If you're building a budget, one of the first questions is: what categories do I even need? The answer depends on your life, but there are standard categories that work for most people. This is your reference guide β bookmark it, come back to it, use it as a template for your own budget structure.
I'm breaking down every major category, what belongs in each one, and how to think about the gray areas where things could go in multiple places.
Housing
What goes here: Anything related to where you live.
- Rent or mortgage payment
- Property tax (if you own)
- Homeowners or renters insurance
- HOA fees (if applicable)
- Maintenance and repairs (including major ones like roof, water heater)
- Appliance replacements
What doesn't go here: Utilities (that's its own category), furniture (that's home goods or personal), or decorations (personal).
Monthly budget: $800-2,000+ depending on your location and mortgage/rent situation.
Utilities
What goes here: Services that keep your home running.
- Electricity
- Gas (if separate from electric)
- Water and sewer
- Internet
- Phone (if it's a home line)
- Trash/recycling pickup
Monthly budget: $120-300 depending on climate and usage.
Transportation
What goes here: Getting around.
- Car payment
- Car insurance
- Gas/fuel
- Parking fees or permits
- Car maintenance (oil changes, tire rotations)
- Public transit passes (bus, train, subway)
- Ride-shares or taxis (if you use them regularly)
- Car registration and tags
Pro tip: Keep car maintenance separate from regular gas if you can, so you can see how much preventative maintenance costs versus fuel.
Monthly budget: $250-600+ depending on whether you own a car and your commute.
Groceries
What goes here: Food you buy to cook at home.
- Groceries from supermarket
- Produce from farmers market
- Bulk food purchases
- Cooking supplies (spices, oils, basics)
What doesn't go here: Dining out (separate category), coffee shop purchases (separate or personal), or alcohol (can be here or separate depending on how you track).
Monthly budget: $250-500 for one person; $400-800+ for a household depending on dietary needs.
Dining Out & Entertainment
What goes here: Food you purchase ready-made, plus entertainment.
- Restaurants
- Food delivery
- Coffee shops
- Bars
- Movies or theater
- Hobbies and entertainment
- Concerts or events
Option: Split this into two categories (Dining Out and Entertainment) if you want to see them separately.
Monthly budget: $100-400 depending on your priorities and social life.
Subscriptions & Memberships
What goes here: Recurring monthly charges for services.
- Streaming services (Netflix, Hulu, Disney+)
- Music streaming (Spotify)
- Gym membership
- App subscriptions
- Software subscriptions
- Coworking spaces
- Subscription boxes
Why separate? Because subscriptions are easy to forget and easy to cancel. Having them in their own category makes it obvious which ones you're actually using.
Monthly budget: $20-150 depending on how many subscriptions you use.
Personal Care & Clothing
What goes here: Things you buy for yourself.
- Haircuts and salon services
- Clothing and shoes
- Toiletries and hygiene products
- Makeup and skincare
- Dry cleaning
Note: Some people split this into "Personal Care" and "Clothing" if the amounts are very different. Do what makes sense for your spending.
Monthly budget: $50-200 depending on how often you buy clothes and how much you spend on self-care.
Insurance (All Types)
What goes here: Protecting yourself financially.
- Health insurance premiums
- Car insurance
- Renters insurance
- Life insurance
- Disability insurance
Note: Some of these overlap with other categories. Car insurance can go in Transportation. Health insurance can be separate. Organize in a way that makes sense to you β just make sure you're not double-counting.
Monthly budget: $100-400+ depending on the types and amounts of coverage.
Medical & Health
What goes here: Healthcare costs beyond insurance.
- Doctor visit copays
- Prescriptions
- Dental cleanings
- Eye exams and glasses
- Therapy or counseling
- Vitamins and supplements
- Medical equipment (like heating pads)
Monthly budget: $50-300 depending on your health needs.
Debt Payments
What goes here: Paying down debt.
- Credit card minimum payments
- Extra credit card payments (toward payoff goals)
- Student loan payments
- Personal loan payments
- Medical debt payments
Pro tip: Separate minimum payments from extra payments if you want to see how much you're accelerating your payoff versus just maintaining.
Monthly budget: $50-500+ depending on your debt situation.
