Fun Money — Allow Yourself to Breathe and Take in the View

In January, we built our basecamp. We mapped out the year, set our financial intentions, and committed to the climb. In February, we focused on building our safety net — the cash reserves that catch us when life, as it always does, throws something unexpected in our path.

But here’s something every experienced climber knows that the guidebooks don’t always tell you. The mountain will break you if you never stop to breathe. If you put your head down and grind every single day without a moment to look up and take in the view, you won’t make it to the top. Not because the mountain beat you, but because you forgot why you started climbing in the first place.

That’s what this week is about. Fun Money.

Why Fun Money Is Not Optional

I want to be direct with you. Fun Money is not a reward for when you’ve “made it.” It’s not something you allow yourself after you’ve checked every financial box. Fun Money is a required line item in your budget — as essential as your rent, your groceries, and your emergency fund.

Here’s why. One of the most common reasons people abandon their financial climb isn’t because they lack discipline or intelligence. It’s because the journey feels like punishment. Every dollar is accounted for, every purchase is scrutinized, every impulse is denied. That works for about three weeks before human nature wins and the budget gets thrown out the window entirely.

The most successful financial plans I’ve ever seen — and after nearly three decades of living, studying, and advising on personal finance, I’ve seen a lot of them — are the ones that build enjoyment into the system from the beginning. Not as an afterthought. Not as a cheat day. As a planned, intentional, guilt-free category in the budget.

At Monthly Money, we’re not just about reaching the top. We’re about enjoying the climb. Because what’s the point of summiting a mountain you hated every step of?

Where This Idea Comes From

I’ll be honest with you about something personal. I grew up in a home where money was a constant source of tension. I watched my parents argue about finances more times than I can count, and eventually that financial stress contributed to their divorce. I was eleven years old when our family split apart, and I made a promise to myself that day — I would learn everything I could about money so I would never feel that powerless again.

But I also made a quieter promise. That when I built my own family, money would not be the thing that tore us apart.

My wife and I have been together for a long time, and I won’t pretend we’ve never had financial disagreements. Every couple does. But one of the systems that has genuinely protected our marriage — not just our budget — is Fun Money. We built it into our financial plan from the beginning, and it has diffused more potential arguments than I can count.

How the System Actually Works

Here’s the practical framework my wife and I use, and that I recommend as a starting point for any couple.

We set aside 3% of our combined net income — that’s take home pay after taxes — every single month. That 3% gets split in half. Half goes into her individual savings account. Half goes into mine. It happens automatically through a scheduled transfer so we never have to think about it or negotiate it in the moment.

That money is earmarked for one purpose only — to spend on whatever each of us finds meaningful, no questions asked and no justification required. If she wants to buy a piece of art for the living room or a pair of earrings I’d never understand the appeal of, that comes from her Fun Money. If I want to book a fly fishing trip or a river rafting adventure, that comes from mine. We don’t debate it. We don’t negotiate it. We simply say “it’s Fun Money” and move on.

I cannot overstate how many arguments that three word phrase has ended before they ever started.

Now, 3% is a baseline and a starting point — not a rule carved in stone. The best percentage is the one that two spouses can genuinely agree on and actually afford. If 3% of your net income works out to $100 a month, that’s $50 each. That might not sound like much, but here’s the beauty of the system — you don’t have to spend it every month.

I am a natural saver. There have been stretches of six months or more where I didn’t touch my Fun Money account at all, just letting it accumulate quietly while I focused on other things. And then one day I’d look at that balance and book something that genuinely filled my soul — a day of fly fishing in a mountain river, a challenging hiking expedition, an outdoor experience that reminded me why I work as hard as I do. I don’t place much value on material possessions. What I value is experience, adventure, and time in the wild. My Fun Money account makes that possible without a single dollar coming out of our family budget or a single conversation that starts with “do we really need to spend money on that?”

My wife has her version of that same freedom. And because we both have it, we’ve never had to fight over it.

Tony fly fishing in a mountain river enjoying his Fun Money outdoor adventure
This is my Fun Money in action — a trip to a mountain river that I saved up for month by month. Worth every penny.

