Easy Guidelines for Automating Finances

Automating finances is one of the smartest money moves you can make. Here are a few easy ways to get started.
Ideas, resources, and templates to help you manage your money, including tracking spending, budgeting, saving money, debt payoff, and increasing your net worth.
Automating finances is one of the smartest money moves you can make. Here are a few easy ways to get started.
If you earn money that doesn’t have taxes withheld when you’re paid, you’ll probably have to pay quarterly estimated taxes to the IRS (and most likely to your state’s department of revenue) in 2019.
Here's a simple Google Spreadsheet of the new 2019 tax brackets announced by the IRS.
When we attend to our short-term financial goals, we’re infinitely more likely to achieve bigger, bolder long-term goals.
Whether you’re new to budgeting or have been doing it for years, these three quick steps will guide your budgeting program toward success.
We’re all somewhat hardwired to want more, more, more even when we have enough or even more than enough.
Auto-categories are useful in many finance apps and tools (including Tiller-powered Google Sheet templates) but there are several benefits to manually categorizing transactions.
See the Google Sheets and Tiller-based spending tracker and budget reports designed by Google Sheets expert and data scientist Ben Collins.
In 2020, one job just isn’t enough. Everyone seems to have an extra source of income, whether it’s driving for Uber, selling crafts on Etsy or performing small jobs on TaskRabbit. It’s the age of the side hustle. But unlike…
A thoughtful independent comparison and review of Tiller Money vs Mint from the Financial Independence forum on Reddit.
You only need to know a few Google Sheets formulas for budgeting and personal finance to transform your spreadsheets into the ultimate tool for managing money.
Traditionally, the envelope method involves making categories for all your expenses, writing those categories on a bunch of envelopes, then putting a set amount of cash inside each envelope each paycheck. You only spend from those envelopes. When you take money out for expenses, you can see exactly how much is left.