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How does a married couple pay bills when one gets paid twice a month and the other will be getting paid every week?
How can I minimize the costs of using paper checks?Common practice to closing a checking and savings account?What should I be wary of when opening a savings account?What can I do with “stale” checks? Can I deposit/cash them?How to minimize damage from sale of savings accountUK Current Account switching bonuses - applies to new accounts?The most appropriate ways to keep money ready for emergencies?Will an only-online checking account work for a new worker? (18 years old)How important is future big purchases (house) when setting up guaranteed investment accounts?interest compounded daily vs monthly
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I get paid on the 15th and the last of the month and my husband will be getting paid weekly when he starts a new job after the one he has been working at for 25 years will be closing soon. How does one work the bills when one person gets paid twice a month and the other will be weekly. I usually make more money then he does currently and so we pay the bigger of the bills when I get paid and the other bills which are usually smaller on his, but when he goes weekly; how does that work? I would like some advice on who are in a similar situation or who can give some advice on how to how to this. Thank you.
savings-account checking-account
New contributor
|
show 5 more comments
I get paid on the 15th and the last of the month and my husband will be getting paid weekly when he starts a new job after the one he has been working at for 25 years will be closing soon. How does one work the bills when one person gets paid twice a month and the other will be weekly. I usually make more money then he does currently and so we pay the bigger of the bills when I get paid and the other bills which are usually smaller on his, but when he goes weekly; how does that work? I would like some advice on who are in a similar situation or who can give some advice on how to how to this. Thank you.
savings-account checking-account
New contributor
11
If you need to worry about this, you are not maintaining enough of a cash cushion in your checking account - another term for that is living paycheck-to-paycheck.
– void_ptr
8 hours ago
3
Yes, I understand all that and we do budget accordingly, but that all is good and all when he was getting paid bi-weekly and I am getting paid twice a month. I am good at paying them when I knew he was getting paid bi-weekly and I am twice a month. But I was wondering how do people do it when the spouse finds a job that is weekly and I am still twice a month. I don't mean to be stupid or whatever, but I need advice, not criticism. I am gathering from what I have read online, that you save what money comes in weekly, put that aside to pay bills. I will just have to adjust.
– Stephanie Grohol
8 hours ago
5
Stephanie, we fail to see how getting paid weekly is any different than getting paid bi-weekly. Our finances sure wouldn't have been affected if one of us were suddenly switched to weekly.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
4
Why would anything change? Just deposit the "odd week" checks and do what you've always done on the even weeks: the money is already there.
– chepner
8 hours ago
2
I'll admit... I dont really get how being paid effects it at all. Presumably money comes into your account at various times. And money gets sent out for bills at other times. As long as more money is coming in than going out why could it possibly matter if that is once, twice, four or even 20 times a month...
– Vality
5 hours ago
|
show 5 more comments
I get paid on the 15th and the last of the month and my husband will be getting paid weekly when he starts a new job after the one he has been working at for 25 years will be closing soon. How does one work the bills when one person gets paid twice a month and the other will be weekly. I usually make more money then he does currently and so we pay the bigger of the bills when I get paid and the other bills which are usually smaller on his, but when he goes weekly; how does that work? I would like some advice on who are in a similar situation or who can give some advice on how to how to this. Thank you.
savings-account checking-account
New contributor
I get paid on the 15th and the last of the month and my husband will be getting paid weekly when he starts a new job after the one he has been working at for 25 years will be closing soon. How does one work the bills when one person gets paid twice a month and the other will be weekly. I usually make more money then he does currently and so we pay the bigger of the bills when I get paid and the other bills which are usually smaller on his, but when he goes weekly; how does that work? I would like some advice on who are in a similar situation or who can give some advice on how to how to this. Thank you.
savings-account checking-account
savings-account checking-account
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 9 hours ago
Stephanie GroholStephanie Grohol
184 bronze badges
184 bronze badges
New contributor
New contributor
11
If you need to worry about this, you are not maintaining enough of a cash cushion in your checking account - another term for that is living paycheck-to-paycheck.
– void_ptr
8 hours ago
3
Yes, I understand all that and we do budget accordingly, but that all is good and all when he was getting paid bi-weekly and I am getting paid twice a month. I am good at paying them when I knew he was getting paid bi-weekly and I am twice a month. But I was wondering how do people do it when the spouse finds a job that is weekly and I am still twice a month. I don't mean to be stupid or whatever, but I need advice, not criticism. I am gathering from what I have read online, that you save what money comes in weekly, put that aside to pay bills. I will just have to adjust.
– Stephanie Grohol
8 hours ago
5
Stephanie, we fail to see how getting paid weekly is any different than getting paid bi-weekly. Our finances sure wouldn't have been affected if one of us were suddenly switched to weekly.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
4
Why would anything change? Just deposit the "odd week" checks and do what you've always done on the even weeks: the money is already there.
