Skip to Content

Bill Pay Hack for Families on a Tight Budget

When we went from being a two-income family to a one-income household with a baby, the days of easily paying the bills on time, let alone paying off debt, seemed like a distant memory.  Instead, we were looking for ways to save money on bills.  Finally, I got fed up with feeling out of control and I figured out a bill pay hack to make the same monthly payments but actually save money on interest every month.

If your monthly budget looks anything like ours, you have at least one week where it seems like all of the big bills are due all at once.

Some weeks, it seemed like we had plenty of money left over.

If we weren’t careful though, we could easily be left with no choice but to dip into our savings on that one week a month when so much was due.

Building a family budget on one income is daunting and overwhelming.

I didn’t even want to look at our debt or when bills were due because it felt like a surefire way to get depressed and anxious.

When I figured out this budget hack, it felt like we had somehow discovered money we didn’t know we had.

Money Hacks

Our Story…

It finally occurred to me that if I could just divide up our payments, we wouldn’t have to risk going in the hole every month.

On paper, it looked like we had enough coming in to cover all of our minimum payments… plus a little left for gas and food.

If we were careful with our expenses, my husband’s income was enough for us to make ends meet.

Here’s the thing:

Every month we went through the same thing.

We’d have those weeks where it looked like there was a lot left over after the bills were paid, so we’d go out to dinner or over spend on groceries.

Then, that one week would roll around and suddenly our bills demanded more of our money than we had in our bank account to offer.

The Bill Pay Hacks That Worked

Finally, I decided enough is enough.

Some of our creditors gave us the option of moving our due date, but this wasn’t enough.

What finally worked for us was dividing up our payments and scheduling them to be automatically deducted from our bank account.

Initially, I was worried about giving companies access to our bank account.

After trying to pay all of our bills weekly, I realized I had missed some.  Even incurring late charges a couple of times. Definitely not how you want to spend your money when trying to get out of debt.

I gave in and scheduled everything to come out of our account automatically.

Why?

My reasoning was that if we had a $200 minimum payment due once a month, we should easily be able to afford $50 per week. We decided on weekly payments even though my husband gets paid every 2 weeks.

Ways to Save Money on a Tight Budget

Honestly, I think this system works best because we were on a tight budget.

If we had money to spare every month, I wouldn’t have noticed such a drastic dip in our financial stress.

After we implemented this bill pay system, it seriously felt like we’d been given a pay raise.  I realized being strategic with not just how we spent our money, but how we paid our bills was key.  It helped us live comfortably on a tight budget.

Exactly what I did…

I made an Excel spreadsheet of all of our minimum payments and due dates, but you could easily do this using a paper ledger like this one.

Then, I made a separate column and divided the total due by 4.

So that $200 minimum payment meant 4 equal payments of $50 could be made weekly to meet our minimum.

I did this for all of our minimum payments and realized it would make our lives SO much easier to pay an even amount of money every week.

How to Save Money on Bills

I called the Discover card company to tell them my plan and to ask a few questions about how our interest was calculated.

It turns out, paying our bill weekly like this instead of just making one payment every month would actually save us in interest charges.

This means that even though we’re paying the same amount of money every month and doing it in a way that makes our finances easier to handle, we’re actually saving money on bills.

This works perfectly for credit card bills, personal loans, car payments, and even utility bills.

I also use this method to pay off recurring monthly charges to make sure they don’t add to our debt load.

For example, our Netflix, Microsoft, and Groovebook accounts draft monthly from our Discover card.

Instead of forgetting about these charges like I used to do every month and letting them add to the debt on the card, I simply added these to the minimum payments that are being auto-debited from our bank account.

These charges add up to roughly $50 per month, so instead of just paying the $200 minimum payment on our Discover card monthly, I take $250 divided by 4 weeks in a month, and pay $62.50 per week.

Money Saving Hacks

If you’re sold on this method by now, keep reading.  I’m going to lay out for you exactly how we implemented this system with our own bills and bank account.

I promise, it’s not as complicated as it looks.  When you sit down to do it yourself, you’ll see how all of these pieces come together.

Step-By-Step Instructions

If you want to try this method, take these steps:

  • Make a list of all of your bills, due dates, and minimum payments
  • Take each minimum payment and divide it by 4 (for 4 weeks in a month)
  • Check your calendar and make sure there are at least 4 weeks before your next due date before starting this method! If not, you can wait until just after your next minimum payment posts to start. Otherwise adjust your payments accordingly.  For example, if your next due date is only 2 weeks away, divide your minimum payment by 2. Then make two weekly payments of half of your minimum payment.  THEN be sure to go back in after your due date and change your payments to a quarter of your monthly minimum payment.  Make sense?  It gets confusing, so I just set up automatic payments to accomplish this for me and kept diligent notes.
  • Next, unless you’re incredibly organized and have lots of time to dedicate to paying bills every week, do this. Go into your bank account and schedule automatic weekly payments for each bill (except your mortgage)
  • Finally, make sure to keep good notes and go into each of your accounts for a couple of weeks. Make sure everything is clearing your bank account and posting to your creditor’s accounts correctly. Believe me, the time you spend getting this right now will save you tons of financial headache after you get this set-up.  It will run on auto-pilot and you can just sit back and enjoy a much more stable budget all month long!

