The simplest budget method for most 20-somethings is usually pay-yourself-first, because it requires the fewest categories and the least day-to-day tracking. You pick a realistic savings target (like $25, $50, or 10% per paycheck), automate it to a separate account, and then pay bills and spend the rest without obsessing over every line item. It’s especially helpful when your income is variable, your schedule is busy, or you’re just getting started and want something you’ll actually stick with.
That said, “simplest” depends on what trips you up:
A practical approach is to start with pay-yourself-first for 30 days. If you keep dipping into savings or regularly run short before payday, switch to zero-based budgeting for a few months to pinpoint leaks. For a deeper comparison and examples, read the full guide here: https://etellium.com/blog/what-s-the-simplest-budget-method-for-somethings-zero-based-or-pay-yourself-first/.
Base your budget on your lowest predictable monthly income, automate a small pay-yourself-first transfer, and treat higher-income months as a chance to catch up on savings, debt, and upcoming expenses. Keep a buffer category so irregular pay doesn’t force you to use credit.
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