– chepner
8 hours ago
2
I'll admit... I dont really get how being paid effects it at all. Presumably money comes into your account at various times. And money gets sent out for bills at other times. As long as more money is coming in than going out why could it possibly matter if that is once, twice, four or even 20 times a month...
– Vality
5 hours ago
|
show 5 more comments
11
If you need to worry about this, you are not maintaining enough of a cash cushion in your checking account - another term for that is living paycheck-to-paycheck.
– void_ptr
8 hours ago
3
Yes, I understand all that and we do budget accordingly, but that all is good and all when he was getting paid bi-weekly and I am getting paid twice a month. I am good at paying them when I knew he was getting paid bi-weekly and I am twice a month. But I was wondering how do people do it when the spouse finds a job that is weekly and I am still twice a month. I don't mean to be stupid or whatever, but I need advice, not criticism. I am gathering from what I have read online, that you save what money comes in weekly, put that aside to pay bills. I will just have to adjust.
– Stephanie Grohol
8 hours ago
5
Stephanie, we fail to see how getting paid weekly is any different than getting paid bi-weekly. Our finances sure wouldn't have been affected if one of us were suddenly switched to weekly.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
4
Why would anything change? Just deposit the "odd week" checks and do what you've always done on the even weeks: the money is already there.
– chepner
8 hours ago
2
I'll admit... I dont really get how being paid effects it at all. Presumably money comes into your account at various times. And money gets sent out for bills at other times. As long as more money is coming in than going out why could it possibly matter if that is once, twice, four or even 20 times a month...
– Vality
5 hours ago
11
11
If you need to worry about this, you are not maintaining enough of a cash cushion in your checking account - another term for that is living paycheck-to-paycheck.
– void_ptr
8 hours ago
If you need to worry about this, you are not maintaining enough of a cash cushion in your checking account - another term for that is living paycheck-to-paycheck.
– void_ptr
8 hours ago
3
3
Yes, I understand all that and we do budget accordingly, but that all is good and all when he was getting paid bi-weekly and I am getting paid twice a month. I am good at paying them when I knew he was getting paid bi-weekly and I am twice a month. But I was wondering how do people do it when the spouse finds a job that is weekly and I am still twice a month. I don't mean to be stupid or whatever, but I need advice, not criticism. I am gathering from what I have read online, that you save what money comes in weekly, put that aside to pay bills. I will just have to adjust.
– Stephanie Grohol
8 hours ago
Yes, I understand all that and we do budget accordingly, but that all is good and all when he was getting paid bi-weekly and I am getting paid twice a month. I am good at paying them when I knew he was getting paid bi-weekly and I am twice a month. But I was wondering how do people do it when the spouse finds a job that is weekly and I am still twice a month. I don't mean to be stupid or whatever, but I need advice, not criticism. I am gathering from what I have read online, that you save what money comes in weekly, put that aside to pay bills. I will just have to adjust.
– Stephanie Grohol
8 hours ago
5
5
Stephanie, we fail to see how getting paid weekly is any different than getting paid bi-weekly. Our finances sure wouldn't have been affected if one of us were suddenly switched to weekly.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
Stephanie, we fail to see how getting paid weekly is any different than getting paid bi-weekly. Our finances sure wouldn't have been affected if one of us were suddenly switched to weekly.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
4
4
Why would anything change? Just deposit the "odd week" checks and do what you've always done on the even weeks: the money is already there.
– chepner
8 hours ago
Why would anything change? Just deposit the "odd week" checks and do what you've always done on the even weeks: the money is already there.
– chepner
8 hours ago
2
2
I'll admit... I dont really get how being paid effects it at all. Presumably money comes into your account at various times. And money gets sent out for bills at other times. As long as more money is coming in than going out why could it possibly matter if that is once, twice, four or even 20 times a month...
– Vality
5 hours ago
I'll admit... I dont really get how being paid effects it at all. Presumably money comes into your account at various times. And money gets sent out for bills at other times. As long as more money is coming in than going out why could it possibly matter if that is once, twice, four or even 20 times a month...
– Vality
5 hours ago
|
show 5 more comments
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
It sounds like the problem is that when your husband got paid twice a month, his paycheck was large enough to cover the bills in full so you were able to pay them right away, then you could use the rest of the money for optional expenses like entertainment, or you could cut back on variable expenses like groceries. Now that he's being paid weekly, a single paycheck is no longer large enough to cover all the bills, even though he's being paid the same amount (I assume your question would be different if he'd taken a significant paycut). So you're worried that you may spend too much on groceries/entertainment/etc then not have enough left to pay the bill when he receives his next paycheck.
If that's your concern, then when your husband gets paid you need to set aside money specifically for the bills that are coming due later. If you have a $400 bill due at the end of the month, set aside $100 from each of his paychecks to pay the bill. You might want physically separate the money, for example by transferring it to another account until you're ready to pay the bill. When your husband gets his final paycheck for the month, transfer the $300 you saved earlier in the month back to your primary account and pay the bill.
