This budgeting method divides income into needs, wants, and savings using percentages.
(What is the 50/30/20 Budget?)
Income before taxes and deductions are removed.
(What is Gross Pay?)
Costs that usually remain the same each month.
(What are Fixed Expenses?)
Money saved for unexpected situations like car repairs or medical bills.
(What is an Emergency Fund?)
A legal agreement to rent a home or apartment.
(What is a Residential Lease?)
In this budgeting method, every dollar is assigned a purpose until the balance equals zero.
(What is a Zero-Based Budget?)
The actual amount deposited into your bank account after deductions.
(What is Net Pay?)
Expenses that change depending on usage or lifestyle choices.
(What are Variable Expenses?)
This savings strategy means setting money aside before spending on entertainment or wants.
(What is Pay Yourself First?)
The average amount of money needed to maintain basic living expenses in an area.
(What is Cost of Living?)
A person earns $3,600 monthly net pay. Under the 50/30/20 rule, they spend $2,100 on needs. By how much are they over the recommended amount for needs?
(What is $300 over?)
A worker receives a salary of $48,000 per year and is paid twice monthly. What is their gross pay per paycheck?
(What is $2,000?)
A budget category includes groceries, gas, and concert tickets. Which item would most likely be considered a want instead of a need?
(What are concert tickets?)
If someone has $2,400 in monthly expenses, how much should they aim to save for a fully funded 6-month emergency fund?
(What is $14,400?)
Your landlord raises rent from $1,400 to $1,650. By how much did your housing cost increase monthly?
(What is $250?)
A student using a zero-based budget has $2,750 in income. After budgeting for all categories, they still have $125 unassigned. According to zero-based budgeting rules, what should they do next?
(What is assign the $125 to a category like savings, debt, or expenses?)
An employee earns $22 per hour, works 38 hours weekly, and receives time-and-a-half for 6 overtime hours. What is the gross pay for that week?
(What is $1,045?)
A family wants to lower spending quickly. Which type of expense is usually easier to reduce first: fixed or variable expenses, and why?
(What are variable expenses because they are more flexible?)
A teenager starts investing at age 18 instead of 28. Besides saving more money overall, what financial advantage do they gain over time?
(What is compound growth/interest over a longer period?)
A tenant signs a 12-month lease but moves out after 4 months without permission. What financial consequence could occur?
(What are lease penalties or owing remaining rent?)
A person’s monthly net pay is $5,000. They budget $2,000 for needs, $1,800 for wants, and save the rest. Analyze whether this follows the 50/30/20 rule and identify which category is most off target.
(What is no; wants are too high at 36%, while savings are too low at 24%?)
A worker’s paycheck shows: gross pay $4,800, federal taxes $620, state taxes $210, insurance $180, and retirement contributions $240. Calculate the net pay and determine what percentage of gross pay was deducted.
(What is $3,550 net pay and about 26% deducted?)
Rank these expenses from MOST flexible to LEAST flexible in a monthly budget: rent, streaming services, groceries, car payment, electricity bill.
(What are streaming services, groceries, electricity bill, car payment, rent?)
Two people both save $200 monthly. Person A keeps it in a checking account with no interest, while Person B invests it earning an average 7% annual return. After many years, which person is likely to have significantly more money and why?
(What is Person B because compound growth increases investment earnings over time?)
A city’s cost of living rises by 12% while a worker’s salary only rises by 3%. Explain how this affects budgeting and financial stability.
(What is purchasing power decreases because expenses rise faster than income, making budgeting harder?)