What This Looks Like in Your Budget

If you’re single, Fun Money still belongs in your budget — it just looks a little different. It’s the category that gives you permission to spend on what brings you joy without derailing everything else you’re building. It’s the concert ticket, the weekend trip, the dinner out with friends that doesn’t send you into a guilt spiral afterward.

The Monthly Money Method is built around capturing the difference between what comes in and what goes out, then deploying that difference strategically. Fun Money is a strategic deployment. It’s not waste. It’s not weakness. It’s the investment you make in your own sustainability as a person who is playing a very long financial game.

The climbers who make it to the top are not the ones who never rest. They’re the ones who know when to rest, how long to rest, and how to use those moments to come back stronger for the next section of the climb.

Your Assignment This Month

Look at your current budget and find Fun Money. If it’s not there, add it. Start with 3% of your monthly net income and divide it equally if you have a spouse or partner. Set up an automatic transfer to a separate savings account on the same day every month — payday works well. Name the account something that makes you smile. And then give yourself genuine permission to spend it on whatever matters most to you, without guilt and without explanation.

The climb is long. The view along the way is part of the reward.

See you at the top.

Your 2026 Financial Map: A 12-Month Ascent to Success

Welcome, Ascenders!

It’s the first Friday of January, and you know what that means—a fresh start, a new summit to reach, and 12 full months stretched out before us like a well-marked trail.

But here’s the thing about mountains: nobody climbs them in a single leap. You ascend one step at a time, one month at a time. And that’s exactly what we’re going to do together this year.

Today, I’m giving you something powerful: Your 2026 Financial Map. This isn’t some complicated 47-page financial plan that requires a PhD to understand. This is your trail map—simple, clear, and designed for real people with real lives.

Let’s chart your journey.


Before You Start: Understanding Your Starting Point

You can’t plan a climb without knowing where you’re starting from. Grab a piece of paper (or open a notes app) and answer these three questions:

1. What’s in your pack right now?

  • How much money do you have today? (Checking, savings, investments—all of it)
  • What debts are you carrying? (Credit cards, student loans, car payments, mortgage)
  • What’s your monthly income after taxes?

2. What’s your current trail condition?

  • Do you have an emergency fund? (Even $500 counts as a start)
  • Are you living paycheck to paycheck, or do you have breathing room?
  • Do you know where your money goes each month?

3. What summit are you trying to reach?

  • What does financial success look like for YOU this year?
  • Is it paying off a credit card? Building a 6-month emergency fund? Saving for a down payment?
  • Be honest. This is YOUR mountain, not anyone else’s.

Write these down. Seriously. We’ll need them as waypoints throughout our journey.


Your 12-Month Map: The Monthly Money Method

Here’s how we’re going to break down your 2026 financial goals—one month at a time, the way real progress happens.

JANUARY: Set Your Basecamp

Your Mission: Get brutally honest about where you are.

  • Track everything you spend for the entire month. Every coffee, every subscription, every impulse Target run. Use an app, use a notebook, use a spreadsheet—whatever works. You can’t navigate if you don’t know where your money actually goes.
  • Calculate your “Big Three” numbers:
    1. Monthly take-home income
    2. Total monthly expenses
    3. The difference (your surplus or deficit)
  • Choose ONE financial goal for 2026. Just one. Not ten. We’re ascending a mountain, not attempting Everest blindfolded. Pick the goal that will change your life the most.

Why This Matters: You can’t follow a trail map without knowing the terrain. January is about truth, not judgment.


FEBRUARY: Build Your Emergency Fund Foundation

Your Mission: Create (or strengthen) your financial safety net.

  • If you have no emergency fund: Aim to save $500 by the end of February. Cut one unnecessary expense, sell something you don’t need, pick up one extra shift. Just get to $500.
  • If you already have savings: Add one month’s worth of essential expenses to your emergency fund. Essential means rent, food, utilities—not Netflix.
  • Open a high-yield savings account (HYSA) if you don’t have one. These accounts earn 3-4% interest right now (as of early 2026) versus the 0.01% most regular savings accounts pay. That’s not jargon—that’s free money for doing nothing.