As others have noted, tracking your spending and using a budget will be important tools for making this approach work. Make a list of all the bills you paid last month and when they were due. Also list out your paychecks and their dates. You'll be able to see which bills can be paid with a single paycheck, and which ones will need to be split across multiple paychecks. Don't forget about bills that come less frequently (like every three months), and plan for those in the same way.
Thank you for the advice. That is the advice I was looking for. I just need to rearrange my thinking and how I am doing things. And what you said, helps me. SO thank you again.
– Stephanie Grohol
8 hours ago
@StephanieGrohol one (main?) reason it would not have affected us (or most of the respondents) is that we heavily use credit cards, and so need make fewer withdrawals from the checking account every month.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
@StephanieGrohol also, I adjusted as many bills as possible to come due either late in the month or early in the month (in which case we'd pay them late in the previous month). Thus, the bulk of the money left our checking account late in the month.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
add a comment
|
The ideal state is one in which it doesn't matter when either of you get paid. Where you use last month's income to pay this month's expenses. The starting place is a simple budget. You know when money is coming in, and you know when your fixed expenses are due, so just map it out on paper/spreadsheet to know how much of each paycheck needs to go to which expenses. Once you are a month ahead, you just have to worry about the total expense pile rather than the timing of the paychecks and payment due dates.
It's probably also a good time to review spending, if things are tight, figure out where the money has gone and where you can cut spending, with the goal being to get a month ahead first, then to have a healthy emergency fund, retirement saving, etc.
I suggest researching zero-based budgets, these are characterized by deciding ahead of time where every dollar will go, that means you budget for vacations, car maintenance, going out to eat, etc. It may sound rigid, but it's a tool that will greatly help. There are plenty of budgeting applications and spreadsheet templates you can use as a starting point.
TL;DR: 1 month's expenditures are in checking account as buffer
– Joshua
41 mins ago
add a comment
|
We are in a similar situation, but one of us is paid monthly and the other is paid semi-monthly. Here's some things we do that might help you as well:
- As much as possible, stagger large bills so they don't all hit at once. Our mortgage hits on the first, so we try to schedule as many other payments as we can on the 16th so the first paycheck is not overloaded.
- See if your bank/landlord will allow you to pay the mortgage/rent in half-payments bi-weekly. This will smooth out the payments and as a bonus you pay one extra monthly payment per year, since there are roughly 26 bi-weekly periods in a year. But don't pay extra for this - at worst you can just send two payments manually.
- Plan a month out. Save enough from the first paycheck(s) to cover any bills that come out in the second half of the month.
Use separate bank accounts for "regular" monthly bills and for discretionary/ periodic spending. We deposit our paychecks into one account and transfer all but what is needed for that period into a second account. That way we always know how much money we have for groceries/dining out/etc., and when it's gone, it's gone. IT may take a few months to get used to this, but once you learn to stay within that budget it helps control "impulse" spending.
Make sure you have enough "cushion" in your cash to handle any bumps. For us that's $500 per month (meaning we try to keep the "discretionary" account above that at a minimum). You didn't mention debt but the last thing you want to do is use credit cards to cover these bumps since it can become a habit that leads to a snowball of credit card debt.
Above all of this is to make sure you have a decent "emergency fund" to cover any large unexpected expenses, and to plan for other irregular expenses like car and home repairs, etc. We use a separate savings account as an "escrow" account to save up for these bills as well as holidays, property taxes and insurance that don't occur monthly.
Good luck!
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Pick a time period and normalize everything to that to determine your likely income and expenses. Let's pick 2 months just to prove the point: You will get paid $x every two weeks, so you will receive 4 paychecks totaling 4x in 2 mo. Your husband gets $y every week, so he will have 8y in 2 mo. You will get a bill for $z every month, so after two months you will have spent 2z. Your total income over this period is 4x+8y-2z.
In reality, picking 1 month or 1 year is more practical as your accounting period.
However, there is no law requiring you to spend your entire paycheck as soon as you get it. Money doesn't go stale (well, there's inflation, but that takes decades to matter). Unless circumstances compel you to live paycheck to paycheck, you should be maintaining savings equivalent to at least several months' worth of your incomes by putting some part of each paycheck aside. The frequency of paychecks doesn't matter, so long as you set aside the same percentage every time. This fund will be much larger than your bills, so you can pay your bills from it without worrying about who gets paid when, and things will even out in the long term (long meaning several months).
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4 Answers
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4 Answers
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It sounds like the problem is that when your husband got paid twice a month, his paycheck was large enough to cover the bills in full so you were able to pay them right away, then you could use the rest of the money for optional expenses like entertainment, or you could cut back on variable expenses like groceries. Now that he's being paid weekly, a single paycheck is no longer large enough to cover all the bills, even though he's being paid the same amount (I assume your question would be different if he'd taken a significant paycut). So you're worried that you may spend too much on groceries/entertainment/etc then not have enough left to pay the bill when he receives his next paycheck.
