Budgeting

Req 2b — Balancing Your Budget

2b.

Compare expected income with expected expenses.

  1. If expenses exceed budget income, determine steps to balance your budget.
  2. If income exceeds budget expenses, state how you would use the excess money (new goal, savings).

The Balancing Act

Now that you have built your 13-week budget in Requirement 2a, it is time to step back and look at the big picture. Add up your total expected income for all 13 weeks. Then add up your total expected expenses (including savings). How do the two numbers compare?

There are only three possible outcomes:

  1. Income > Expenses: You have money left over. Great problem to have.
  2. Income = Expenses: Perfectly balanced. Every dollar has a job.
  3. Income < Expenses: You are planning to spend more than you earn. This needs fixing.

When Expenses Exceed Income

If your expenses are higher than your income, your budget is “in the red.” This is not unusual — many people (and many governments) create budgets that spend more than they earn. The difference is that you are going to fix it.

Here are practical strategies to bring your budget into balance:

Cut expenses:

Increase income:

A Scout looking at a notebook with two columns comparing income and expenses, using a pencil to make adjustments, with a balanced scale illustration in the margin

When Income Exceeds Expenses

If you have money left over after covering all your expenses and savings, congratulations — you are ahead of the game. But “extra” money without a plan tends to disappear. Decide now what you will do with the surplus.

Smart options for excess funds:

Presenting Your Analysis

When you discuss this with your counselor, show your work clearly:

Budget Balance Summary

What your counselor will want to see
  • Total expected income: The sum across all 13 weeks
  • Total expected expenses: Including planned savings
  • The difference: Income minus expenses
  • Your plan: Steps to balance (if negative) or how you will use excess (if positive)
  • Specific changes: If you adjusted your budget, show what you changed and why
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — Spending Tracker A free tool from the U.S. government to help track spending and identify areas where you can cut back.