A good budget starts with knowing exactly how much you should allocate to each spending category based on your income.
Quick Budget by Income
Monthly Take-Home Budget Breakdown
| Category | $30K Salary (~$2,100/mo) | $50K (~$3,300/mo) | $75K (~$4,500/mo) | $100K (~$5,900/mo) | $150K (~$8,200/mo) | $200K (~$10,500/mo) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Housing | $630 (30%) | $990 (30%) | $1,350 (30%) | $1,770 (30%) | $2,460 (30%) | $2,940 (28%) |
| Utilities | $130 (6%) | $165 (5%) | $200 (4%) | $235 (4%) | $330 (4%) | $370 (4%) |
| Food (grocery + dining) | $300 (14%) | $430 (13%) | $540 (12%) | $650 (11%) | $820 (10%) | $945 (9%) |
| Transportation | $250 (12%) | $360 (11%) | $450 (10%) | $530 (9%) | $660 (8%) | $735 (7%) |
| Insurance (health, life) | $150 (7%) | $200 (6%) | $250 (6%) | $300 (5%) | $410 (5%) | $525 (5%) |
| Phone/Internet | $100 (5%) | $100 (3%) | $110 (2%) | $120 (2%) | $130 (2%) | $135 (1%) |
| Savings & Investing | $200 (10%) | $500 (15%) | $810 (18%) | $1,180 (20%) | $2,050 (25%) | $3,150 (30%) |
| Debt Payments | $100 (5%) | $165 (5%) | $225 (5%) | $295 (5%) | $410 (5%) | $525 (5%) |
| Wants/Discretionary | $200 (10%) | $330 (10%) | $450 (10%) | $590 (10%) | $740 (9%) | $945 (9%) |
| Buffer/Misc | $40 (2%) | $60 (2%) | $115 (3%) | $230 (4%) | $190 (2%) | $230 (2%) |
Housing Budget Guide
Maximum Housing Cost by Income
| Annual Gross Income | 28% of Gross (Guideline) | 30% of Take-Home | Comfortable (25% of Take-Home) |
|---|---|---|---|
| $30,000 | $700/month | $630 | $525 |
| $40,000 | $933 | $830 | $692 |
| $50,000 | $1,167 | $990 | $825 |
| $60,000 | $1,400 | $1,150 | $958 |
| $75,000 | $1,750 | $1,350 | $1,125 |
| $100,000 | $2,333 | $1,770 | $1,475 |
| $125,000 | $2,917 | $2,150 | $1,792 |
| $150,000 | $3,500 | $2,460 | $2,050 |
Transportation Budget
| Transportation Method | Estimated Monthly Cost | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| No car (walk/bike/transit) | $50-$150 | Urban areas with good transit |
| Public transit only | $75-$200 | Cities like NYC, Chicago, DC |
| One used car (paid off) | $250-$400 | Moderate driving, no car payment |
| One car (with payment) | $500-$800 | Average American |
| Two cars (both with payments) | $1,000-$1,600 | Suburban dual-income households |
Car Payment Guide
| Monthly Payment | Maximum Car Price (5-year loan) | Recommended Income |
|---|---|---|
| $200 | $10,500 | $30,000+ |
| $300 | $15,700 | $40,000+ |
| $400 | $20,900 | $55,000+ |
| $500 | $26,200 | $70,000+ |
| $600 | $31,400 | $85,000+ |
Rule of thumb: Total car costs (payment + insurance + gas + maintenance) should be under 15% of take-home pay.
Food Budget by Household Size
USDA Food Plans (Monthly, 2025)
| Plan Level | 1 Person | 2 People | Family of 4 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thrifty (minimal) | $250 | $470 | $815 |
| Low-Cost | $320 | $590 | $1,010 |
| Moderate | $400 | $730 | $1,250 |
| Liberal | $490 | $900 | $1,545 |
Food Spending Breakdown
| Sub-Category | % of Food Budget | $500 Budget | $800 Budget |
|---|---|---|---|
| Groceries | 70% | $350 | $560 |
| Dining out / takeout | 25% | $125 | $200 |
| Coffee, snacks, drinks | 5% | $25 | $40 |
Savings Rate by Goal
| Goal | Recommended Savings Rate | Monthly Savings ($75K Income) |
|---|---|---|
| Basic emergency fund only | 10% | $450 |
| Standard retirement | 15% | $675 |
| Early retirement (FIRE) | 25-50% | $1,125-$2,250 |
| Aggressive debt payoff | 20-30% (to debt) | $900-$1,350 |
| Home down payment | 15-20% | $675-$900 |
Where to Put Savings
| Priority | Account | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 401(k) to employer match | Variable |
| 2 | Emergency fund (3-6 months) | Until funded |
| 3 | High-interest debt payoff | Until $0 |
| 4 | Roth IRA (max) | $583/month |
| 5 | 401(k) to max | Remaining savings |
| 6 | Taxable brokerage | Extra savings |
Budget for Specific Situations
Single Person in High-Cost City ($75K Salary, $4,500/mo Take-Home)
| Category | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Rent (studio/1BR) | $1,800 (40%) | HCOL reality — will need to cut elsewhere |
| Utilities | $120 | Electric, internet |
| Groceries | $350 | Cook at home primarily |
| Transportation | $130 | Transit pass |
| Phone | $50 | Budget plan |
| Savings/investing | $810 (18%) | 401(k) + Roth IRA |
| Insurance | $150 | Renter’s, supplemental health |
| Dining/entertainment | $400 | Social spending |
| Personal/clothing | $200 | |
| Miscellaneous | $140 | Buffer |
| Subscriptions | $50 | 2-3 services |
| Student loan payment | $300 | Standard repayment |
Family of 4 in Mid-Cost Area ($120K Combined, $7,500/mo Take-Home)
| Category | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Mortgage + property tax + insurance | $2,250 (30%) | |
| Utilities | $300 | Electric, gas, water, trash |
| Groceries | $900 | Family of 4 |
| Car payments + insurance + gas | $900 | 2 cars |
| Childcare | $800 | One child in care |
| Phone/Internet | $150 | Family cell plan + internet |
| Savings/investing | $1,125 (15%) | 401(k)s + savings |
| Insurance (life, umbrella) | $150 | Term life for both parents |
| Kids activities | $200 | Sports, lessons |
| Dining out | $250 | Family dinner out weekly |
| Entertainment/subscriptions | $125 | Streaming, activities |
| Clothing | $150 | Family |
| Medical co-pays | $100 | |
| Miscellaneous | $100 | Buffer |
Budget Red Flags
| Red Flag | Action to Take |
|---|---|
| Housing > 35% of take-home | Consider roommate, downsizing, or increasing income |
| No savings allocation | Even $50/month is a start — automate it |
| Credit card balances growing | Stop non-essential spending, cut cards |
| No emergency fund after 1 year of budgeting | Redirect wants to savings temporarily |
| Total debt payments > 20% of take-home | Debt consolidation or payoff strategy needed |
| Eating out > 15% of food budget | Meal prep, pack lunches |
| “Don’t know where money goes” | Track every purchase for 30 days |
Related: 50/30/20 Rule | Paycheck Budgeting | Zero-Based Budgeting | Average Monthly Expenses | Take-Home Pay | Emergency Fund Guide