If that's your concern, then when your husband gets paid you need to set aside money specifically for the bills that are coming due later. If you have a $400 bill due at the end of the month, set aside $100 from each of his paychecks to pay the bill. You might want physically separate the money, for example by transferring it to another account until you're ready to pay the bill. When your husband gets his final paycheck for the month, transfer the $300 you saved earlier in the month back to your primary account and pay the bill.
As others have noted, tracking your spending and using a budget will be important tools for making this approach work. Make a list of all the bills you paid last month and when they were due. Also list out your paychecks and their dates. You'll be able to see which bills can be paid with a single paycheck, and which ones will need to be split across multiple paychecks. Don't forget about bills that come less frequently (like every three months), and plan for those in the same way.
Thank you for the advice. That is the advice I was looking for. I just need to rearrange my thinking and how I am doing things. And what you said, helps me. SO thank you again.
– Stephanie Grohol
8 hours ago
@StephanieGrohol one (main?) reason it would not have affected us (or most of the respondents) is that we heavily use credit cards, and so need make fewer withdrawals from the checking account every month.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
@StephanieGrohol also, I adjusted as many bills as possible to come due either late in the month or early in the month (in which case we'd pay them late in the previous month). Thus, the bulk of the money left our checking account late in the month.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
add a comment
|
It sounds like the problem is that when your husband got paid twice a month, his paycheck was large enough to cover the bills in full so you were able to pay them right away, then you could use the rest of the money for optional expenses like entertainment, or you could cut back on variable expenses like groceries. Now that he's being paid weekly, a single paycheck is no longer large enough to cover all the bills, even though he's being paid the same amount (I assume your question would be different if he'd taken a significant paycut). So you're worried that you may spend too much on groceries/entertainment/etc then not have enough left to pay the bill when he receives his next paycheck.
If that's your concern, then when your husband gets paid you need to set aside money specifically for the bills that are coming due later. If you have a $400 bill due at the end of the month, set aside $100 from each of his paychecks to pay the bill. You might want physically separate the money, for example by transferring it to another account until you're ready to pay the bill. When your husband gets his final paycheck for the month, transfer the $300 you saved earlier in the month back to your primary account and pay the bill.
As others have noted, tracking your spending and using a budget will be important tools for making this approach work. Make a list of all the bills you paid last month and when they were due. Also list out your paychecks and their dates. You'll be able to see which bills can be paid with a single paycheck, and which ones will need to be split across multiple paychecks. Don't forget about bills that come less frequently (like every three months), and plan for those in the same way.
Thank you for the advice. That is the advice I was looking for. I just need to rearrange my thinking and how I am doing things. And what you said, helps me. SO thank you again.
– Stephanie Grohol
8 hours ago
@StephanieGrohol one (main?) reason it would not have affected us (or most of the respondents) is that we heavily use credit cards, and so need make fewer withdrawals from the checking account every month.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
@StephanieGrohol also, I adjusted as many bills as possible to come due either late in the month or early in the month (in which case we'd pay them late in the previous month). Thus, the bulk of the money left our checking account late in the month.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
add a comment
|
It sounds like the problem is that when your husband got paid twice a month, his paycheck was large enough to cover the bills in full so you were able to pay them right away, then you could use the rest of the money for optional expenses like entertainment, or you could cut back on variable expenses like groceries. Now that he's being paid weekly, a single paycheck is no longer large enough to cover all the bills, even though he's being paid the same amount (I assume your question would be different if he'd taken a significant paycut). So you're worried that you may spend too much on groceries/entertainment/etc then not have enough left to pay the bill when he receives his next paycheck.
If that's your concern, then when your husband gets paid you need to set aside money specifically for the bills that are coming due later. If you have a $400 bill due at the end of the month, set aside $100 from each of his paychecks to pay the bill. You might want physically separate the money, for example by transferring it to another account until you're ready to pay the bill. When your husband gets his final paycheck for the month, transfer the $300 you saved earlier in the month back to your primary account and pay the bill.
As others have noted, tracking your spending and using a budget will be important tools for making this approach work. Make a list of all the bills you paid last month and when they were due. Also list out your paychecks and their dates. You'll be able to see which bills can be paid with a single paycheck, and which ones will need to be split across multiple paychecks. Don't forget about bills that come less frequently (like every three months), and plan for those in the same way.
It sounds like the problem is that when your husband got paid twice a month, his paycheck was large enough to cover the bills in full so you were able to pay them right away, then you could use the rest of the money for optional expenses like entertainment, or you could cut back on variable expenses like groceries. Now that he's being paid weekly, a single paycheck is no longer large enough to cover all the bills, even though he's being paid the same amount (I assume your question would be different if he'd taken a significant paycut). So you're worried that you may spend too much on groceries/entertainment/etc then not have enough left to pay the bill when he receives his next paycheck.
