Track your spending habits with a money-management app

Money management is probably at the forefront of your mind. While everyone should have a long-term plan for their investments, yours will do you no good if you aren't also watching your money on a day-to-day basis. You should have a monthly budget, spending categories with soft and hard caps, and a system to keep track of it all and rein in your spending. If you don't have responsible spending habits, you don't have responsible saving habits; it's that simple. There are a multitude of technologies that can help you pay attention to your spending budgets. These include money-management apps on your mobile phone or banking websites that let you categorize your expenditures for easier totaling, among other things. For most of us, keeping a close eye on our spending is all it takes to make more responsible money decisions. When you have to notice every dollar as it comes in and goes out, the awareness of your accounts creates its own incentive to spend carefully. It's the same principle behind calorie counting: Even if you don't adopt any special diet, having all the information in front of you - and the awareness of how many minutes of exercise it takes to balance out that one candy bar - will tug you gently in the direction of prudent decision-making. Here are a few of our few favorite daily money-management hacks. EveryDollar Financial guru Dave Ramsey has plugged this iPhone app (there is not yet an Android version). It's simple, yet elegant and effective. After installing it, you create a monthly budget on the app's corresponding website. You link it to your various credit, debit, savings and investment accounts, and the app tracks your expenditures proportionate to your budgets. When you spend money in a category, the app shows you how much you have left to spend for the month. For one-time or annual expenditures, EveryDollar has you create a Fund that's paid into every month and then zeroes out when the expenditure is made. The basic version of EveryDollar is free. If you get the premium version of the app, you can drag and drop transactions from your bank to one of your budgets, making it easier to ensure that every expenditure is properly accounted for. Mint Another budgeting and money-management app, Mint (available on iOS and Android) has the same basic functionality. You create monthly budgets in several different areas, taking up a portion of your monthly projected income. You can then set goals with the remaining funds. An example goal might be "Pay off credit card" or "Save for vacation." Most of the differences between this app and EveryDollar are cosmetic. Assigning categories to credit or debit card transactions in Mint is a little more tedious. Instead of dragging and dropping from transaction to budget, you have to scroll down a submenu, for example. Then again, this is a premium feature on EveryDollar, so it comes at a price of $99 yearly. Mint is free for all users, although the app does offer "advice" in the form of advertisements for credit cards and other financial solutions. These are customized to your spending and saving habits, which could make some users leery of just how much financial data they are sharing with the manufacturer. You have to set up each of your monthly budgets yourself, but there is a dropdown menu's worth of spending options to choose from, so this isn't too onerous. Mint has additional features such as spending reports, divided by category (into a pie chart) or by month (in a bar graph). If one of the spending categories looks suspicious, you can easily navigate to the list of transactions to make sure they all belong there, and have a clear sense of where your money is going. Even if you don't change a penny of your spending habits, being able to view and justify every dollar will have you feeling good about your decisions instead of wondering why your wallet is always empty. Mint's main screen is a snapshot that shows every connected account balance and a summary of those accounts. (You can get this in EveryDollar as well, but it requires paying for the Plus version.) One-time or annual expenditures are also a little trickier to manage on Mint, but there are workarounds that can make them feasible. At free, it's a bargain at twice the price. Know Thyself and Save Whatever money-management app you decide to use, the automatic transaction tracking will make it easy to keep track of your budget and find corners to cut. When you do, make sure to turn those extra discretionary funds into progressive investments, to make your retirement richer - and possibly sooner! ----- Reid Abedeen is a partner at Safeguard Investment Advisory Group, LLC (www.safeguardinvestment.com). As an investment advisor, Abedeen has helped retirees for nearly two decades with issues such as insurance, long-term care planning, financial services, asset protection and many other areas. He holds California Life-Only and Accident and Health licenses (#0C78700), and holds a Series 65 license, and is registered through the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA). Abedeen is a family man who owes much of his fulfillment in life to his wife, Smyrna, and his three children, Yusef, Leena and Adam. Published: Fri, May 01, 2015