5 BEST WAYS TO MANAGE YOUR MONEY
By MacKenzy Pierre
The estimated reading time for this post is 206 seconds
-
To save, improve credit, reduce debt, and build wealth, you have to manage your money better. Here are the five best ways to manage your money.
-
A personal finance budget can highlight your cash flow problems. Are you eating out too much or making too many trips to Starbucks?
-
You need to try to save as much as 1,500 dollars in the emergency account, and you can keep that savings account at the same brick and mortar bank when you should already have your checking account.
-
A personal finance budget is a living-breathing document, which requires constant review
-
Visit the Financial Middle-Class homepage for more stories
The U.S. Economy continues its decade-long growth, but Americans are having a hard time managing their money. Most of them would have to get into debt or borrow from friends or families to cover a couple-hundred dollars unexpected bills.
Based on current economic metrics, American households are supposed to be in their best financial shape, but the majority of them are struggling with financial insecurity.
The unemployment rate is a historic low, the major stock indices are trading at a record high, and annual pay increases by 3.4%.
To save, improve credit, reduce debt, and build wealth, you have to manage your money better. Here are the five best ways to manage your money
Budgeting
You are earning a decent income, but yet you are living paycheck to paycheck. A personal finance budget can highlight your cash flow problems. Are you eating out too much or making too many trips to Starbucks? A detailed budget will answer those questions for you.
Savings
Building an Emergency Fund
Saving 6 to 12 months of take-home pay needs to be the long-term goal. In the meantime, you need to start building your emergency funds right now. While reviewing your cash inflows and outflows, you will most likely discover frivolous spending that you can get rid of or cut back on. You need to contribute that newfound wealth to your emergency fund.
You need to try to save as much as 1,500 dollars in the emergency account, and you can keep that savings account at the same brick and mortar bank when you should already have your checking account.
Saving 6 to 12 Months of taking Home Pay
No matter how careful you comb through your budget, there might not be enough cuts for you to build regular savings. You might need to find a better-paid job, a side hustle, or a second job. Your 6 to 12 months savings need to be invested in high-yield savings accounts, certificates of deposit (CDs), or treasury bills.
Pay Down Debt and Build Credit
Paying down debt and building credit is the next step once you have enough money in your emergency fund. If you have collection accounts, you need to call the creditors and negotiate a settlement. In most cases, you can settle collection accounts for about $0.50 on a dollar.
Pay your bills on-time and review your credit report annually. You get access to all 3 of your credit reports for free by visiting this site.
Building Wealth
After you get rid of all revolving and installment debts, including credit cards, personal and payday loans, and other unsecured debt, you turn your focus into building wealth. First, you have to contribute as much as you can into your employer’s 401(k), 403(b), or any other employer-sponsored retirement account. At least the minimum you need to contribute to get full employer’s match.
If you are part of millions of American workers who don’t have access to 401(k) or any other employer-sponsored retirement account at your workplace, you can set up and contribute to a Roth IRA.
With the rising of Fintech, there are numerous money management, investing, and personal finance applications that you can use to invest easily outside your employer-sponsored retirement plan.
Monitor
A personal finance budget is a living-breathing document, which requires constant review. All major life changes such as getting married or divorced, having a child, or death of a spouse, require that you go back and review your budget. A well-thought-out budget is the first step to financial freedom.
Senior Accounting & Finance Professional|Lifehacker|Amateur Oenophile
RELATED ARTICLES
How Credit Card Rewards Can Mislead You (and How to Beat the Traps)
The estimated reading time for this post is 218 seconds The illusion (why “free points” aren’t free) Rewards feel like free money. In reality, red tape, devaluations, and “earn-more-to-save-more” nudges push you to overspend for perks that move under your...
Why Annual Fees Keep Going Up (and What You Get in Return)
The estimated reading time for this post is 200 seconds The give-and-take (how premium cards actually work) Premium cards are a trade: issuers “give” perks (lounges, credits, partners), and you “give back” via the annual fee and your spending. When...
Leave Comment
Cancel reply
How Credit Card Rewards Can Mislead You (and How to Beat the Traps)
Why Annual Fees Keep Going Up (and What You Get in Return)
Luxury Credit Cards in 2025: What’s Behind the Rising Fees?
Gig Economy
American Middle Class / Oct 16, 2025
How Credit Card Rewards Can Mislead You (and How to Beat the Traps)
The estimated reading time for this post is 218 seconds The illusion (why “free points” aren’t free) Rewards feel like free money. In reality, red tape,...
By Article Posted by Staff Contributor
American Middle Class / Oct 15, 2025
Why Annual Fees Keep Going Up (and What You Get in Return)
The estimated reading time for this post is 200 seconds The give-and-take (how premium cards actually work) Premium cards are a trade: issuers “give” perks (lounges,...
By Article Posted by Staff Contributor
American Middle Class / Oct 15, 2025
Luxury Credit Cards in 2025: What’s Behind the Rising Fees?
The estimated reading time for this post is 185 seconds The short answer Premium perks got expensive (lounges, partner reimbursements, richer credits), the “perk arms race”...
By Article Posted by Staff Contributor
American Middle Class / Oct 15, 2025
Why the American Middle Class Is Watching the Credit Card Battle from the Sidelines
The estimated reading time for this post is 282 seconds I. The $900 Question Let’s be honest: most middle-class Americans can’t wrap their heads around paying...
By Article Posted by Staff Contributor
American Middle Class / Oct 15, 2025
Middle-Class Money: Choosing Value Over Vanity
The estimated reading time for this post is 160 seconds The simple framework Middle-class households win by maximizing certainty—low fees, clear cash-back, and guardrails that protect...
By Article Posted by Staff Contributor
American Middle Class / Oct 13, 2025
Life Insurance Explained: Choosing the Right Policy for Your Family’s Financial Security
The estimated reading time for this post is 369 seconds Why Life Insurance Matters (Now More Than Ever) Most people think life insurance is for “older...
By Article Posted by Staff Contributor
American Middle Class / Oct 12, 2025
How Millennials Can Still Buy a Home in 2025 — Even as the American Dream Shrinks
The estimated reading time for this post is 395 seconds I. The Locked Door of the American Dream If house-hunting feels harder than it was for...
By Article Posted by Staff Contributor
American Middle Class / Oct 11, 2025
Universal Basic Income Is a Middle-Class Policy
The estimated reading time for this post is 526 seconds I. The Middle-Class Mirage Every few election cycles, the American middle class is asked to choose...
By FMC Editorial Team
American Middle Class / Oct 11, 2025
4 Things Every Parent Should Know — Particularly Older Moms and Dads
The estimated reading time for this post is 256 seconds Introduction: Parenting on Your Own Timeline Great parenting happens at every age. In fact, one of...
By Ceranes Lejulus
American Middle Class / Oct 11, 2025
Financial Literacy in America: Why 73% of Adults Struggle with Basic Money Questions
The estimated reading time for this post is 272 seconds Introduction: A National Blind Spot Every year, surveys reveal an uncomfortable truth: the majority of Americans...
By FMC Editorial Team
Latest Reviews
American Middle Class / Oct 16, 2025
How Credit Card Rewards Can Mislead You (and How to Beat the Traps)
The estimated reading time for this post is 218 seconds The illusion (why “free points”...
American Middle Class / Oct 15, 2025
Why Annual Fees Keep Going Up (and What You Get in Return)
The estimated reading time for this post is 200 seconds The give-and-take (how premium cards...
American Middle Class / Oct 15, 2025
Luxury Credit Cards in 2025: What’s Behind the Rising Fees?
The estimated reading time for this post is 185 seconds The short answer Premium perks...