If that's your concern, then when your husband gets paid you need to set aside money specifically for the bills that are coming due later. If you have a $400 bill due at the end of the month, set aside $100 from each of his paychecks to pay the bill. You might want physically separate the money, for example by transferring it to another account until you're ready to pay the bill. When your husband gets his final paycheck for the month, transfer the $300 you saved earlier in the month back to your primary account and pay the bill.
As others have noted, tracking your spending and using a budget will be important tools for making this approach work. Make a list of all the bills you paid last month and when they were due. Also list out your paychecks and their dates. You'll be able to see which bills can be paid with a single paycheck, and which ones will need to be split across multiple paychecks. Don't forget about bills that come less frequently (like every three months), and plan for those in the same way.
answered 8 hours ago
lizzivlizziv
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Thank you for the advice. That is the advice I was looking for. I just need to rearrange my thinking and how I am doing things. And what you said, helps me. SO thank you again.
– Stephanie Grohol
8 hours ago
@StephanieGrohol one (main?) reason it would not have affected us (or most of the respondents) is that we heavily use credit cards, and so need make fewer withdrawals from the checking account every month.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
@StephanieGrohol also, I adjusted as many bills as possible to come due either late in the month or early in the month (in which case we'd pay them late in the previous month). Thus, the bulk of the money left our checking account late in the month.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
add a comment
|
Thank you for the advice. That is the advice I was looking for. I just need to rearrange my thinking and how I am doing things. And what you said, helps me. SO thank you again.
– Stephanie Grohol
8 hours ago
@StephanieGrohol one (main?) reason it would not have affected us (or most of the respondents) is that we heavily use credit cards, and so need make fewer withdrawals from the checking account every month.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
@StephanieGrohol also, I adjusted as many bills as possible to come due either late in the month or early in the month (in which case we'd pay them late in the previous month). Thus, the bulk of the money left our checking account late in the month.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
Thank you for the advice. That is the advice I was looking for. I just need to rearrange my thinking and how I am doing things. And what you said, helps me. SO thank you again.
– Stephanie Grohol
8 hours ago
Thank you for the advice. That is the advice I was looking for. I just need to rearrange my thinking and how I am doing things. And what you said, helps me. SO thank you again.
– Stephanie Grohol
8 hours ago
@StephanieGrohol one (main?) reason it would not have affected us (or most of the respondents) is that we heavily use credit cards, and so need make fewer withdrawals from the checking account every month.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
@StephanieGrohol one (main?) reason it would not have affected us (or most of the respondents) is that we heavily use credit cards, and so need make fewer withdrawals from the checking account every month.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
@StephanieGrohol also, I adjusted as many bills as possible to come due either late in the month or early in the month (in which case we'd pay them late in the previous month). Thus, the bulk of the money left our checking account late in the month.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
@StephanieGrohol also, I adjusted as many bills as possible to come due either late in the month or early in the month (in which case we'd pay them late in the previous month). Thus, the bulk of the money left our checking account late in the month.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
add a comment
|
The ideal state is one in which it doesn't matter when either of you get paid. Where you use last month's income to pay this month's expenses. The starting place is a simple budget. You know when money is coming in, and you know when your fixed expenses are due, so just map it out on paper/spreadsheet to know how much of each paycheck needs to go to which expenses. Once you are a month ahead, you just have to worry about the total expense pile rather than the timing of the paychecks and payment due dates.
It's probably also a good time to review spending, if things are tight, figure out where the money has gone and where you can cut spending, with the goal being to get a month ahead first, then to have a healthy emergency fund, retirement saving, etc.
I suggest researching zero-based budgets, these are characterized by deciding ahead of time where every dollar will go, that means you budget for vacations, car maintenance, going out to eat, etc. It may sound rigid, but it's a tool that will greatly help. There are plenty of budgeting applications and spreadsheet templates you can use as a starting point.
TL;DR: 1 month's expenditures are in checking account as buffer
– Joshua
41 mins ago
add a comment
|
The ideal state is one in which it doesn't matter when either of you get paid. Where you use last month's income to pay this month's expenses. The starting place is a simple budget. You know when money is coming in, and you know when your fixed expenses are due, so just map it out on paper/spreadsheet to know how much of each paycheck needs to go to which expenses. Once you are a month ahead, you just have to worry about the total expense pile rather than the timing of the paychecks and payment due dates.
It's probably also a good time to review spending, if things are tight, figure out where the money has gone and where you can cut spending, with the goal being to get a month ahead first, then to have a healthy emergency fund, retirement saving, etc.
I suggest researching zero-based budgets, these are characterized by deciding ahead of time where every dollar will go, that means you budget for vacations, car maintenance, going out to eat, etc. It may sound rigid, but it's a tool that will greatly help. There are plenty of budgeting applications and spreadsheet templates you can use as a starting point.
