College Student Budget: A Real $900-a-Month Plan
Build a college student budget on a tiny, irregular income. Get a copy-and-use monthly table, a real $900 example, and fixes for the money mistakes that drain your account.
Real sample budgets for every income, from $2,000 to $5,000 a month.
Build a college student budget on a tiny, irregular income. Get a copy-and-use monthly table, a real $900 example, and fixes for the money mistakes that drain your account.
When rent and groceries eat almost everything, budgeting feels pointless. Here is a real plan that gives every dollar a job, protects the essentials first, and slowly builds a little breathing room.
If your paychecks are never the same twice, a normal budget falls apart fast. Here is how to build one around your lowest month, pay yourself a steady salary, and stop dreading the slow weeks.
The same budgeting math works whether you take home $2,000 or $5,000. Here is how the percentages scale, with sample budgets and guides for every income level.
Getting paid every two weeks throws most monthly budgets off. Here is how to assign each paycheck to specific bills and turn your two bonus checks a year into real progress.
A $5,000 take home month gives you real breathing room, but that comfort is exactly what makes it easy to overspend. Here is a full sample budget and how to push your savings past 20 percent.
A $3,000 take home month gives you real room to work with. Here is a full sample budget, how to split it with 50/30/20, and how to adjust it for your rent.
A $2,000 take home month is tight but workable. Here is a real sample budget, how to adjust it for your rent, and what to do when it does not all fit.
Your first real paycheck lands smaller than you expected, and the bills line up fast. Here is how to build a budget from day one that handles loans, rent, and a first credit card without the stress.
The right budget looks very different on $2,000 a month than on $5,000. These guides give you a real, copy-ready sample budget for your exact income, with the categories filled in, the housing target that keeps things stable, and honest advice on what to prioritize when the numbers are tight.
Find the guide closest to your take-home pay, swap in your real rent, and you have a working budget in minutes.