60/10/30 budget for $6,000 income

Enter your paycheck and see exactly where your money should go.

$
Needs (60%)
Committed expenses
$3,600
Savings (10%)
Emergency fund, retirement
$600
Wants (30%)
Everything else
$1,800

If your income is $6,000, the 60/10/30 rule means $3,600 for needs, $600 for savings, $1,800 for wants.

With this income level, you have room for lifestyle spending while still saving meaningfully. Consider splitting your savings between an emergency fund and investments.

Next time you get paid

Will you remember this split? Will you actually move the money? Most people do the math once and never follow through.

Wealthsplitter shows you where every dollar goes, every time you get paid. Enter your income and you're done.

I built this for myself. I've been using it for over 2 years.

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30-day free trial, then $39 USD/year
(works out to only $3.25/month)

What is the 60/10/30 rule?

The 60/10/30 budget is a percentage-based approach to managing your money.

It divides your after-tax income into three categories:

  • 60% for needs: Committed expenses.
  • 10% for savings: Emergency fund, retirement.
  • 30% for wants: Everything else.

It's a starting point. Adjust the percentages to fit your situation. The important thing is having a system.

Frequently asked questions

What if my income changes month to month?

The 60/10/30 rule works especially well for freelancers, contractors, and anyone whose income varies. You just apply the percentages to whatever you earned. If you make $3,000 one month and $7,000 the next, the split adjusts automatically.

Is the 60/10/30 rule right for everyone?

It's a starting point, not a rigid formula. If you live in an expensive city, you might need different percentages. If you're paying down debt, you might allocate more toward savings. The key is having a system you actually stick to.

Should I use the 60/10/30 rule for gross or net income?

Use your after-tax (net) income: the amount that actually hits your bank account. If you budget based on gross income, you'll overestimate what you have to work with.

What if I can't hit these percentages?

That's normal, especially if you're in a high cost-of-living area or paying down debt. The percentages are a starting point, not a pass/fail test. Adjust them to fit your situation. Even a rough split is better than no system at all.

Is Wealthsplitter free to try?

Yes. 30-day free trial, no credit card required. After that, $39 USD/year ($3.25/month).

No credit card required

30-day free trial, then $39 USD/year
(works out to only $3.25/month)

Related reading

No credit card required

30-day free trial, then $39 USD/year
(works out to only $3.25/month)