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How Much Time Do You Take To Manage Your Personal Finance?

By: Mike | Date posted: May 25, 2010 (7:56 am) | Write a Comment (4 Comments)

Taking care of your personal finances, while rarely urgent, remains very important. The problem is that most folks don’t really like to manage their personal finance (or anything else that is important but not urgent). Call it procrastination, call it laziness or call it hiding from the cold hard truth; delaying the moment when you sit down and look at your financial situation can be very expensive.

In this article, I offer you a simple routine to review and adjust your personal finances on a regular basis. In order to avoid feeling overwhelmed, I suggest that you manage specific tasks according to given blocks of time. Therefore, you will be able to manage your personal finance in a more effective manner. So, I am sharing how I manage my personal finance on a daily, weekly, monthly and annual basis.

Manage your personal finance on a daily basis: quick overview

Each day when I arrive home from work, I take 5 minutes to look over my personal finance. Within this 5 minutes I:

  • Open the mail and email (review statements)
  • Login into my bank account to make sure that  my accounts, lines of credit are in order (no strange transactions)
  • Log my purchases for the day into my budget software

Since I just take 5 minutes, I do not pay any bills or scutinize the transactions one by one. I just make sure that everything is normal. When I have bills to pay, I put them in a separate basket to take care of later on.

Manage your personal finance once a week: quick actions

Now that my day-to-day finance is under control, I make sure to spend about 15 minutes per week to “clear” what’s on my desk. This is when I:

  • Pay the bills I received during the week
  • Make sure I have enough money for the upcoming bills
  • Take a brief look at the upcoming weeks to see if there are any one-off expenses

Manage your personal finance once a month: supervising the real stuff

Once a month (usually the first weekend of the month), I sit down and take a look at my personal finance for a good 30 minutes. During this time I:

  • Make sure I have followed my budget
  • Look at the upcoming month for unusual expenses
  • Look at my investments to make sure everything is on track
  • Calculate my net worth to see if I’m going forward or backward

Manage your personal finance once a year: planning the real stuff

This is probably the most important part of my personal finance management. This is when I look at what has been done over the past 12 months and plan for what is coming up. This is also where I set my priorities for the next 1, 2, 3 years:

  • Compare my net worth to last year
  • Review my financial goals and make sure I have reached them
  • Establish my new goals
  • Review my budget and look where I spent the most (I know it already; dining out!).
  • Determine the amount I give to charity
  • Review my retirement plan

As you can see, this step can take a few hours up to a full day to plan (especially when you do it for the first time). However, this is the day in your year where your time is definitely well invested!

Do you have any tricks to manage your personal finance?

I’d be curious to know what your tricks are when it comes down to managing your personal finance. Do you do it on a monthly basis? Yearly basis?

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4 Comments »
  1. Comment by Bucksome Boomer — May 25, 2010 @ 8:44 pm

    What you have under daily I do weekly and what you have under weekly, I handle twice a week.

    The important thing is to do them regularly and keep on top it. Great list!

  2. Comment by Financial Samurai — May 27, 2010 @ 12:21 am

    What I try and do is flush EVERYTHING away to other banks that maximize my returns.

    I love having no money to spend, hence don’t have any money to worry about!

  3. Comment by Mike — May 27, 2010 @ 9:11 am

    @ Financial Samurai,

    Interesting concept ;-) Do you have an automatic transfer going from your checking account to a savings accoung or you do it manually?

    »crosslinked«

  4. Pingback by Week in Review: Memorial Day Edition — May 30, 2010 @ 9:26 am

    [...] Green Panda Tree House has a great schedule of how much time to spend managing your personal finance. [...]

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