Budgetcalculator

Houd uw inkomsten en uitgaven bij om een ​​evenwichtig maandbudget te creëren.

Voer details in

Maandelijks inkomen

$
$

Huisvesting

$
$
$

Vervoer

$
$
$

Levend

$
$
$

Schuld

$
$
$

Savings & More

$
$
$
$

Enter your income and expenses, then click Calculate Budget to see your breakdown and recommendations.

Volledige gebruikershandleiding

What is the Budget Calculator?

This calculator helps you build and analyze a monthly budget. You enter your income (salary and other) and expenses by category: housing, transportation, living, debt, savings, healthcare, and other. It shows your total income, total expenses, and remaining amount, plus a spending breakdown and comparison to recommended percentages (e.g. 30%% housing, 20%% savings). You also get simple recommendations to improve your budget health.

De 50/30/20-regel

50% Behoeften

Housing, utilities, groceries, insurance, minimum debt payments.

30% Wil

Dining, entertainment, shopping, hobbies, subscriptions.

20% Besparingen

Emergency fund, retirement, extra debt payments, investments.

Hoe te gebruiken

  1. Enter your monthly income (salary and any other income).
  2. Fill in each expense category with your typical monthly amounts.
  3. Click Calculate Budget to see your summary, charts, and recommendations.
  4. Compare your spending to the recommended amounts and adjust as needed.

Inzicht in uw resultaten

Remaining: Income minus expenses. Positive means surplus; negative means you're overspending.

Status: Healthy = balanced budget; Warning = e.g. housing over 30%%; Deficit = expenses exceed income.

Recommended: Guideline amounts (e.g. 30%% income for housing, 20%% for savings) to compare with your actual spending.

De grafieken begrijpen

Spending Breakdown: Doughnut chart showing how your expenses are split across Housing, Transportation, Living, Debt, Savings, and Other.

Actual vs Recommended: Bar chart comparing your spending in each category to the recommended amount based on income.

Belangrijke opmerkingen

  • Housing should generally be no more than 30%% of gross income.
  • Aim for at least 20%% to savings and debt payoff when possible.
  • Use remaining surplus to build an emergency fund (3–6 months of expenses) first.

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