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Budget & Savings Planner

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Start with the cash that actually hits your checking account each month, then map where it goes. This tool is meant to help you pressure-test your budget, see whether your emergency fund is healthy, and understand what goal your current savings pace can realistically support.
Inputs
Income and Savings
Monthly Spending
Goals
This planner assumes any positive monthly cash left after expenses can go toward cash savings goals. It treats retirement contributions separately so you can see both your paycheck budget and your all-in savings habit at the same time.
Budget health
Based on free cash flow and cash buffer
Monthly free cash flow
$0
Take-home pay minus monthly spending
Total annual savings
$0
Cash savings + retirement + employer match
Current savings runway
0.0 months
Current cash savings divided by essential expenses
Months to target emergency fund
Using positive free cash flow only
Suggested next priority
Direction based on your current budget shape
Monthly spending mix
This chart shows spending categories only. Retirement contributions are tracked separately because your take-home pay is assumed to already be after payroll deductions.
Savings milestones timeline
The line shows cash savings growth if you keep the same budget. Horizontal guides mark a starter cushion, a 3-month fund, your chosen emergency-fund target, and your custom goal.
Savings milestones
MilestoneTarget balanceTime to reachStatus today
Coaching takeaways
How to use this planner
  • Monthly free cash flow is the money left in your checking-account budget after your current spending. If this is negative, your plan is too tight to support new goals without a change.
  • Current savings runway compares your cash savings to housing, debt payments, food, transportation, utilities, and child care, not your full lifestyle spending.
  • Total annual savings annualizes your cash savings, retirement contributions, and employer match so you can compare your overall saving pace against longer-term benchmarks.
  • Suggested next priority is meant to be a planning prompt, not a universal rule. Use it to decide what the next dollar should probably do.
  • Healthy planning usually starts with a positive monthly buffer, then a starter emergency fund, then a deeper emergency fund, and only after that heavier focus on optional goals.