None at the moment, but will have soon.
Modern policing, eh? Only enough staff to worry.Yikes. If I find out you've just laid a new patio, I'm going to start worrying.
Yikes. If I find out you've just laid a new patio, I'm going to start worrying.
Absolutely zero.
Don't earn enough to.
When I can save 200 quid the car fails an mot or need to buy something else that's broken. Been saving for a new bed for a year then the Mrs car dies. Always one thing after another.
Earn 50k? 30k would do right now!
This is extremely good advice. In fact I can't see how anyone with only just enough money annually could possibly manage without doing this. These days it is made a bit simpler by more things being on monthly DD but "Christmas & Birthdays" and "House & Car" are essential pots to save into every month if you are on a limited and fixed income ...Possibly the best thing I ever did money-wise, quite early on, was to setup a separate bank account that I moved cash into every month on pay day for all the things that were either annual bills or things that could happen from time to time. The amount I saved was equal to what each of those things cost a year divided by 12. So, for example (and some of these numbers are just there for illustration)...
- Car Insurance - £30
- Car Tax - £20
- MOT and car maintenance - £30
- TV Licence - £10
- Christmas (presents and general increased expenditure) - £50
- Other stuff going wrong - £50
etc etc
Now, I fully appreciate that if things are tight, it may be easier said than done to get this up and running, but it meant that I was constantly saving for things that I'd need to pay for, but I wouldn't have one of those "I could really do without the car needing new tyres as the washing machine needs repairing too" months.
I'd keep track of each individual "pot" within the account, and I'd often find that one pot may go negative but that would be offset by other pots being positive. At the end of each calendar year, I'd asses whether I was saving enough or too much for each individual thing, and adjust if required.
It really made a difference when it came to money stresses, at a time when I didn't have much spare money.
This is extremely good advice. In fact I can't see how anyone with only just enough money annually could possibly manage without doing this. These days it is made a bit simpler by more things being on monthly DD but "Christmas & Birthdays" and "House & Car" are essential pots to save into every month if you are on a limited and fixed income ...