Enter Values

$
Take-home pay after taxes and deductions
$
Housing, utilities, groceries, insurance, min debt payments
$
Dining out, entertainment, subscriptions, shopping
$
Retirement contributions, emergency fund, extra debt payments
%
%
%
Total: 100% (must equal 100%)
50/30/20 Budget Rule
Needs ≤ 50%  |  Wants ≤ 30%  |  Savings ≥ 20%
Percentages applied to after-tax income.
Source: "All Your Worth" by Elizabeth Warren & Amelia Warren Tyagi
Ryan O'Connell, CFA
Calculator by Ryan O'Connell, CFA

Budget Analysis

Budget Score
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Needs
Target --
Actual --

Surplus --
Wants
Target --
Actual --

Surplus --
Savings
Target --
Actual --

Surplus --
Total Allocated --
Unallocated / Over Budget --

Visual Breakdown

Target vs Actual
Allocation Breakdown

Model Assumptions

  • The 50/30/20 rule is a budgeting guideline from "All Your Worth" by Elizabeth Warren and Amelia Warren Tyagi. It is widely used as a benchmark for after-tax income allocation.
  • Percentages are guidelines, not rigid rules. Actual allocations should vary based on location (cost of living), family size, outstanding debt, and financial goals.
  • "Needs" covers essential expenses only: housing, utilities, groceries, basic transportation, insurance, minimum debt payments. Non-essential spending belongs in "Wants."
  • "Savings" includes retirement contributions, emergency fund deposits, investment contributions, and debt payments above the required minimum.
  • If your employer withholds retirement contributions before your paycheck, do not count those again in savings. Income should reflect your actual take-home pay.
For educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Consult a qualified financial advisor for personal financial planning.

Understanding the 50/30/20 Budget Rule

What is the 50/30/20 Rule?

The 50/30/20 rule is a simple budgeting framework that divides your after-tax income into three broad categories. It was popularized by Senator Elizabeth Warren and her daughter Amelia Warren Tyagi in their book "All Your Worth: The Ultimate Lifetime Money Plan." The Kapoor personal finance textbook (Chapter 3, p.100) also presents this alongside the 70/20/10 variant.

The 50/30/20 Framework
50% Needs: Essential living expenses
30% Wants: Discretionary spending
20% Savings: Savings and debt repayment
All percentages applied to after-tax (take-home) income

The Three Categories Explained

Needs (50%)

Essential expenses you cannot avoid.
Housing, utilities, groceries, basic transportation, health insurance, and minimum debt payments.

Wants (30%)

Discretionary spending above necessities.
Dining out, entertainment, subscriptions, vacations, clothing upgrades, and non-essential services.

Savings (20%)

Building wealth and reducing debt.
Retirement contributions (401k, IRA), emergency fund, investment accounts, and extra debt payments above minimum.

Adapting for Your Situation

The 50/30/20 split is a starting point, not a rigid rule. Common adjustments include:

  • High cost-of-living areas: Needs may consume 60% or more, requiring adjustment to wants and savings.
  • Aggressive debt payoff: Temporarily shifting wants budget toward savings (e.g., 50/15/35).
  • High earners: Needs may be well below 50%, allowing a higher savings rate.
  • Students or early career: Income may be too low for strict adherence; focus on building the savings habit first.
Important: If your employer withholds retirement contributions (e.g., 401k match) before your paycheck, those are already "saved." Use your actual take-home pay as the income figure, and only count additional voluntary savings in the savings category.

Key Assumptions

  • Income represents after-tax take-home pay
  • Percentages are guidelines that should be adjusted for personal circumstances
  • The distinction between needs and wants requires honest self-assessment
  • Savings includes both traditional savings and aggressive debt repayment
  • The framework works best as a monthly budgeting tool
Alternative Framework: The Kapoor textbook (Chapter 3) also presents the 70/20/10 rule: 70% for necessary expenses, 20% for savings, and 10% for retirement and future security. Use the Custom mode in this calculator to model either approach.

Frequently Asked Questions

The 50/30/20 rule is a personal budgeting framework popularized by Senator Elizabeth Warren and Amelia Warren Tyagi in "All Your Worth." It divides after-tax income into three categories: 50% for needs (essential living expenses), 30% for wants (discretionary spending), and 20% for savings and debt repayment. The simplicity of the rule makes it an accessible starting point for building a first budget.

Needs are essential expenses you cannot reasonably avoid: rent or mortgage payments, utilities, groceries, basic transportation (car payment, insurance, gas, or public transit), health insurance, and minimum debt payments. Subscriptions or services that are not strictly essential — such as streaming services or gym memberships — are generally classified as wants, even if they feel habitual.

Wants are spending above the minimum required to live and work — dining out, entertainment, vacations, new clothing beyond necessity, and upgrades to already-functional items. Savings includes contributions to retirement accounts (401k, IRA), emergency funds, investment accounts, and debt payments above the required minimum. Paying down high-interest debt aggressively is treated as savings because it improves net worth.

The Budget Score summarizes overall budget health. "Excellent" means all three categories are within their target allocations. "Good" means savings are on track and any overspending in needs or wants is minor (within 10% of target). "Needs Work" means savings are below target or spending significantly exceeds category targets. "Over Budget" means total spending exceeds income, which requires immediate action.

The 50/30/20 rule is a useful starting benchmark, but it may not fit every situation. High cost-of-living areas, significant student loan burdens, or aggressive savings goals may all require a different split. The custom mode lets you set any percentages summing to 100%, enabling models like 60/20/20 for high-housing-cost scenarios or 40/20/40 for aggressive saving.

A negative surplus for a category means actual spending exceeded the target for that specific category, even if total spending is below income. For example, spending $2,700 on needs against a $2,500 target produces a -$200 needs surplus. The total surplus reflects how much income is unallocated after all three categories. A positive total surplus means money is available for additional savings or flexibility.
Disclaimer

This calculator is for educational purposes only. The 50/30/20 rule is a general guideline and may not be appropriate for every financial situation. Actual budget allocations should consider your specific income, expenses, debt obligations, and financial goals. Consult a qualified financial advisor for personalized financial planning advice.