Why This Matters: Mountains are unpredictable. Your emergency fund is your safety rope. Before you climb higher, you need to know you won’t fall all the way to the bottom if you slip.


MARCH: Tackle Your Highest-Interest Debt (The Avalanche Method)

Your Mission: Start chipping away at the debt that’s costing you the most.

  • List all your debts by interest rate. Credit cards usually have the highest (15-25%), then car loans (4-8%), then student loans (4-7%), then mortgages (3-7%).
  • Make minimum payments on everything, but throw every extra dollar at the debt with the highest interest rate.
  • Set a target: Pay an extra $200-500 toward this debt in March. Adjust based on what you CAN do, not what sounds impressive.

Real Talk: Some people prefer the “snowball method” (paying off the smallest debt first for the psychological win). That’s fine. But mathematically, attacking high-interest debt first saves you the most money. Pick the method that will keep YOU moving up the trail.


APRIL: Audit Your Subscriptions and Recurring (Monthly)Expenses

Your Mission: Find the money hiding in plain sight.

  • List every single subscription: Streaming services, gym memberships, apps, wine clubs, subscription boxes, software—all of it.
  • Ask yourself the tough question: “Have I used this in the last 30 days? Does it actively improve my life?”
  • Cancel ruthlessly. Most of us are spending $200-500/month on subscriptions we barely remember signing up for.
  • Redirect what you save into your emergency fund or toward debt.

Why This Matters: These small monthly charges are like carrying unnecessary weight up a mountain. Every ounce matters when you’re climbing.


MAY: Increase Your Income (Add Crampons to Your Climb)

Your Mission: Find a way to bring in extra money.

  • Ask for a raise if you’re underpaid. Research what others in your position make. Write down your accomplishments. Schedule the conversation.
  • Start a side hustle that uses skills you already have. Freelance writing, tutoring, dog walking, selling stuff on Facebook Marketplace—it doesn’t have to be sexy, it just has to work.
  • Set a May target: Earn an extra $300-1000 this month from something OTHER than your main job.

Real Talk: Income is your climbing gear. The more you have, the faster you can ascend. Don’t be ashamed to hustle.


JUNE: Optimize Your Benefits (Don’t Leave Money on the Table)

Your Mission: Claim free money you’re already entitled to.

  • Review your employer benefits. Are you contributing enough to get the full 401(k) match? Are you using your HSA or FSA? Are you taking advantage of any employee discounts?
  • Check if you qualify for tax credits: Earned Income Tax Credit, Child Tax Credit, education credits. Use the IRS’s Interactive Tax Assistant online.
  • Adjust your tax withholding if you got a huge refund last year. That’s YOUR money you’re giving the government as an interest-free loan. Use the IRS W-4 calculator to keep more money in your paycheck now.

Why This Matters: This is found money. You’ve already earned it. Go get it.


JULY: Mid-Year Check-In (Are You Still on the Trail?)

Your Mission: Assess your progress and adjust your route.

  • Compare where you are now to where you were in January. Look at your numbers—savings, debt, spending. What’s changed?
  • Celebrate what’s working. Seriously. If you’ve saved even $500 or paid off even $1,000 in debt, that’s progress. Acknowledge it.
  • Adjust what’s not. If your plan isn’t working, don’t beat yourself up—adapt. Maybe your goal was too aggressive, or life threw you a curveball. Recalibrate and keep climbing.
  • Recommit to your ONE goal. We’re halfway through the year. Don’t get distracted by shiny new summits. Finish what you started.

AUGUST: Build a Buffer (Financial Breathing Room)

Your Mission: Live on last month’s income.

This is a game-changer. Instead of living paycheck to paycheck, you’re going to try to live on the money you earned LAST month. Here’s how:

  • If you have a surplus each month: Start banking one full paycheck. This takes 2-4 paychecks depending on how you’re paid.
  • If you’re barely breaking even: Save just $100-200 this month and gradually build toward a one-month buffer over the next several months.

Why This Matters: When you’re living on last month’s money, you stop the paycheck-to-paycheck cycle. Bills become predictable instead of stressful. This is what financial calm feels like.


