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  1. Plenty of tutorials for setting up a simple budget spreadsheet. If it’s for personal budgeting, and you’re not opposed to premade, I highly recommended checking out this post from r/personalfinance from about 2 years ago: I made a spreadsheet for people who don’t know how to budget v2.0.

  2. - on the first sheet ("Budget"), you can set your monthly budget by specifying your salary and the percentage of each of the categories (Living expenses, Extra and Savings) - duplicate the sheet "MonthTemplate" for each month. - here you can add expenses to each of the category.

  3. you can use iSave, it is free and you don't need a google sheet: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.idev.isave

  4. Discouraged, I decided to try creating a budgeting tool in Sheets with the end goal making something powerful and easy to use (features I thought existing templates severely lacked). Over time, I ended up creating a spreadsheet and making it available for others to download and use ( AspireBudget.com ).

  5. I use google sheets for my budgeting. A new workbook for each year, each account has its own tab with all transactions, and then additional tabs with totals, summaries and graphs. Anytime I think of a new feature I've just added it over the years.

  6. About a year and a half ago, I started an experiment to see just how hard it would be to make a comprehensive budgeting spreadsheet. Something that felt and acted like a real web-app, but didn’t have all the complicated bits around development, hosting, logins, etc.

  7. So for the past three years I've been making a budgeting spreadsheet for those who don't know how to budget. It started out of my own need for financial literacy and needing a budget desperately. Here's a link to what this years sheet looks like

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