Budgeting UK 2026 — Systems, Methods and Practical Money Management

Monthly Budget Planner UK 2026/27 — Free Budget Template and Guide

Build a realistic monthly budget with this free UK budget planner. Includes the 50/30/20 rule, expense categories, income tracking, and tips for sticking to your plan.

A monthly budget is the foundation of good money management. Whether you are trying to clear debt, save for a house deposit, or simply understand where your money is going, this guide walks you through every step of building a realistic UK budget.

For more budgeting tools and guides, see the Budgeting Hub.

Step 1: Calculate your monthly take-home income

Start with what arrives in your bank account each month — not your gross salary.

Include:

  • Net salary (after tax, NI, pension contributions)
  • Benefits (Universal Credit, Child Benefit, Tax Credits, DLA/PIP)
  • Self-employment income (monthly average)
  • Rental income (after expenses)
  • Child maintenance received
  • Any other regular income

Exclude:

  • Irregular overtime or bonuses (add these to savings when received)
  • Tax refunds (one-off)
  • Gifts

Use a three-month average if your income varies.

Step 2: List all your expenses

Divide your spending into fixed and variable categories:

Fixed expenses (the same every month)

Category Examples
Housing Rent or mortgage, service charge, ground rent
Council Tax Usually divided into 10 monthly payments
Energy Gas and electricity direct debit
Water Water rates
Internet and phone Broadband, mobile phone contract
Insurance Contents, life, car, health
Loan repayments Personal loans, car finance, student loan (Plan 1/2 threshold)
Minimum debt payments Credit card minimums, overdraft fees
Subscriptions Streaming services, gym membership
Pension (if not via payroll) SIPP or personal pension contributions

Variable expenses (change month to month)

Category Examples
Groceries Food, household cleaning products
Eating out and takeaways Restaurants, coffee shops, Just Eat
Transport Petrol, train tickets, bus fares, parking
Clothing Everyday clothing, workwear
Personal care Haircuts, toiletries
Children School trips, clubs, uniform
Health Prescriptions, dentist, optician
Entertainment Cinema, events, hobbies
Gifts Birthdays, Christmas

Irregular/sinking fund expenses (annual costs, divided monthly)

Expense Typical annual cost Monthly saving
Car insurance £600–£1,200 £50–£100
Car MOT and servicing £300–£500 £25–£42
Home insurance £150–£400 £13–£33
Christmas gifts £300–£800 £25–£67
Annual holiday £500–£3,000 £42–£250
TV Licence £174.50 £14.54
Dentist £100–£300 £8–£25

Step 3: Apply the 50/30/20 framework

The 50/30/20 rule is a simple way to check whether your budget is balanced:

Category Target % Examples
Needs 50% Rent/mortgage, bills, food, transport, minimum debt payments
Wants 30% Dining out, subscriptions, hobbies, holidays
Savings + debt repayment 20% Emergency fund, savings goals, overpaying debts

Example: £2,500/month take-home pay

Category Target Amount
Needs (50%) £1,250 Housing + bills + food + transport
Wants (30%) £750 Leisure, eating out, subscriptions
Savings (20%) £500 Emergency fund, house deposit, ISA

Adjust as needed: In expensive cities like London, housing alone may be 40–50% of income. In this case, reduce the wants percentage rather than the savings percentage — protect savings first.

Step 4: Identify your surplus or deficit

Monthly surplus/deficit = Total income − Total expenses

If you have a surplus: direct it to your savings priority (emergency fund → debt → goals).

If you have a deficit: work through expenses from largest to smallest and look for cuts. Common areas to reduce:

  • Subscriptions you do not use actively (average UK household has £1,000+ in unused subscriptions per year)
  • Eating out and takeaways (the highest-discretionary category for most households)
  • Energy — switch tariff, reduce usage (see Energy Cost Hub)
  • Insurance — compare and switch at renewal

Step 5: Set up the system

A budget only works if you can maintain it. Choose a system that fits your habits:

The envelope method (cash budgeting)

Withdraw cash for each variable category at the start of the month. When the envelope is empty, spending for that category stops. Works well for impulse spenders.

Separate bank accounts

Open a second current account or savings pot for each budget category. Transfer the allocated amount on payday. Many UK banks (Monzo, Starling, Chase) offer free savings pots or spaces.

Automated savings

Set up a standing order on payday to move savings to a separate account before you can spend them. The “pay yourself first” method is the most reliable way to make savings consistent.

Fortnightly check-ins

Review your budget every fortnight — not just month-end. Catching overspending two weeks in gives you time to course-correct. Most banking apps show categorised spending in real time.

Common UK budgeting mistakes

  1. Forgetting annual expenses — car insurance, Christmas, and holidays create predictable cash crunches if not planned for with sinking funds
  2. Budgeting from gross income — always use take-home (net) pay
  3. Setting unrealistic targets — a budget 10% below actual spending is more sustainable than one 40% below
  4. Not reviewing after life changes — salary increases, relationship changes, new subscriptions, rent renewals all need to trigger a budget review
  5. Ignoring minimum debt payments — these are fixed expenses; only the amount above the minimum belongs in the “savings + debt” category

Sources

  1. Money Helper — Budget Planner
  2. StepChange — Budgeting Tool
  3. Citizens Advice — How to Budget