50/30/20-Budgetplaner

The 50/30/20 rule from Senator Elizabeth Warren's All Your Worth: 50% to needs, 30% to wants, 20% to savings and debt repayment beyond minimums. Enter your monthly take-home (after tax), see the breakdown.

Der 50/30/20-Budgetplaner teilt dein Nettoeinkommen nach der bekannten Regel auf: 50% für Bedürfnisse (Miete, Lebensmittel, Versicherung), 30% für Wünsche (Restaurant, Streaming, Hobbys), 20% fürs Sparen und Schuldenabbau. Trag dein Monatsgehalt nach Steuern ein, der Rechner zeigt dir die drei Eimer in Euro. Mit eigenen Werten für die Kategorien kannst du sehen, ob du in jeder im Rahmen bleibst.

Built by Bob Article by Lace QA by Ben Shipped

Anwendung

  1. 1

    Trag dein monatliches Nettoeinkommen ein (was wirklich auf dem Konto landet).

  2. 2

    Sieh die Standardaufteilung: 50% Bedürfnisse, 30% Wünsche, 20% Sparen.

  3. 3

    Optional: trag deine tatsächlichen Ausgaben pro Kategorie ein, um zu sehen, wo du stehst.

  4. 4

    Bei roten Zahlen weißt du sofort, welcher Bereich aus dem Ruder läuft.

Häufig gestellte Fragen

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Where the 50/30/20 Rule Comes From

Elizabeth Warren — then a Harvard Law professor specializing in bankruptcy, later a US Senator — co-authored All Your Worth: The Ultimate Lifetime Money Plan with her daughter Amelia Warren Tyagi in 2005. The book argued that most personal-finance frameworks were too complex; what most people needed was a simple structural rule that prevented the slow-creeping disaster of overspending on needs while underspending on savings.

The rule: divide after-tax income into three buckets — 50% needs, 30% wants, 20% savings. The Microapp 50/30/20 Budget Planner does the math; the value of the rule is in the discipline of categorizing spending honestly.

Worked example. Take-home pay: $5,000/month.
• Needs (50%): $2,500 — rent, utilities, groceries, transportation, insurance, minimum debt payments
• Wants (30%): $1,500 — dining out, streaming, hobbies, travel, premium upgrades
• Savings (20%): $1,000 — retirement, emergency fund, debt payoff above minimums, savings goals

What Counts in Each Category

Needs (50%)Wants (30%)Savings (20%)
Rent or mortgage paymentDining out & takeoutRetirement (401k, IRA contributions)
Utilities (electric, gas, water, internet)Entertainment subscriptionsEmergency fund (3-6 months of expenses)
Groceries (basic)Travel & vacationsDebt payoff above minimums
Transportation to workHobbies & non-essential gearDown payment savings
Health insurancePremium clothingSpecific savings goals
ChildcareGym memberships, premium appsInvestment accounts
Minimum debt paymentsCable / streaming services

The Trickiest Categorization Calls

Cell phone. A phone is a need; the latest iPhone with a $90/mo plan is wants territory above a basic plan that covers the actual need.

Car. Car payment + insurance + gas = need (assuming you need the car for work). Car upgrades, premium models, the second/third car, optional features = wants.

Groceries. Basic groceries to feed yourself = need. Premium groceries (specialty foods, ready-made meals, organic premium) = wants. The 'basic' baseline is debatable but useful.

Internet & subscriptions. Internet access for work = need. Multiple streaming services, premium gaming subscriptions, etc. = wants.

Health insurance. Required by law in many countries — need. Supplemental policies, premium plans above the minimum = depends on situation.

When 50/30/20 Doesn't Fit

The framework breaks for many people in high-cost-of-living areas where needs alone consume 60-80% of take-home. San Francisco, NYC, London, Hong Kong — rent for a basic apartment can exceed 50% of take-home pay even on professional salaries. When that's the case:

  1. Increase income. The most powerful long-term lever. Pursue raises, switch jobs, develop side income, build skills that command higher pay.
  2. Reduce the biggest expense. For most people, that's housing — moving to a cheaper area, getting roommates, downsizing. Transportation is second.
  3. Accept the trade-off. If 65% goes to needs, your wants/savings split becomes 20/15. Pretending the framework still fits doesn't help.

The 50/30/20 rule is a yardstick, not a constitution. Your real-world budget might land at 55/25/20 or 45/25/30 — both fine if they're sustainable.

Where to Put the 20% Savings (In Order)

  1. Employer 401k match — literally free money. If your employer matches up to 6%, contribute at least 6%. Anything less is leaving compensation on the table.
  2. Emergency fund — 3-6 months of essential expenses in a high-yield savings account (4-5% APY currently). This is the buffer that prevents medical bills, car repairs, or job loss from cascading into debt.
  3. High-interest debt — credit cards (typically 18-24% APR), payday loans. Pay these off as fast as possible; the 'return' on paying off a 22% APR debt is 22% — better than any investment.
  4. Tax-advantaged retirement — Roth IRA ($7k/year), then maxing your 401k beyond the match (up to $23k/year in 2026). Pre-tax accounts reduce current taxes; Roth accounts mean tax-free growth.
  5. Other goals — down payment, additional investment accounts, specific savings buckets (vacation, kids' college, etc.).

Why This Beats Tracking Every Dollar

Detailed budgeting (zero-based, envelope method, expense-tracking apps) requires constant attention. Most people start with enthusiasm and abandon it within 3 months because the friction is too high. The 50/30/20 rule's advantage is that it's coarse enough to follow long-term — set up automatic transfers (savings comes off the top before you see it), then loosely budget the rest into needs vs wants. You don't track every coffee.

The deeper principle: structure beats willpower. Automating the 20% savings into a separate account at every payday means you never see it as 'available money.' You don't have to resist spending it; it's not in front of you.

Common Pitfalls

Calling wants 'needs' to feel better. Streaming subscriptions, dining out, premium apps — these are wants. Calling them needs makes the 50% category balloon and gives a false sense of being responsible.

Not adjusting for take-home vs gross. The rule applies to take-home (after-tax) income. Using gross will show you have more to spend than you actually do.

Ignoring irregular expenses. Annual insurance premiums, holiday gifts, car maintenance, medical co-pays — these need monthly allocation even though they're not paid monthly. Either save toward them in 'savings' or include the prorated monthly cost in 'needs/wants.'

Treating the framework as rigid. 50/30/20 is a reference point. If your situation requires 60/20/20 (high-cost-of-living + aggressive savings goal), that's still a framework — just a different one. The point is to be intentional about allocation, not hit specific numbers.

Educational Tool — Not Financial Advice

This calculator implements the basic 50/30/20 split. Real personal-finance planning involves your specific income, expenses, debts, goals, tax situation, family context, and risk tolerance. For comprehensive financial planning, consult a fee-only fiduciary financial advisor (XY Planning Network has a directory of fee-only planners).

Related Tools

To track how your budget translates into long-term wealth, use the Net Worth Calculator. For projecting how the 20% savings compounds over time, the Compound Interest Calculator shows the long arc. For converting an annual salary to monthly take-home (the input to this calculator), see the Salary to Hourly tool.