50/30/20 מחשבון כלל תקציב
מדריך מפורט בקרוב
אנחנו עובדים על מדריך חינוכי מקיף עבור 50/30/20 מחשבון כלל תקציב. חזרו בקרוב להסברים שלב אחר שלב, נוסחאות, דוגמאות מהעולם האמיתי וטיפים מקצועיים.
The 50/30/20 Budget Rule is a personal-finance framework that splits your after-tax (take-home) income into three buckets: 50% for Needs, 30% for Wants, and 20% for Savings and debt repayment. It was popularized by US Senator Elizabeth Warren and her daughter Amelia Warren Tyagi in their 2005 book All Your Worth: The Ultimate Lifetime Money Plan, where they argued that the most important budgeting decision is not what coffee you skip but what proportion of income goes to fixed essential commitments. The framework has since exploded in popularity on TikTok and Instagram as a beginner-friendly alternative to the spreadsheet-heavy zero-based budgeting methods championed by older personal-finance gurus. The rule's enduring appeal lies in its simplicity. Most beginner budgets fail because they require tracking dozens of micro-categories — restaurants, coffee, subscriptions, gas, groceries — and reconciling them every week. The 50/30/20 approach collapses all spending into just three buckets, which lets new budgeters succeed at the most important goal (consistent saving) without burning out on tracking. Once the macro-level allocation is right, the micro-level decisions tend to take care of themselves. Needs (50%) covers housing, utilities, groceries, transportation, insurance, and minimum debt payments — the expenses you cannot legally or practically avoid without major life consequences. Wants (30%) covers everything optional: dining out, streaming services, hobbies, clothing beyond basics, travel, and entertainment. Savings (20%) covers emergency fund contributions, retirement deposits, brokerage investments, and any debt payments above the minimum. The 20% bucket is the wealth-building engine; the other two are operational. This calculator helps you instantly see your three targets given any monthly after-tax income, compare your actual spending against those targets, and project the annual impact of consistently saving 20%. The visual breakdown and comparison feature make it easy to test different income scenarios — like a raise, a side hustle, or a move to a lower cost-of-living area — and see how your budget changes.
- 1Step 1 — Calculate Your After-Tax Income: Start with your monthly take-home pay, not gross salary. If you are paid biweekly, multiply one paycheck by 2.17 (52 weeks ÷ 24 months) for a more accurate monthly figure. Include any consistent secondary income (side hustles, rental income, dividends) that you can reliably count on.
- 2Step 2 — Multiply by Each Bucket Percentage: Your three targets are simply Income × 0.50 for Needs, Income × 0.30 for Wants, and Income × 0.20 for Savings. The calculator does this automatically — no spreadsheets or apps required. These are targets, not hard limits; they give you a benchmark to aim for and a signal when things are out of balance.
- 3Step 3 — Identify Your Needs vs Wants: This is the hardest part. A useful test: if you stopped paying this expense, would you face legal trouble, lose housing, or be unable to work? If yes, it is a Need. If you could stop paying and life would just be less fun, it is a Want. Internet might be a Need if you work from home; cable TV is almost always a Want.
- 4Step 4 — Track Actual Spending (Optional): Most people overestimate their needs and underestimate their wants. Pulling three months of bank and credit card statements and categorizing each expense gives you a baseline. The calculator lets you enter actual spending in each bucket and shows whether you are over, under, or on track.
- 5Step 5 — Automate the 20% Savings: The single most powerful behavior in this system is automating the savings transfer to happen the day after payday. When 20% leaves your checking account immediately, your spending naturally adjusts to the remaining 80%. People who manually save what is left at month-end almost never hit the 20% target consistently.
- 6Step 6 — Adjust for Reality: If your needs exceed 50% — common in high-cost cities — consider a 60/20/20 or 70/20/10 variant as a temporary measure while you work on income or housing. The goal is forward progress, not perfection. A consistent 10% savings rate beats an aspirational 20% you never hit.
- 7Step 7 — Review Quarterly: Re-run the calculator every three months as income changes, expenses shift, or financial goals evolve. A raise should mostly flow to savings (not lifestyle inflation), while a temporary income drop may require shifting to a more conservative variant until things stabilize.
Sustainable starting point for early-career professional
At $4,500/month after-tax (roughly $65k–70k gross depending on state), a $2,250 housing-plus-essentials budget is achievable in most US metros outside of San Francisco, NYC, and Boston. The $900/month savings target, sustained for 30 years at a 7% real return, would compound to roughly $1.1M — meaningful retirement security from a single budget habit.
Needs squeeze in HCOL city — temporary 60/30/10 acceptable
In cities like Seattle or San Diego, a couple may genuinely need 60% for housing and essentials. The pragmatic move is to maintain Wants at 30% (preserving quality of life) and accept a temporary 10% savings rate while working to either grow income or reduce housing costs. The calculator flags this as 'over budget' but in practice 10% savings is still meaningful progress.
Aggressive saver on track for FIRE (financial independence)
A 40% savings rate sustained for 12–15 years can produce financial independence. At $10,000/month income, this person is saving $48,000/year — enough to max out 401k ($23,000), IRA ($7,000), and still invest $18,000 in a brokerage account. The 50/30/20 rule is the floor here, not the ceiling.
