How to Avoid Lifestyle Creep

Palm tree from a trip to New Orleans

New Orleans, US

Lifestyle creep is a more palatable way of saying as your income increases, so do your expenses. To build long-term wealth and save for shorter term, but just as important, goals you want to do the opposite: Increase your income regularly, and keep your expenses as low as possible. How I do this is by keeping my spending the same as before the raise or picking up a side hustle(with some exceptions*).

Here’s how I avoid lifestyle creep

  1. Putting the extra money out of sight: a separate, an online only bank account is my personal favorite. Since it takes a few days to transfer funds from my Varo account to my main account, I just leave my card at home and don’t have the details saved anywhere, so if I want to spend the “extra” money, it’s a hassle, which works as a pretty good deterrent.

  2. Having a specific dollar goal for the income increase: Are you saving for a house(I am… slowly)? An international trip? Do your want to pay down a big chunk of some debt? Earmark the money so it’s not rolled into your day to day budget.

  3. Reviewing my budget: The beginning of a new quarter is the perfect time to analyze spending habits for the last 60-90 using your bank and credit card’s spending reports. Seeing if and where expenses can be reduced and/or money can be shifted to new priorities helps so much in ensuring that my income increase remains earmarked for the goals I set for it.

As I get further into my late twenties, and get closer to moving into my dream career field, I know that a large income increase is forthcoming. I want to make sure when that happens my money habits are so ingrained that if I'm making $75,000 or $225,000, my expenses remain more or less the same, so I can focus on building lasting wealth for myself and my family. Avoiding lifestyle creep is one of the most effective ways to do that, in my opinion.

*Why with exceptions: I don’t think life is very fun if you’re only earning and saving. In line with my personal money philosophy, I think it's important to spend on planned experiences that make bring joy and fulfillment… as long a you budget for it. So take that international trip, skydive, ride the hot air balloon, get the new tattoo… maybe just don’t do all these things in a six month span.

Three Easy Steps to Effective Budgeting

Tracking these three things monthly takes about thirty minutes of my month, but sets me up for success and has bolstered my savings account more in the two years I’ve been using the method than the past four years of my working history.

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