Section 1 of 7

General Principles of Financial Planning

This is your foundation. Before investing, tax strategy, or retirement planning, these building blocks determine how solid everything else will be. Work through each tool below at your own pace, your entries are saved automatically so you can return anytime.

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Net Worth Tracker

Your real financial scoreboard, assets minus liabilities.

Income is how fast you're running. Net worth is how far you've actually gone. Enter everything you own and everything you owe. This is your starting point, the goal is simply to make it trend upward over time.

Assets (What You Own)
Liabilities (What You Owe)
Net Worth Summary
AssetCurrent Value
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Total Assets$0
LiabilityBalance Owed
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Total Liabilities$0
$0
Total Assets
$0
Total Liabilities
Your Net Worth
$0
Enter your assets and liabilities to see your net worth.
Remember: Your net worth today is just a starting point. What matters is that it trends upward. Track it once a month, even modest progress feels motivating when you can see it moving.
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Watch the Tutorial
Build Your Own Free Net Worth Tracker in 2026 โ†—
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Emergency Fund Calculator

Find your target and your timeline to get there.

An emergency fund isn't optional, it's the thing that keeps a rough month from unraveling everything you've built. Enter only your essential expenses: the things you absolutely must pay no matter what happens.

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$0
Monthly Essentials
$0
Target Amount
$0
Remaining to Save
Not yet set
Months to Goal
0% funded
Where to keep it: A high-yield savings account (HYSA) at an online bank is the right home. It stays separate from your everyday spending so you're not tempted to use it, earns a competitive rate, and is accessible within 1โ€“3 business days when you actually need it.
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Cash Flow & Budget Planner

See exactly where your money goes, and where it should.

A budget isn't a restriction, it's giving every dollar a job before the month begins. The 50/30/20 framework (50% needs, 30% wants, 20% savings) is shown as a reference point, but your actual plan should fit your real life and real goals.

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Needs & Fixed Expenses
ExpenseMonthly Amount
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Wants & Variable Expenses
ExpenseMonthly Amount
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Savings & Investments
Savings GoalMonthly Amount
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$0
Total Income
$0
Needs
$0
Wants
$0
Savings
Leftover / Unallocated
$0
Enter your income to see what's left after your plan.
50/30/20 Comparison
The 50/30/20 rule is a starting-point guideline, not a rigid rule. Someone with heavy student loans may run 60% needs. Someone aggressively saving may run 30% savings. Use this for awareness, not judgment.
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Rent vs. Buy Calculator

Find your true breakeven point โ€” when buying actually beats renting.

Rent vs. buy is one of the most emotionally charged financial decisions young adults face. This calculator goes beyond the mortgage payment to account for opportunity costs, equity building, taxes, and inflation โ€” giving you a real apples-to-apples comparison over time.

๐Ÿ˜๏ธ Renting
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๐Ÿก Buying
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Show Optionsโ–ผ
๐Ÿ“‹ Additional Info
%
Show Optionsโ–ผ
๐Ÿ“… How long do you plan to stay?
years
Calculating...
Rent Buy You are here Break even
Total costs after 3 years โ–ผ
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Watch the Tutorial
Rent vs. Buy: Here's What the Numbers Say โ†—
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Listen to the Podcast Episode
Rent vs. Buy: How to Make the Right Call for Your Life - 25 โ†—
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Debt Payoff Planner

Avalanche vs. Snowball, model both strategies side by side.

Avalanche, pay off the highest interest rate first. Saves the most money mathematically. Snowball, pay off the smallest balance first. Builds momentum and motivation faster. Enter your debts below and any extra monthly payment you can make beyond the minimums.

Decision rule: If your interest rate is above ~7%, pay it down aggressively before investing beyond your match. Below ~4%, investing likely wins long-term. The 4โ€“7% zone is a judgment call, your comfort level with carrying debt matters here.
Debt NameBalanceInterest RateMin. Payment
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$ % $
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Credit Score Breakdown

Understand exactly what builds and hurts your score.

Your FICO credit score affects your ability to get a mortgage, car loan, and in some cases even a job. Here's exactly what goes into it, and what you can actually do about each factor.

35%
Payment History
The biggest single factor. One missed payment can drop your score significantly. Set up autopay on every account, at minimum for the minimum payment.
30%
Credit Utilization
How much of your available credit you're using. Keep it under 30%, under 10% is ideal. Paying balances in full each month keeps this in check automatically.
15%
Length of History
Older accounts help. Don't close your oldest credit card even if you don't use it often. Time is your ally here, just keep accounts in good standing.
10%
Credit Mix
Having both revolving accounts (credit cards) and installment loans (student/car loans) signals that you can manage different types of credit responsibly.
10%
New Inquiries
Each hard credit check (applying for a new card or loan) slightly lowers your score for up to 2 years. Limit applications, especially before a major purchase like a home.
Where do you stand?
Enter your score above
Your Credit Action Plan
Click each item to check it off as you complete it โ€” your progress saves automatically.
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Set up autopay on all accounts (at least the minimum payment)
Protects your 35%, a single missed payment can drop your score 60โ€“110 points
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Pay down credit card balances to under 30% of your limit
Directly improves your 30%, can raise your score significantly within one billing cycle
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Keep your oldest credit card open, even if rarely used
Preserves your 15%, closing it shortens your average account age immediately
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Pull your free credit report at AnnualCreditReport.com
One free report per bureau per year, errors are more common than you'd think and fixing them can help your score
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Avoid applying for new credit in the 6โ€“12 months before a mortgage
Hard inquiries stay on your report for 2 years, timing matters when you need the best rate on a home loan
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If building credit from zero: consider a secured credit card
You put down a deposit that becomes your credit limit, low risk way to establish a credit history when you have none
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Freeze your credit until you plan to apply for more
You can freeze your credit for free with each of the bureaus. Do this to protect yourself. Remember, it's free, so don't pay for any service to 'lock' your credit. Simply freeze it.
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Sinking Funds Planner

Turn "unexpected" expenses into planned ones, and never be surprised again.

A sinking fund is money you save a little at a time for a known future expense: a car repair, a vacation, holiday gifts, a new laptop. When the expense arrives, the money is already sitting there. No stress. No debt. No disruption to your other goals.

No sinking funds added yet. Create your first goal below.

Add a Sinking Fund Goal
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Automation Checklist

Systems beat willpower every time. Set it up once and let it run.

Taxes are automatic because if you had to manually pay them each month, most people wouldn't. Apply the same logic to saving and investing. Automate it so the money moves before you have a chance to spend it. Check off each automation as you set it up.

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401(k) contribution auto-deducted from every paycheck
Set your contribution percentage in your HR portal, the money leaves before you ever see it
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Automatic transfer to Roth IRA on payday
Schedule a recurring transfer to your IRA provider on the same day you get paid, monthly or per paycheck
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Automatic transfer to Emergency Fund / HYSA
Until your emergency fund is fully funded, automate a fixed amount every payday, even $50 compounds fast
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Credit card autopay set to full statement balance
Never pay interest, never miss a payment. Full balance, not just the minimum, the minimum is a trap
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Sinking fund transfers on payday
Route the right amount to each sinking fund goal the moment your paycheck arrives, before it gets spent
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Monthly money review on the calendar (30 minutes)
One calendar block per month: confirm transfers went through, update net worth, review budget. That's all it takes to stay on track
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Investments are actually invested (not sitting as cash)
Confirm your Roth IRA and 401(k) money is invested in index funds, not just deposited and sitting idle in cash
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Annual contribution increase when you get a raise
When you get a raise, increase your Roth IRA and 401(k) contribution by at least half of that raise, you'll never miss what you never had