Budgeting
Starting your Budget
The first step in managing your money is knowing what’s coming in (and from where) and where it’s going out – and making sure the "in" exceeds the "out" so you have enough for your needs, and can save and invest for your future.
- Income
 - Expenses
	
- Fixed Expenses
 - Variable Expenses
 
 - Difference between the two: Surplus or Deficit
 
- Savings
 - Registered Investments (RRSPs, TFSAs, or LIRAs)
 - Salary, Part-time Earnings, Tips
 - GST/Income Tax Refunds
 - Stipends from Assistantships
 - Student Loan
 - Family Support
 - Scholarships/Awards
 
- Housing
 - Car payments
 - Loan payments
 - Insurance (car, home, travel, etc.)
 - Utilities (electric, gas, water)
 - Telecommunications (cable, internet, telephone, cell phone, long distance, voice and data roaming charges)
 - Childcare
 
- Education (post-secondary tuition, books, fees, etc.)
 - Groceries
 - Eating out
 - Household expenses (cleaning, maintenance, furniture)
 - Computer (hardware, software, accessories, supplies)
 - Pets
 - Transportation (transit, gas, car maintenance, etc.)
 - Health care (Medical Services Plan, dental, glasses/lenses, medication)
 - Clothing and footwear
 - Personal care (toiletries, hair care, make-up, laundry)
 - Recreation (movies, games, VD/videos, clubs, concerts, sports, etc.)
 - Travel
 - Gifts and charitable donations
 
- Need: a necessity, something required, something essential for life
 - Want: a desire, something wished for, something non-essential
 - Priority: something that you have to do first because it is more important than other things
	
- 1 = items that are essential for healthy living
 - 2 = items that are not essential but are important
 - 3 = items that are not essential and not important
 
 - Balance your needs and wants
 - Awareness of personal factors like emotions, habits and behaviours can help control your spending
 
Reference: Financial Basics and Your Financial Toolkit from FCAC
Download one of these budgeting worksheets to help start your budget:
Budgeting Worksheet by the Credit Counselling Society of Canada 
Budgeting Worksheet by the Ontario Securities Commission
Links for more budgeting tips and information:
Budget Calculator from the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada
Cost Estimator for First-Year Undergraduate Students 
Tip Sheet: Making a budget and sticking to it
Track your expenses with one of these banking apps:
Track Your Expenses with TD MySpend App 
Track your Expenses with RBC my Finance Tracker