TL;DR: 1 month's expenditures are in checking account as buffer
– Joshua
41 mins ago
add a comment
|
The ideal state is one in which it doesn't matter when either of you get paid. Where you use last month's income to pay this month's expenses. The starting place is a simple budget. You know when money is coming in, and you know when your fixed expenses are due, so just map it out on paper/spreadsheet to know how much of each paycheck needs to go to which expenses. Once you are a month ahead, you just have to worry about the total expense pile rather than the timing of the paychecks and payment due dates.
It's probably also a good time to review spending, if things are tight, figure out where the money has gone and where you can cut spending, with the goal being to get a month ahead first, then to have a healthy emergency fund, retirement saving, etc.
I suggest researching zero-based budgets, these are characterized by deciding ahead of time where every dollar will go, that means you budget for vacations, car maintenance, going out to eat, etc. It may sound rigid, but it's a tool that will greatly help. There are plenty of budgeting applications and spreadsheet templates you can use as a starting point.
The ideal state is one in which it doesn't matter when either of you get paid. Where you use last month's income to pay this month's expenses. The starting place is a simple budget. You know when money is coming in, and you know when your fixed expenses are due, so just map it out on paper/spreadsheet to know how much of each paycheck needs to go to which expenses. Once you are a month ahead, you just have to worry about the total expense pile rather than the timing of the paychecks and payment due dates.
It's probably also a good time to review spending, if things are tight, figure out where the money has gone and where you can cut spending, with the goal being to get a month ahead first, then to have a healthy emergency fund, retirement saving, etc.
I suggest researching zero-based budgets, these are characterized by deciding ahead of time where every dollar will go, that means you budget for vacations, car maintenance, going out to eat, etc. It may sound rigid, but it's a tool that will greatly help. There are plenty of budgeting applications and spreadsheet templates you can use as a starting point.
edited 8 hours ago
answered 8 hours ago
Hart COHart CO
42.2k7 gold badges105 silver badges119 bronze badges
42.2k7 gold badges105 silver badges119 bronze badges
TL;DR: 1 month's expenditures are in checking account as buffer
– Joshua
41 mins ago
add a comment
|
TL;DR: 1 month's expenditures are in checking account as buffer
– Joshua
41 mins ago
TL;DR: 1 month's expenditures are in checking account as buffer
– Joshua
41 mins ago
TL;DR: 1 month's expenditures are in checking account as buffer
– Joshua
41 mins ago
add a comment
|
We are in a similar situation, but one of us is paid monthly and the other is paid semi-monthly. Here's some things we do that might help you as well:
- As much as possible, stagger large bills so they don't all hit at once. Our mortgage hits on the first, so we try to schedule as many other payments as we can on the 16th so the first paycheck is not overloaded.
- See if your bank/landlord will allow you to pay the mortgage/rent in half-payments bi-weekly. This will smooth out the payments and as a bonus you pay one extra monthly payment per year, since there are roughly 26 bi-weekly periods in a year. But don't pay extra for this - at worst you can just send two payments manually.
- Plan a month out. Save enough from the first paycheck(s) to cover any bills that come out in the second half of the month.
Use separate bank accounts for "regular" monthly bills and for discretionary/ periodic spending. We deposit our paychecks into one account and transfer all but what is needed for that period into a second account. That way we always know how much money we have for groceries/dining out/etc., and when it's gone, it's gone. IT may take a few months to get used to this, but once you learn to stay within that budget it helps control "impulse" spending.
Make sure you have enough "cushion" in your cash to handle any bumps. For us that's $500 per month (meaning we try to keep the "discretionary" account above that at a minimum). You didn't mention debt but the last thing you want to do is use credit cards to cover these bumps since it can become a habit that leads to a snowball of credit card debt.
Above all of this is to make sure you have a decent "emergency fund" to cover any large unexpected expenses, and to plan for other irregular expenses like car and home repairs, etc. We use a separate savings account as an "escrow" account to save up for these bills as well as holidays, property taxes and insurance that don't occur monthly.
Good luck!
add a comment
|
We are in a similar situation, but one of us is paid monthly and the other is paid semi-monthly. Here's some things we do that might help you as well:
- As much as possible, stagger large bills so they don't all hit at once. Our mortgage hits on the first, so we try to schedule as many other payments as we can on the 16th so the first paycheck is not overloaded.
- See if your bank/landlord will allow you to pay the mortgage/rent in half-payments bi-weekly. This will smooth out the payments and as a bonus you pay one extra monthly payment per year, since there are roughly 26 bi-weekly periods in a year. But don't pay extra for this - at worst you can just send two payments manually.
- Plan a month out. Save enough from the first paycheck(s) to cover any bills that come out in the second half of the month.
