Thu, Feb 23, 2012, 10:00 AM EST - U.S. Markets close in 6 hrs.

Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Saving money: Tricks for stashing more cash

    RELATED QUOTES

    SymbolPriceChange
    SBUX48.17-0.16
    DNKN29.20-0.20

    I'm in desperate need of financial advice. My husband and I have two kids and earn more than $75,000 a year. It seems like we should have enough money, but we live paycheck to paycheck and sometimes overdraw our checking account. I've thought about going to a financial adviser for help. But since we don't have a big portfolio, I'm not even sure an adviser would talk to us. Are there any tricks to saving? How do I start a budget and stay on it? -- S.T., Carmel, Indiana

    It would be nice if I could give you some magical incantation or secret budgeting tip to quickly and painlessly transform you into a diligent saver. But, let's be real. We all know saving money boils down to one thing: Living on less than what you earn.

    For most of us, this is easier said than done. In fact, saving is an unnatural activity for humans. We're hardwired for immediate gratification. We see a shiny new car, we want a shiny new car. And we know that by spending (or borrowing) we get to enjoy it right now.

    Devoting money to our financial security or a retirement nest egg, by contrast, doesn't provide that instantaneous good feeling. Small wonder that the psycho-economic playing field is tilted more toward spending money than saving it.

    Fortunately, there are a few strategies that can help you overcome this natural bias toward spending and give you a shot at becoming an assiduous saver.

    The technique that I think is most effective doesn't involve budgeting per se, but arranging your financial life so that you'll have a better chance of living on less than you make.

    You do so by turning the tables on the whole budgeting paradigm and focusing not on the spending side of the equation, but the savings side. Specifically, you set a savings target and make sure to hit that first.

    The conventional budgeting approach would have you divide your spending into various categories -- housing, utilities, entertainment, etc. -- and then shave your expenditures a bit in each category. So rather than buying a latte and croissant each morning at Starbucks, you might save a buck or so each day by having a coffee and Boston Kreme at Dunkin Donuts instead. Or you might save even more by making breakfast at home.

    Best New Money Moves

    The problem with this method is that even if you manage to cut back in various areas, there's no assurance the money you're no longer spending on croissants, late-night pizza, new clothes or whatever will find its way into savings. You may just end up spending it on something else.

    You have a much better chance of actually getting money into a savings or retirement account by specifically earmarking a certain portion of your annual earnings for savings -- say, 10% or in your case, $7,500 this year.

    To make sure that $7,500 is actually saved, you could enroll in your company's 401(k) plan and agree to contribute 10% of salary. Each month $625 would go from your paycheck into your 401(k) before you even have a chance to get your mitts on it (and before the government gets to tax it). If your employer doesn't have such a plan, you could sign up for an automatic investing plan with a mutual fund company that will transfer whatever amount you stipulate from your checking account to your fund account each month.

    Or, for that matter, you could split your savings between a retirement account and other savings. (Ideally, you should start your savings effort by building an emergency fund equal to three-to-six months' worth of living expenses in a savings account, money-market fund or CD.)

    Ask the Help Desk your money questions

    The point, though, is that by setting aside savings first, you'll little choice but to live on less than you earn. With $7,500 siphoned off the top for savings, you'll no longer have $75,000 (before taxes) to spend. You'll have $67,500 (actually, a bit more to the extent you contribute to a 401(k) as your contribution lowers your taxable income and your tax bill).

    As a practical matter, this means that, one way or another, you'll have to arrange your life to get by on your salary after savings. Whether you do that by making a lot of small economies (brown bagging it for lunch, choosing a bare-bones cable TV package) or one or two big ones (owning a less expensive car or living in a more modest home or apartment) doesn't much matter.

    The key is that you fit your lifestyle to the amount of money you have after you've set aside savings (and, of course, that you don't subvert the whole process by funding extra spending with debt).

    There are other techniques that can also help you salt away some dough. As I've suggested before, you can turn the urge to spend into an incentive to save. For example, you might set a savings target -- say, $5,000 for the year -- and, if you hit it, give yourself a nice little reward at the end of the year: a weekend getaway, an electronic gadget, whatever.

    Or if you're one of those people who respond better to penalties than rewards, you can check out the StickK site. Once there, you create a "commitment contract" to achieve a certain goal, say, save $1,000 within six months. Fail to reach that goal, and you must pay a penalty you set in advance -- $100, $500, however much you choose -- to whatever person or organization you designate. To increase the pain of failure (and the incentive to succeed), the person or organization that receives the dough if you fall short should be one you don't much care for.

    And, of course, you can always go with the old standby, budgeting, whether it's putting together a conventional budget or going with a variation like the "bucket budget," which many people find easier to create and follow.

    By the way, I really don't think you need an adviser to do any of this. But if you feel you won't follow through without some handholding, you could always hire a financial planner on a flat fee or hourly basis to help you get started.

    But whether you decide to go it alone or seek help, I suggest you get moving now while the impulse to save is still strong. Because the longer you live a lifestyle that doesn't include regular saving, the harder it will be to change.

    View this article on Money



    More From Money
     

    2 comments

    • Nan H  •  San Luis Obispo, California  •  1 month 6 days ago
      One basic and important fact is "pay yourself first". Out of every paycheck pull out a specific amount you can and set it aside in a savings account, or at home in safe place. Pretend it is a bill that must be paid each month. Do not raid the savings money, otherwise forget the whole thing.
    • The Puppet Master  •  1 month 6 days ago
      Costco has delicious all butter croissants in a huge pack for $5.50. If there's 16 in there that's .34 cents each. Make your own coffee - they have their own coffee bean grinder there for their bags. Store it in airtight containers - the OXO brand is good. Doughnut shops are cheaper then the coffee shops and the very long time ago I went there the coffee was really good....I wouldn't waste the calories on a purchase though unless you go to a place where they are really homemade...huge difference, and so much better.

      Always buy certain items at certain stores, get on their e-mail list and website and they will also mail coupons. Always make lists and stick to them unless you have a strong craving.

      Save first and then deal with it later; both have to do more things around the house and garden, etc. I'm not sure about the kid expense...but we have to keep in mind that some singles can save and support themselves so couples without kids have NO excuse in the world to not be very well off if they have good jobs. Live below your means...and negotiate housing...dual income people make life severely hard on singles or one income families because you say yes to everything like suckers. Believe it or not, others are getting deals while you pay more because of your attitude. Try to live off of one income and spare everyone the damage and price hikes.

      Target companies with a good benefit package. An employer match for savings is vital. If you can't get that and even if you can, save anywhere that will give you a good interest rate that has a good rep. Save even if you owe, and just pay off what you owe.

      After you hit the first high benchmark you make for yourself, it gets alot easier....

    RATES

    Yahoo! Finance on Facebook

      YAHOO! FINANCE ON TWITTER

    Stay in touch with Yahoo! Finance

    [X]

    How to subscribe

    Roll over each section to subscribe using Add to My Yahoo! or RSS Feed feeds.

    Yahoo! News offers dozens of RSS feeds you can read in My Yahoo! or using third-party RSS news reader software. Click here to find out more about RSS and how you can use it with Yahoo! News.
    Loading...