Soon-To-Be Debt Free, 2016! (2024)

Happy Day, Everyone!! I have decided to release the 2016 Soon-To-Be Debt Free Workbook, a little early! I am absolutely loving the changes I have made to this version, and I hope that you will too!

This is going to be a pretty intensive post – taking you through the entire workbook. So let’s get right into it!

This year’s workbook has the same great content as the previous years- but with an updated look, and a few tweaks that will make it even better than before!

Year of Saving & Paycheck Schedule

We start with the year of savings and our paycheck schedules. If you were here last year and followed through with the 2015 version, you would have saved a minimum of 1,300 with my year of savings! If you did not stick to it (or are new to this workbook) this is your clean slate – you absolutely CAN do this! If you succeed last year, then congratulations!! Pat yourself on the back, and keep going!!

Last year I only marked Scott’s paychecks. This year I am going to be adding a few of my “paydays’ as well, and that will be exciting to see!

Use a highlighter to mark them. Since we are both on there this year, I color coated us. 🙂

Balanced Budget

These two pages can make or break you this year. Yes, you need all of them to be truly successful, but if you keep spending more than you make, you will never achieve the Debt Free lifestyle!

Take your time! Really analyze your budget – figure out what you can cut out and DO IT. Remember the end game. “Everyone thinks they are going to get out of debt” You can actually be one of those people! Do it for yourself, and your family!

How do you find your percentage value?

  • It is super easy. Simply take your total budget (for each category) and divide it by your monthly take-home pay.
    • Example. Say you bring home 1,000 dollars a month (net take-home pay) and your food budget totals $150.00 a month. Your percentage value would be 150 / 1000 = .15 or 15%

Paycheck Budgeting & Payment Tracker

Once I started breaking our bills into two groups (Beginning and middle of the month) our finances started to take off in the right direction. It is so much easier to budget and plan out in two-week chunks than it is a full month at a time. I know that Scott is paid every two weeks. He is guaranteed a paycheck by the 15th of every month. So I called our bill companies and had the bills that get paid with the firstpaycheck of the month due on the 16th The rest get paid with the second paycheck and those are due on the 28th. This way we are never ever late – and I know what bills get paid when – and the exact amount that comes out of our bank account twice a month. It is fantastic.

I use the payment tracker as a way to double check that the bills were paid that month and have cleared our account.

Irregular Income and Debt Priority List

Irregular Income-

  • Sit down and make a priority list of items/debts you want to tackle.
  • This list can be any sort of thing. Do you know you’ll need tires for your car next season? Would you love to splurge on a special gift for someone in your family? list it in order of priority on this form. Since this is a workbook to get you debt free- I recommend that you list debts you want to eliminate!
  • I am scattering debt payment amounts on this list. For example, Priority #3 is to put an additional 1,000 on a car payment.
  • Hop on over to the Budgeted column, and go down the list and write how much you need for each item
  • When you get an “Irregular Income” Put that amount in the Income Amount column and go as far down the list as possible based on the income. IE.
  • Budgeted Items:
    • Priority #1: New tires – $400
    • Priority #2: Car Payment Extra – $1,000
    • Priority #3: Trip to the Fair – $150
  • You received $1,500 in Irregular Income. You’d be able to fully fund the New tires column, as well as the Extra Car Payment and $100 of the Fair Item. So, when the next Irregular Income comes in, you’d pick right up on Priority # 3 (Trip the fair) until that is fully funded, and then continue down the list.

Debt Priority List-

On a blank piece of paper list all of your Debts, along with their total balance! *don’t get sick! You can do this!

Once you have them all, determine your debt payoff priority and get to listing them on this form. Make sure you take the time to locate the interest rate and your minimum payments.

  • You can go to crown.org and input all of your debt information to determine your Estimated Payoff Date
  • Most people recommend you paying your debt off from SMALLEST BALANCE to the LARGEST BALANCE. So you’ll get some “wins” under your belt quickly to keep up the momentum.

Snowball Calculator

One of my favorite pages! Pick your top 6 debts (That you listed already on your Debt Priority List). Each debt get’s their own page. Fill out the debt info at the top. Every-time you make a payment – whether it is a regular monthly payment OR an extra payment write down the date and amount, along with the balance. I love watching that balance decrease! It is such an amazing feeling, to finally write PAID across our student loan balances!

Monthly Budget Check-In

It is so important to sit down every month and make a plan for those 30 / 31 days! If you are really committed to becoming debt free, you’ll end up loving planning day. Each time you sit down and write out your goals/plans you are are recommitting to this process. This is not an easy goal (To become debt free) but I promise you, it will be one of the best decisions of your life! Imagine what you will be able to do, once you do not have bills looming over you!

Here is how it works:

  • You and your spouse / significant other each set a goal for the month. IT CAN BE ANYTHING. This does not have to be related to finances. Just a goal each. (Goal 1 and Goal 2 – you each get your own goal)
  • Underneath groceries fill in your weekly categories. Ours look like this:
    • Groceries
    • Scott’s Lunch
    • Equinox Gas
    • Sonata Gas
    • Entertainment
  • Every week write in the amount you spent for each category in the corresponding column. At the bottom, you total your amount and you’ll see if you are over or under for the week. You’ll be shocked at how quickly you can go significantly over budget if you are not constantly tracking your spending. This will ensure that at the end of the month you’ll have MORE MONEY than you domonth! Make sure you check out my favorite budgeting technique (Keeps me in check when I go shopping!)

Here is how page 2 works:

  • Sit down with your spouse / significant other and come up with three goals for the month
  • The first goal is a financial goal. Some examples:
    • Get our emergency fund up to 1,000 dollars
    • Pay of XXX Debt
    • Save $500.00 for new car tires
    • Work XX number of overtime hours to equal an additional $750.00
  • The second goal is a family goal. Some examples:
    • Eat out only 1 time this month
    • Play more games together!
    • Watch less television
    • Go on 3 walks together a week
  • The third goal is a long-term one. Some examples:
    • Save $500 towards a Disney vacation in June 2016
  • To the right of each goal you’ll fill in:
    • Why? – Why is this your goal. You need to have a legitimate reason otherwise you will not stay motivated to completeit.
    • Total cost. For the Disney vacation, lets sayit will cost 3,000 to take your family there. $3,000is your total cost of the goal.
    • Progress to Date- How much progress have you made towards yourgoal already? Have you already saved $1,000 to go to Disney? Have you already paid $2,000 off that credit card? Put that figure here!
    • Date to complete the goal by. You need a firm date to strive towards. I’ve found that without a date you’ll be more likely to cheat your budget.

Paying Bills Worksheet

I made some changes to my bill pay worksheet, and I included it at the very end of the workbook. I still love this worksheet and use it every.single.time I pay bills. It keeps everything organized – and is a complete sanity and bank account, saver!!note-The checkboxes are for you to use once the payment has cleared your account, not when you send the payment.

If you have made it all the way to the bottom of this post, give yourself a giant pat on the back! I hope all of you will join in, and start or continue on the quest of becoming and staying debt free!!

You can click HERE to purchase this workbook, for only $4.25!

You will be automatically emaileda downloadable file, and can start immediately!

Soon-To-Be Debt Free, 2016! (2024)
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