Savings & Emergency Fund
What goes here: Money set aside for future goals and emergencies.
- Emergency fund contributions
- Retirement account contributions (401k, IRA)
- Goal-specific savings (vacation, car replacement, home down payment)
- General savings
Note: You can have multiple savings categories if you're saving for different goals. Many people start with just one "Savings" bucket and split later.
Monthly budget: $50-500+ depending on your income and goals. Aim for 10-20% of after-tax income if possible.
Gifts & Donations
What goes here: Money you give to others.
- Birthday gifts
- Holiday gifts
- Charitable donations
- Wedding or shower gifts
- Donations to causes you care about
Note: This is optional if your gift spending is minimal. But if you spend more than $50/month on gifts, it's worth tracking.
Monthly budget: $0-200 depending on the month and your generosity.
Pets
What goes here: Everything pet-related (if you have pets).
- Pet food
- Pet supplies (litter, toys, beds)
- Veterinary care and checkups
- Pet insurance (if you have it)
- Grooming
Monthly budget: $50-300 depending on number and type of pets.
Kids & Childcare (If Applicable)
What goes here: All expenses related to children.
- Childcare or daycare
- School supplies
- Clothing for kids
- Kids' activities (sports, lessons, camps)
- Baby supplies
- Kids' healthcare (beyond insurance)
Monthly budget: $300-2,000+ depending on childcare costs and number of kids.
Miscellaneous/Discretionary
What goes here: Everything that doesn't fit elsewhere.
- Impulse purchases
- Items you buy when you're being flexible with spending
- Small treats and random purchases
Note: Keep this category loose β it's your catch-all for spending that doesn't fit neatly. If it gets too large, you might want to add a new category.
Monthly budget: $50-200 depending on how much you spend on random things.
10 tabs, 4,600+ formulas, both snowball and avalanche strategies built in. Automatically calculates interest, payoff dates, and progress. Works on phone, tablet, desktop. Available in 6 color themes. Instant download.
How to Choose Your Categories
You don't need to use all of these. Choose based on your life:
If you don't have a car: Skip Transportation entirely, or just add bus pass/rideshare.
If you don't have kids: Skip the Kids category.
If you rent: Skip homeowners insurance and maintenance; keep renters insurance in Housing or Insurance.
If you spend very little on gifts: Combine with Miscellaneous or skip it.
The goal is to have categories that represent your actual spending, not categories that exist "just in case."
Linking Categories to Your Budget Method
If you're using the 50/30/20 budget method, here's how categories map:
50% Needs: Housing, Utilities, Transportation (basics), Groceries, Minimum Debt, Insurance, Medical, Phone
30% Wants: Dining Out, Entertainment, Subscriptions, Personal Care, Clothing, Gifts, Pets, Miscellaneous
20% Savings/Goals: Debt Payoff (extra), Savings, Retirement, Goal-specific savings
If you're using zero-based budgeting, assign every category a dollar amount before the month starts.
Quick Category Reference Table
| Category | Sample Monthly Budget | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Housing | $900-2,000 | Rent, insurance, maintenance |
| Utilities | $120-300 | Electric, water, internet |
| Transportation | $250-600 | Car payment, insurance, gas |
| Groceries | $250-500 | Food to cook at home |
| Dining Out | $100-300 | Restaurants, coffee, delivery |
| Subscriptions | $20-150 | Streaming, gym, apps |
| Personal Care | $50-200 | Haircuts, clothing, toiletries |
| Insurance | $100-400 | Health, car, renters |
| Medical & Health | $50-300 | Copays, prescriptions, dental |
| Debt Payments | $50-500 | Credit cards, loans |
| Savings | $50-500 | Emergency fund, retirement |
| Miscellaneous | $50-200 | Unexpected, discretionary |
10 tabs, 4,600+ formulas, both snowball and avalanche strategies built in. Automatically calculates interest, payoff dates, and progress. Works on phone, tablet, desktop. Available in 6 color themes. Instant download.
The Bottom Line
There's no "perfect" set of budget categories. Use these as a starting point, but adjust for your life. The best budget is one that matches how you actually spend money, not how you think you should spend it. Track your spending for one month, see what your natural categories are, and build from there.