Use separate bank accounts for "regular" monthly bills and for discretionary/ periodic spending. We deposit our paychecks into one account and transfer all but what is needed for that period into a second account. That way we always know how much money we have for groceries/dining out/etc., and when it's gone, it's gone. IT may take a few months to get used to this, but once you learn to stay within that budget it helps control "impulse" spending.
Make sure you have enough "cushion" in your cash to handle any bumps. For us that's $500 per month (meaning we try to keep the "discretionary" account above that at a minimum). You didn't mention debt but the last thing you want to do is use credit cards to cover these bumps since it can become a habit that leads to a snowball of credit card debt.
Above all of this is to make sure you have a decent "emergency fund" to cover any large unexpected expenses, and to plan for other irregular expenses like car and home repairs, etc. We use a separate savings account as an "escrow" account to save up for these bills as well as holidays, property taxes and insurance that don't occur monthly.
Good luck!
add a comment
|
We are in a similar situation, but one of us is paid monthly and the other is paid semi-monthly. Here's some things we do that might help you as well:
- As much as possible, stagger large bills so they don't all hit at once. Our mortgage hits on the first, so we try to schedule as many other payments as we can on the 16th so the first paycheck is not overloaded.
- See if your bank/landlord will allow you to pay the mortgage/rent in half-payments bi-weekly. This will smooth out the payments and as a bonus you pay one extra monthly payment per year, since there are roughly 26 bi-weekly periods in a year. But don't pay extra for this - at worst you can just send two payments manually.
- Plan a month out. Save enough from the first paycheck(s) to cover any bills that come out in the second half of the month.
Use separate bank accounts for "regular" monthly bills and for discretionary/ periodic spending. We deposit our paychecks into one account and transfer all but what is needed for that period into a second account. That way we always know how much money we have for groceries/dining out/etc., and when it's gone, it's gone. IT may take a few months to get used to this, but once you learn to stay within that budget it helps control "impulse" spending.
Make sure you have enough "cushion" in your cash to handle any bumps. For us that's $500 per month (meaning we try to keep the "discretionary" account above that at a minimum). You didn't mention debt but the last thing you want to do is use credit cards to cover these bumps since it can become a habit that leads to a snowball of credit card debt.
Above all of this is to make sure you have a decent "emergency fund" to cover any large unexpected expenses, and to plan for other irregular expenses like car and home repairs, etc. We use a separate savings account as an "escrow" account to save up for these bills as well as holidays, property taxes and insurance that don't occur monthly.
Good luck!
We are in a similar situation, but one of us is paid monthly and the other is paid semi-monthly. Here's some things we do that might help you as well:
- As much as possible, stagger large bills so they don't all hit at once. Our mortgage hits on the first, so we try to schedule as many other payments as we can on the 16th so the first paycheck is not overloaded.
- See if your bank/landlord will allow you to pay the mortgage/rent in half-payments bi-weekly. This will smooth out the payments and as a bonus you pay one extra monthly payment per year, since there are roughly 26 bi-weekly periods in a year. But don't pay extra for this - at worst you can just send two payments manually.
- Plan a month out. Save enough from the first paycheck(s) to cover any bills that come out in the second half of the month.
Use separate bank accounts for "regular" monthly bills and for discretionary/ periodic spending. We deposit our paychecks into one account and transfer all but what is needed for that period into a second account. That way we always know how much money we have for groceries/dining out/etc., and when it's gone, it's gone. IT may take a few months to get used to this, but once you learn to stay within that budget it helps control "impulse" spending.
Make sure you have enough "cushion" in your cash to handle any bumps. For us that's $500 per month (meaning we try to keep the "discretionary" account above that at a minimum). You didn't mention debt but the last thing you want to do is use credit cards to cover these bumps since it can become a habit that leads to a snowball of credit card debt.
Above all of this is to make sure you have a decent "emergency fund" to cover any large unexpected expenses, and to plan for other irregular expenses like car and home repairs, etc. We use a separate savings account as an "escrow" account to save up for these bills as well as holidays, property taxes and insurance that don't occur monthly.
Good luck!
edited 7 hours ago
yoozer8
2,5875 gold badges12 silver badges26 bronze badges
2,5875 gold badges12 silver badges26 bronze badges
answered 8 hours ago
D StanleyD Stanley
63.7k10 gold badges182 silver badges190 bronze badges
63.7k10 gold badges182 silver badges190 bronze badges
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Pick a time period and normalize everything to that to determine your likely income and expenses. Let's pick 2 months just to prove the point: You will get paid $x every two weeks, so you will receive 4 paychecks totaling 4x in 2 mo. Your husband gets $y every week, so he will have 8y in 2 mo. You will get a bill for $z every month, so after two months you will have spent 2z. Your total income over this period is 4x+8y-2z.
In reality, picking 1 month or 1 year is more practical as your accounting period.