SEPTEMBER: Invest in Your Financial Education

Your Mission: Learn something that will change your trajectory.

  • Read one personal finance book.
  • Take an online course on investing, budgeting, or retirement planning.
  • Learn about retirement accounts: What’s the difference between a Traditional IRA and a Roth IRA? What are index funds? How do employer 401(k) matches work? You don’t need a financial advisor to understand this stuff.

Why This Matters: Financial literacy is your map and compass. The more you know, the less vulnerable you are to bad advice, predatory fees, and your own fear.


OCTOBER: Automate Your Savings and Debt Payments

Your Mission: Make good financial behavior effortless.

  • Set up automatic transfers from checking to savings the day after your paycheck hits. Even $50-100 per paycheck adds up.
  • Automate extra debt payments. Most lenders let you set up recurring payments above the minimum.
  • Automate your bills so you never miss a payment and trash your credit score.

Why This Matters: Willpower is overrated. Automation removes the decision. You’re not relying on motivation—you’re relying on systems.


NOVEMBER: Plan for the Holidays WITHOUT Debt

Your Mission: Don’t sabotage 11 months of progress.

  • Set a realistic holiday budget for gifts, travel, and celebrations. Write it down.
  • Start a “Holiday Fund” if you don’t have one. Even $200-400 can keep you from putting everything on a credit card.
  • Get creative: Homemade gifts, Secret Santa instead of buying for everyone, experiences instead of things. Most people just want to feel loved, not buried in stuff.

Real Talk: The holidays are a trap. Don’t let Thanksgiving through New Year’s undo everything you’ve built. Remember: You’re an Ascender. You don’t fall for the same tricks twice.


DECEMBER: Reflect, Plan, and Set Next Year’s Summit

Your Mission: Close out 2026 strong and set up 2027.

  • Review your entire year. What worked? What didn’t? How much progress did you make on your ONE big goal?
  • Make year end strategic contributions and donations. Remember both the sprit of giving and reducing our tax liability.
  • Celebrate your wins. You climbed for 12 months straight. That deserves recognition.
  • Set your 2027 goal. Now that you’ve proven you can ascend one mountain, what’s next? A bigger emergency fund? Investing for the first time? Paying off your car? Dream bigger—you’ve earned it.
  • Share your story. If you’ve made progress this year, tell someone. Your success might inspire another Ascender to start their own climb.

The Three Rules of Ascending

As you follow this map through 2026, remember these three rules. They’re simple, but they’re everything:

Rule #1: Progress Over Perfection

You’re going to have a bad month. You’ll overspend, or an emergency will drain your savings, or you’ll lose motivation. That’s not failure—that’s life. What matters is that you get back on the trail the next month. One bad month doesn’t erase 11 good ones.

Rule #2: Your Mountain, Your Pace

Don’t compare your climb to anyone else’s. Someone might be starting with $50,000 in savings while you’re starting with $50. Someone might be paying off $5,000 in debt while you’re tackling $50,000. None of that matters. The only thing that matters is that YOU are moving forward from where YOU started.

Rule #3: Community Matters

You don’t have to hire a guide (financial advisor) to succeed, but you also don’t have to climb alone. Connect with other Ascenders. Share your struggles and your wins. When you feel like quitting, let this community remind you why you started.


A Final Word: You Can Do This

I started with nothing. I mean that literally. I grew up watching my parents fight about money until it tore our family apart. I rode a $10 yard-sale bike until the handlebars rusted off. I counted my childhood savings on the floor like it was treasure because, to me, it was.

But here’s what I learned: financial security isn’t about being the smartest person in the room or having a fancy degree. It’s about showing up. Every. Single. Month.

That’s the Monthly Money promise. We don’t climb mountains in a day. We do it one month at a time, one intentional decision at a time.

You’re not powerless. You’re not behind. You’re exactly where you need to be—at the start of your ascent.

So let’s go, Ascenders. Your 2026 summit is waiting.


Your First Step: Pick ONE action from the January section and do it this weekend. Just one. That’s how every climb begins—with a single step.

I’ll be here every month, climbing alongside you.

See you at the top.