Family Finances: a Vintage Budgeting Method is Back

Family Finances: a Vintage Budgeting Method is Back
Chung I Ho/The Epoch Times
Tribune News Service
Updated:
By Lisa Gerstner From Kiplinger’s Personal Finance

In a video from TikTok account AbundantGains, a woman separates cash from her paycheck into clear plastic envelopes with labels: $40 for Black Friday shopping, $50 toward getting a tattoo, $355 to save for a future home purchase, $215 for a vacation. There’s something satisfying and soothing about watching her neatly tuck away the bills.

With more than 11 million views, the video resonates—and it’s one of many on TikTok about “cash stuffing,” a budgeting method that relies on dividing physical cash into spending and saving categories.

While millennials and Generation Z have made cash stuffing a viral trend on social media, it’s hardly a new concept. Budgeters have long used the strategy—also known as the envelope method—to set hard limits on their spending.

It has staying power because it works. “Watching your paper money disappear before your very eyes has a much greater mental impact versus swiping a credit or debit card,” says Rockie Zeigler, a certified financial planner in Peoria, Illinois. “It can greatly increase your chances of keeping on a budget.”

If you struggle to keep your spending in check or are working on a savings or debt-payoff goal, cash stuffing is one way to get on track. And if you view it as a game, it can even be fun, says Curtis Crossland, a CFP in Scottsdale, Arizona, who has used the method himself.

For example, if you have money left over in an envelope for a spending category at the end of a budgeting period, you get to decide whether to leave it there for the next period or move it elsewhere. “Purposely underspending in a category meant I could plan on something that wasn’t previously in the budget, and I started looking forward to ‘earning’ that thing,” says Crossland.

But cash stuffing has its share of drawbacks. Paying with cash isn’t always feasible or practical—you may not be able to pay your wireless or utility bills with cash, for example. If your cash is lost or stolen, you likely won’t get it back. (You can replace a lost credit or debit card, and you have legal protections that limit your liability for stolen funds.)

Cash that sits in envelopes won’t earn interest, which hurts a little more right now as interest rates rise. And if you don’t use a credit card, you miss out on opportunities to earn cash back or points on your purchases and to build a credit history.

If you’re interested in cash stuffing but you don’t want to shift to it entirely, consider a hybrid approach. For example, you could put cash in envelopes for your discretionary budget categories and set up online savings accounts for your savings goals. Arrange automatic transfers to the accounts from each paycheck before you have a chance to spend the money. If you’d rather use a budgeting app, try one that encourages you to dig into the details.

(Lisa Gerstner is a contributing editor at Kiplinger’s Personal Finance magazine. For more on this and similar money topics, visit Kiplinger.com.)

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