What should my weekly budget be?
<div class="user-question">What should a weekly budget look like? I have car loans & student loans as well. Trying to save up my emergency fund.</div>
If your paycheck feels gone before it even hits your account, welcome.
The good news is this: your weekly budget does not need to be complicated to work. It just needs to be honest.
And honestly? Weekly budgeting can be a lot easier than monthly budgeting when you are juggling debt and trying to save at the same time. It gives you a smaller number to manage, helps you reset faster, and makes it way less likely that you blow through your spending early.
Start with the bills that are an absolute must
Before you decide what you can spend in a week, you need to know what is already spoken for. That means:
- rent
- utilities
- car payment
- minimum student loan payment
- insurance
- phone
- groceries
- any other recurring essentials
<div class="frich-tip">Frich tip: Student loan refinancing platforms like this one help you see if you might be overpaying for your student loans. It takes only 2 minutes to check!</div>
Turn your month into a weekly number
This is where people tend to make budgeting harder than it needs to be.
Once you know what is left after bills, debt, and savings, divide that number by 4. That is your weekly spending target. For example:
- You make 68K annually, that's roughly 4K a month after taxes
- Calculate bills + minimum debt payments + savings goal
- Assume that adds up to 3K. This leaves you with 1K
- Divide that by 4 and your weekly budget is $250
- That $250 is what you have for gas, eating out, errands, and whatever little chaos the week decides to bring.
<div class="frich-tip">Frich tip: Platforms like these can also help you save each month on better and cheaper car insurance. You might be overpaying without knowing!</div>
Your emergency fund does not need to be dramatic
A lot of people think saving only “counts” if they are moving big chunks of money into their savings accounts. You have to shift that mindset. Saving counts if it's consistent.
If all you can do right now is $5 or $10 a week, great. Start there. Your emergency fund is supposed to help protect you from the stuff that always seems to show up at the worst time - a random copay, a car repair, an “are you kidding me” expense.
Just stop treating savings like the thing that happens only if you are unusually disciplined and nothing goes wrong. It needs to happen consistently.
<div class="frich-tip">Frich tip: Always keep your emergency fund in a HYSA. The interest these accounts pay really adds up! Here are our favorites.</div>
Btw - you are not behind
A lot of people are trying to do this same balancing act as you are. In the Federal Reserve’s latest household financial well-being survey, only 63% of adults said they could cover a $400 emergency expense, and only 55% said they had set aside at least three months of emergency savings.
So if it feels hard to manage debt, regular life, and savings at the same time, know you're not the only one.
Stop waiting to save “whatever is left”
This is where a lot of budgets fall apart. People pay bills, spend what they spend, and then hope there is something left to save. Usually there's nothing.
Try flipping that. Pick your emergency fund amount first, even if it is small, and treat it like one more bill. Then build your weekly number around what is left.
The goal isn't perfection
If you have debt and you are trying to save at the same time, your money may feel tight right now. That does not mean you are bad at money.
A weekly budget helps because it makes the whole thing feel less overwhelming. It gives you smaller decisions, faster resets, and a clearer sense of what you can actually afford without wrecking your progress.
Found this valuable? Here are some more deep dives from the Frich team 🤝
✅ Your guide to negotiating bills
✅ Rent affordability calculator
✅ Car affordability calculator
Danielle

