollar budget apps for iPhone and Android.
Want a great tool to help you get started budgeting? You Need a Budget lets you customize your monthly budget and easily move your money around when things don’t go as planned (always).
Emeals is a great resource to help you with meal planning and lowering your monthly spending on food. If you don’t have a meal plan and want to get started, this is a great resource!
Over the past several weeks we have been talking about car payments and how to avoid them. We’ve discussed the benefits of being without a car payment, the importance of keeping up with routine vehicle maintenance, and the real hurdle of preparing for the unexpected in terms of vehicle replacement. Now let’s talk about how to plan for a vehicle purchase in such a way that you are able to buy without remaining in a cycle of debt and car payments.
In our last post, we talked about the importance of vehicle maintenance in helping prolong the life of your vehicle. However, there are times where routine maintenance simply won’t matter. Major engine damage, theft, or accidents can happen at any time, and when they do, it can throw a wrench in your plans, and that assumes that you have a plan to begin with!
In continuation of our series on avoiding car payments, I wanted to talk about some of the important things we have had to keep in mind as vehicle owners, particularly when owning slightly older vehicles that we’ve bought with cash. In this part, we will talk about the importance of vehicle maintenance. If you missed the first part of our series, you can catch up here.
My wife and I abhor car payments. When we had been married just a little more than two years, we decided that we were financially sound enough to purchase a “new” vehicle. In this case that meant one that was already 3 years old, but it was certainly new to us!