However, there is no law requiring you to spend your entire paycheck as soon as you get it. Money doesn't go stale (well, there's inflation, but that takes decades to matter). Unless circumstances compel you to live paycheck to paycheck, you should be maintaining savings equivalent to at least several months' worth of your incomes by putting some part of each paycheck aside. The frequency of paychecks doesn't matter, so long as you set aside the same percentage every time. This fund will be much larger than your bills, so you can pay your bills from it without worrying about who gets paid when, and things will even out in the long term (long meaning several months).
add a comment
|
Pick a time period and normalize everything to that to determine your likely income and expenses. Let's pick 2 months just to prove the point: You will get paid $x every two weeks, so you will receive 4 paychecks totaling 4x in 2 mo. Your husband gets $y every week, so he will have 8y in 2 mo. You will get a bill for $z every month, so after two months you will have spent 2z. Your total income over this period is 4x+8y-2z.
In reality, picking 1 month or 1 year is more practical as your accounting period.
However, there is no law requiring you to spend your entire paycheck as soon as you get it. Money doesn't go stale (well, there's inflation, but that takes decades to matter). Unless circumstances compel you to live paycheck to paycheck, you should be maintaining savings equivalent to at least several months' worth of your incomes by putting some part of each paycheck aside. The frequency of paychecks doesn't matter, so long as you set aside the same percentage every time. This fund will be much larger than your bills, so you can pay your bills from it without worrying about who gets paid when, and things will even out in the long term (long meaning several months).
add a comment
|
Pick a time period and normalize everything to that to determine your likely income and expenses. Let's pick 2 months just to prove the point: You will get paid $x every two weeks, so you will receive 4 paychecks totaling 4x in 2 mo. Your husband gets $y every week, so he will have 8y in 2 mo. You will get a bill for $z every month, so after two months you will have spent 2z. Your total income over this period is 4x+8y-2z.
In reality, picking 1 month or 1 year is more practical as your accounting period.
However, there is no law requiring you to spend your entire paycheck as soon as you get it. Money doesn't go stale (well, there's inflation, but that takes decades to matter). Unless circumstances compel you to live paycheck to paycheck, you should be maintaining savings equivalent to at least several months' worth of your incomes by putting some part of each paycheck aside. The frequency of paychecks doesn't matter, so long as you set aside the same percentage every time. This fund will be much larger than your bills, so you can pay your bills from it without worrying about who gets paid when, and things will even out in the long term (long meaning several months).
Pick a time period and normalize everything to that to determine your likely income and expenses. Let's pick 2 months just to prove the point: You will get paid $x every two weeks, so you will receive 4 paychecks totaling 4x in 2 mo. Your husband gets $y every week, so he will have 8y in 2 mo. You will get a bill for $z every month, so after two months you will have spent 2z. Your total income over this period is 4x+8y-2z.
In reality, picking 1 month or 1 year is more practical as your accounting period.
However, there is no law requiring you to spend your entire paycheck as soon as you get it. Money doesn't go stale (well, there's inflation, but that takes decades to matter). Unless circumstances compel you to live paycheck to paycheck, you should be maintaining savings equivalent to at least several months' worth of your incomes by putting some part of each paycheck aside. The frequency of paychecks doesn't matter, so long as you set aside the same percentage every time. This fund will be much larger than your bills, so you can pay your bills from it without worrying about who gets paid when, and things will even out in the long term (long meaning several months).
answered 1 min ago
Money AnnMoney Ann
2,2275 silver badges14 bronze badges
2,2275 silver badges14 bronze badges
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Stephanie Grohol is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Stephanie Grohol is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Stephanie Grohol is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Stephanie Grohol is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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11
If you need to worry about this, you are not maintaining enough of a cash cushion in your checking account - another term for that is living paycheck-to-paycheck.
– void_ptr
8 hours ago
3
Yes, I understand all that and we do budget accordingly, but that all is good and all when he was getting paid bi-weekly and I am getting paid twice a month. I am good at paying them when I knew he was getting paid bi-weekly and I am twice a month. But I was wondering how do people do it when the spouse finds a job that is weekly and I am still twice a month. I don't mean to be stupid or whatever, but I need advice, not criticism. I am gathering from what I have read online, that you save what money comes in weekly, put that aside to pay bills. I will just have to adjust.
– Stephanie Grohol
8 hours ago
5
Stephanie, we fail to see how getting paid weekly is any different than getting paid bi-weekly. Our finances sure wouldn't have been affected if one of us were suddenly switched to weekly.
– RonJohn
8 hours ago
4
Why would anything change? Just deposit the "odd week" checks and do what you've always done on the even weeks: the money is already there.
– chepner
8 hours ago
2
I'll admit... I dont really get how being paid effects it at all. Presumably money comes into your account at various times. And money gets sent out for bills at other times. As long as more money is coming in than going out why could it possibly matter if that is once, twice, four or even 20 times a month...
– Vality
5 hours ago