Buying A Car
Budgeting Styles
Loans
Credit Card
Buying A Home
100

This rule recommends 20% down, a 4‑year loan, and keeping car costs under 10% of take‑home pay.

What is the 20/4/10 rule.

100

This method splits your money into 50% needs, 30% wants, and 20% savings  

What is the 50/30/20 rule.

100

This number includes interest and fees, showing the true cost of borrowing.

What is APR.

100

This habit is the #1 way to build a strong credit score.  

What is paying on time.

100

This is the upfront amount you pay when buying a house, often 3%–20% of the price.  

What is a down payment.

200

This term describes how a car loses value the moment you drive it off the lot.

What is depreciation.

200

This budgeting style assigns every dollar a job until nothing is left unplanned.

 What is zero‑based budgeting.

200

This is the amount of money you originally borrow before interest.

What is the principal.

200

Keeping this under 30% helps protect your credit score.  

 What is credit

200

This long‑term loan, usually 15–30 years, is used to buy a home.

What is a mortgage.

300

This type of car is cheaper upfront and loses value more slowly than a new one.

What is a used car.

300

This method uses physical or digital envelopes to control spending categories.

 What is the envelope system

300

This part of a loan describes how long you have to pay it back.

What is the loan term.

300

This is the maximum amount a credit card lets you borrow

 What is a credit limit.

300

This yearly cost paid to your local government is based on your home’s value.

What are property taxes.

400

This required protection helps pay for damage or injuries if you get into an accident insurance.

What is car

400

This strategy puts savings first before spending on anything else.

what is pay‑yourself‑first budgeting

400

This is the extra money you pay a lender for borrowing their money

 What is interest.

400

This small required amount keeps your account active but leads to long‑term debt if it’s all you pay.  

What is the minimum payment.

400

This type of insurance protects your home from damage, theft, or disasters

What is homeowners insurance.

500

This phrase includes gas, insurance, maintenance, and repairs — not just the car payment.

 What is total cost of ownership.


500

This simple budgeting tool helps you separate essentials from non‑essentials.

What is a needs‑vs‑wants analysis.


500

This person signs a loan with you to help you qualify, promising to pay if you don’t.

What is a cosigner.

500

This is the total amount you owe at the end of a billing cycle.  

What is the statement balance.

500

These fees — usually 2%–5% of the home price — cover things like inspections, appraisals, and paperwork when finalizing a home purchase.

What are closing costs.

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