70/20/10 variant likely more realistic at this income level
At $2,200/month, even the cheapest US apartments plus groceries and transportation typically exceed $1,100. The realistic budget here is 70% needs ($1,540), 20% wants ($440), and 10% savings ($220). Even $220/month invested at 7% for 40 years grows to roughly $560k — proof that any savings rate, consistently maintained, builds real wealth.
Recent graduates building their first budget with a simple, sustainable framework that does not require detailed expense tracking
Couples merging finances after marriage or moving in together, using the 50/30/20 split as a neutral starting point for negotiation
Anyone recovering from credit-card debt who needs a post-debt savings rhythm that prevents the cycle from repeating
High earners checking whether lifestyle inflation has eroded their savings rate over time
Career-change planners modeling how a salary cut or move to a lower-cost city would reshape their household budget
| Scenario | Needs % | Wants % | Savings % | When to Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Classic 50/30/20 | 50% | 30% | 20% | Average cost of living, stable income, no major debt |
| HCOL 60/20/20 | 60% | 20% | 20% | Expensive cities (NYC, SF, Boston, London) |
| Lower-income 70/20/10 | 70% | 20% | 10% | Income below $40k, focus on stability first |
| Aggressive 50/20/30 | 50% | 20% | 30% | Building FIRE momentum, 5–10 year goal |
| FIRE 50/10/40+ | 50% | 10% | 40%+ | Lean FIRE pursuit, age 25–40 |
| Debt Crisis 50/10/40 | 50% | 10% | 40% | Aggressive debt payoff, all 40% to debt principal |
Should I use gross or net income for the 50/30/20 rule?
Always use net (after-tax, take-home) income. The rule was designed around the dollars that actually arrive in your bank account, not the pre-tax salary. Using gross income would inflate your targets and lead to chronic under-saving. If your employer deducts pre-tax health insurance and 401k contributions before your paycheck arrives, those count as deductions from gross — but the 401k portion can be added back when calculating your true savings rate (it is already part of the 20% savings bucket).
What if my needs exceed 50% of my income?
This is extremely common in expensive cities. Use a temporary variant like 60/20/20 (more for needs, less for wants) or 70/20/10 (lower-income variant). The goal is consistent savings, not hitting exactly 20%. Long-term, work on either increasing income (skill development, job change, side hustle) or reducing fixed costs (cheaper housing, refinancing debt, lower insurance). The 50% needs target is a goal, not a hard rule — many financial advisors consider anything under 60% acceptable in HCOL markets.
Does the 50/30/20 rule include retirement contributions?
Yes. 401(k) contributions, IRA deposits, HSA contributions (if invested), and any other retirement savings count toward the 20% savings bucket. Employer matches are a bonus on top — they do not count against your 20% because they are not coming from your paycheck. If you contribute 10% of pre-tax salary to a 401k with a 5% match, your effective savings rate is roughly 15% of net (the 10% you contribute) plus the employer match — already strong even before voluntary savings.
How do I categorize debt payments?
Minimum required payments on debt belong in 'needs' because failing to pay them has legal consequences. Any payment above the minimum — extra principal on a mortgage, accelerated student-loan payoff, credit-card payments above the minimum — counts as 'savings' because you are reducing a liability faster than required. This is true even though the money is going to a debt servicer rather than a savings account: paying off a 22% credit card is mathematically equivalent to investing at a 22% return.
What is the difference between 50/30/20 and zero-based budgeting?
50/30/20 is a macro-level framework: you only need to track three buckets and aim for the right proportion. Zero-based budgeting (championed by Dave Ramsey, YNAB, and the EveryDollar app) assigns every single dollar to a specific category before the month begins, then tracks every transaction. Zero-based offers more precision and is favored by people paying down significant debt, while 50/30/20 offers more sustainability and is favored by people with stable income who want low-friction habits. Many people start with 50/30/20 and graduate to zero-based when they want tighter control.
How long until I see the impact of saving 20%?
Emergency-fund security typically arrives in 6–12 months (3 months of expenses saved). Meaningful retirement progress shows up in 5–10 years. True financial independence at a 20% savings rate takes 35–40 years, which aligns with traditional retirement age. To accelerate, increase the savings rate: 25% saves about 32 years, 35% saves about 25 years, 50% saves about 17 years, and 70% saves about 8 years. The math of savings rate vs years to FI is more powerful than the math of investment returns.
Should couples use one combined 50/30/20 or separate?
Most financial advisors recommend treating combined household income and expenses as a single 50/30/20 system. This avoids double-counting shared bills (rent, utilities, groceries) and provides a unified view of household financial health. Some couples maintain 'yours, mine, and ours' systems where each partner has a personal allowance from the wants bucket — this preserves autonomy while keeping the macro budget unified.
Pro Tip
Automate the 20% savings transfer to leave your checking account the day after payday — set up a recurring auto-transfer to a separate savings or brokerage account. When the money never appears in checking, your spending naturally adjusts to the remaining 80% and the 20% target becomes nearly automatic. This single habit is the most reliable way to hit the 20% savings rate consistently across years.
Did you know?
The 50/30/20 rule was originally published in 2005, the same year as Robert Kiyosaki's 'Rich Dad's Cashflow Quadrant' and Dave Ramsey's 'The Total Money Makeover.' What made Warren's framework durable while competing methods rose and fell is its elegant minimalism: most personal-finance books recommend tracking 15+ categories, but 50/30/20 collapses all spending decisions into just three numbers — which turns out to be exactly the cognitive load most people can sustain for decades.