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Summary
The 50/30/20 rule is a simple budgeting guideline that divides your after-tax income into three categories: 50% for needs, 30% for wants, and 20% for savings. It was popularised by U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren and her daughter Amelia Warren Tyagi in their 2005 book All Your Worth: The Ultimate Lifetime Money Plan. The rule has since been adopted worldwide — including by UK banks such as HSBC and Halifax — as a straightforward starting point for personal budgeting.
How it works
After receiving your monthly take-home pay (i.e. after income tax, National Insurance, and any pension deductions), allocate your spending as follows:
Needs — 50%
Essential expenses you cannot avoid. These are the bills that must be paid regardless of lifestyle choices:
- Rent or mortgage payments
- Council tax and utility bills (electricity, gas, water)
- Groceries (basic food, not dining out)
- Transport to work (commute costs, fuel, bus/train fare)
- Insurance (home, car, health)
- Minimum debt repayments (credit cards, loans)
- Childcare
Wants — 30%
Discretionary spending on things you enjoy but could live without:
- Dining out and takeaways
- Entertainment (streaming, cinema, concerts)
- Shopping (clothing, gadgets, non-essential items)
- Holidays and travel
- Gym membership and hobbies
- Subscriptions beyond essentials
Savings — 20%
Money set aside for your financial future:
- Emergency fund (typically 3–6 months of expenses)
- Pension contributions (beyond employer minimum)
- ISA or investment account contributions
- Debt repayment above minimum payments
- Saving for specific goals (house deposit, car, wedding)
The formula
Where
Worked example
Monthly take-home pay: £2,500
Needs (50%)
= £1,250/mo
Wants (30%)
= £750/mo
Savings (20%)
= £500/mo
Result
Total = £1,250 + £750 + £500 = £2,500 (100% allocated)
Inputs explained
- Monthly take-home pay — your income after all deductions (tax, NI, pension). This is the number that lands in your bank account each month.
- Needs / Wants / Savings percentages — the calculator defaults to 50/30/20 but allows you to adjust the split. The three percentages must always sum to 100%.
Outputs explained
- Monthly amounts — how much to allocate to each category per month
- Annual amounts — the monthly figure multiplied by 12, useful for annual planning
- Visual bar — a proportional bar chart showing the relative size of each category
Assumptions & limitations
- The rule is a guideline, not a prescription. In high-cost areas (e.g. London), needs may exceed 50% — the rule still helps by making the overshoot visible so you can plan adjustments.
- The rule applies to after-tax income, not gross salary. If you’re not sure of your take-home pay, use a salary calculator first.
- Minimum debt repayments are classified as needs (they’re non-optional). Extra debt repayment above the minimum goes under savings.
- The rule does not distinguish between good debt (mortgage, student loan) and bad debt (credit cards) — both minimums are needs.
- Percentages can be customised. Common variations include 60/20/20 (tight budget), 70/20/10 (survival), and 40/20/40 (aggressive savings).
Verification
| Test case | Monthly income | Needs (50%) | Wants (30%) | Savings (20%) | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HSBC worked example | £1,500 | £750 | £450 | £300 | HSBC UK |
| Halifax example | £1,800 | £900 | £540 | £360 | Halifax |
| Standard test | £3,000 | £1,500 | £900 | £600 | Manual calculation |
Sources
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