Where This Method Won’t Work – Mortgage Payments

A word of caution:  DO NOT, I repeat, do not try this with your mortgage.   Without going into too much detail, here’s why that’s a terrible idea (I learned this first hand):

When you make a payment to your mortgage company that equals less than a monthly payment, one of two things will happen.

They will either take your extra money and move it into a “suspense” account where it waits for a set amount of time until you make another payment(s) that equal a full payment.  That amount of money will then be moved from the suspense account to cover a monthly payment.

Or, as in our case, the extra payments were sent straight to principle.  We ended up behind on our monthly payment, but with two monthly payments worth of funds applied to our principle balance.

I know, I was annoyed (and kind of shocked) when we started getting phone calls that our mortgage was behind.

It took numerous phone calls, e-mails, and chat sessions to finally get this cleared up.  Take my advice and don’t go down that road.

It IS possible that your mortgage company offers a biweekly payment option.

Unfortunately, ours doesn’t.

Give your mortgage company a call and see if they can work with you.

If not, you can always transfer 1/4 of your mortgage payment to savings every month and then move the full amount back to your checking when it’s time to pay the mortgage payment.

If you’re organized enough, that is definitely an option.  We decided to just leave the mortgage out of our weekly payment plan.

Best Way to Pay Bills Each Month

The best way to pay bills each month and to pay bills ON TIME is to automate everything.

Life happens.

Kids get sick, unexpected events come up, cars break down…

It’s so easy to forget to pay bills on time when you don’t even know what day it is most of the time.

The best thing I ever did for our finances was to automate all of our bills to be paid weekly and on autopay.

While I absolutely hated the idea of giving anyone power over our bank account at first, I can’t even tell you how much it has saved me in late fees.

My method is also the best way, in my opinion, to pay bills with little money.

It happens to most of us.

We’re living paycheck to paycheck, a job is lost, or a huge unexpected medical bills comes up.

Why not have the smallest amount of weekly output financially so you know what to expect each week?

Life Hacks to Save Money

For our little family, this method works perfectly!  We pay each of our bills weekly (except for that dreaded mortgage) and we don’t have to worry anymore about having a crazy expensive week and blowing our budget.

This helps us to stay organized, pay all of our bills on time, and even schedule small extra payments to help pay down debt.

Update:

Since I originally wrote this article, our financial situation has changed a lot because of this blog.  It now brings in a significant income for us every month, but we do still make weekly payments to each of our creditors (and we still don’t pay our mortgage weekly!)  If you think you might have what it takes to start a successful blog, check out this post and join my e-mail newsletter for bloggers!

Do you struggle to make the minimum payments on your debts?  Do you think this method will work for you?  If you have any questions, be sure to let me know in the comments!

Money hack for families on a tight budget – This budget hack will help you save money on bills by teaching you how to pay your bills strategically instead of draining your bank account all at once. This saved our family budget! Money hack for families on a tight budget – This budget hack will help you save money on bills by teaching you how to pay your bills strategically instead of draining your bank account all at once. This saved our family budget!

Frugal Living Tips From The Best Frugal Living Blogs & Bloggers

Monday 21st of January 2019

[…] This is a really cool blog post that shows you how to save extra money simply by paying your bills weekly. Check it out here. […]

Penny

Friday 11th of May 2018

Many financial institutions offer an automatic transfer system that you can easily set yourself through your online banking or with a teller. Basically you would put your weekly allotment for your mortgage in your savings and set the transfer to run on a certain day of the month so that your payment is ready go and you don't have to remember to move it.

jules rosen

Tuesday 1st of May 2018

Just an idea for those math challenged. Some debit cards now Mail payments for you as well. Serve deducts your payments the day you do it on the computer wher it nails it or electronically sends it.

jules rosen

Tuesday 1st of May 2018

P. S. Serve is an American Express product available at mass merchants. (debit card)

Nancy

Wednesday 11th of April 2018

I have been doing this for years and it is a fantastic way to pay bills. You made it very easy to understand and I wish everyone who tries this method great success!

Sulema

Tuesday 27th of February 2018

So, I will try this but is there a day of the week that is the best to make the payment.?

Jamie

Monday 12th of March 2018

I really don't think day of the week matters. We've always used Friday just because we both used to get paid on Fridays. Now, my paychecks come at random times through the month and my husband gets paid on the 1st and 15th. It's just easier for us to stick with Fridays because it's what we've always known.

Comments are closed.