Planning Financial Indpendence | ||
Retire Early
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Expense Estimate |
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| The Expense Estimate spreadsheet is an budget of expenses by category for an average month.
Expense Estimate Spreadsheet The best way to make an Expense Estimate is to clear off the kitchen table and take your bills, receipts and invoices for an entire year, separate them by company, and put them in order by date. Look through your checkbook and bank statements to find expenses that did not show up in your bills and invoices. Try to guess how much you spend in cash on snacks, knick knacks, and miscellaneous fluff. Honesty is the best policy here, your goal is to learn from mistakes, so don't hide from the truth. Split up expenses into budget categories as best you can. You can create your own categories. Try to estimate an average expense per month. Sometimes this is not possible. For example, heating bills are higher in the winter, while electric bills are higher in the summer. Make notes of expenses that vary by time of year. Some expenses occur once or twice a year, such as insurance or property taxes. Use the Annual Expenses spreadsheet to log expenses that occur once or twice a year. As you go through your expenses, try to categorize them into the following Expense types:
The reason you are going through this difficult exercise is that you are going to be setting up a cash flow sheet that is going to regulate how much money you will spend on each of the expense types. If your estimates are accurate, you will find it far easier to follow the cash flow plan. | ||