Now that we are living on an annuity and 401K$ withdrawals(some months), I am still going to keep track of our monthly spending and income, and hopefully we'll still be able to live BELOW our means and I'll have some leftover monies each month to tuck aside.
I am trying to be as transparent as I can with how much is coming in and how much is going out. 8-)
On to the August report---
I had 2 goals for August.......
The 1st is to actually finish the month in the black and not the red.
The 2nd is to try to have a little cash leftover at the end of the previous month to tuck back into a slush fund. This slush fun may be to apply toward unforeseen bills that are coming due in subsequent months, to spend on "extras/wants" during the year or to just sit there and grow until the end of 2020.
I can report that we finished up August in the red.
The amount we ended the month of August with?.....-$725.44
Income or Funds We Can Access
The "income" in August---
* Monthly annuity payment of $3,222.24(after tax withholding)
* RMSA(Healthcare account)reimbursement of $1,883.76
* Interest earned on non-retirement accounts of $507.66
Expenses in August---
* Healthcare Premium for August was $1,883.76(paid for with RMSA reimbursement)
* Irregular bills in August were $594.00
* Variable Expenses in August came to $3,861.34
Total Expenses....$6,339.10
$5613.66-$6339.10= -$725.44
Slush into August of $29,359.07 in that Fund, subtract the $725.44 shortfall brings the Slush to $28,633.63 going into September.
The Slush Fund on it's Page(tab at the top of the blog)shows a subtraction of $2241.06 for August.
HERE are the GOOD THINGS
* The electric bill was $12.96 lower than in July.
* The Amazon c/c bill was $99.93 lower than last month.
* The WAM was the same amount taken as last month.
* The water bill was $7.14 higher than last month.
FINAL THOUGHTS on August---
One small irregular bill last month so that was good but I did spend what I consider a lot at the grocery stores again, AND the credit card bill was quite high as there were some unusual expenses on that in August. To add insult to injury all the banks I have investments with lowered their interest rates mid-July so we've seen less interest income coming in. And with the state of the world lately I'd don't see that changing/reversing for some time to come. ugh.
THOUGHTS going forward into September 2020----
Did you stay within your budget or not?
What did you do with any money leftover at the end of the month?
Did you pay off any debts or put extra toward your mortgage principle or into savings, in an emergency fund or a retirement account?
Or did you blow it on a want?
Sluggy
Interesting month, but you bought a large consumer good that likely will be a long time purchase. Since the highs and lows of covid, I have not shared my end of month end. Overall, we are doing better than I had anticipated, but of course all could change any month.
ReplyDeleteSome months just end in the red, you use your slush money and move on. It happens to us all on occasion. We got a small "bonus" in August. TheHub buys season tickets for Alabama's football games every winter. Because of social distancing they are only allowing 20 percent of the stadium to be filled. We opted to have our money refunded, but will still get to keep our ticket priority and seats for the 21 season.
ReplyDeleteI have a Slush Fund just like you do. It is a set amount of money every year. My passive income is not sufficient due to the remaining mortgage for the apartment in Antalya. So, I use that fund and keep things in control. The money comes from my nest egg. My Net Worth went up in August due to selling mom's old apartment and sharing the amount in her bank account with my sister. Each time I look at my Xcel sheet, I remember that the big jump is due to mom's passing and can't help crying. Wish I had no money but her.
ReplyDeleteI did have $50 left over this month.
ReplyDeleteWe were pretty good staying on budget. Hubs is "unfurloughed" as of yesterday, so we should be back to normal (whatever that is now) sticking money into the saving account within the next month.
ReplyDeleteSue L.
Still chipping away at the mortgage and we’re at about 3.6 years at the current rate. I’ve looked at refinancing but doesn’t seem worth the closing costs.
ReplyDeleteJen G.