You set your budget. You log your expenses carefully. But somehow, every month ends tighter than expected — even when you didn't do anything obviously wrong.
The culprit is usually undercounted fixed expenses, specifically the irregular ones.
The irregular fixed expense problem
Monthly costs are easy to remember: rent, gym, Netflix. But annual or quarterly costs are invisible most of the time — until the charge hits.
Examples: annual software subscriptions, car registration, vet checkups, dentist visits, holiday gifts, insurance deductibles. These are real, predictable costs — but they don't show up in a typical monthly budget.
The fix: amortize them
Take every cost you pay less-than-monthly and divide it by 12 (or by the number of months in your period). Add that monthly share to your fixed expenses.
A $360 annual subscription is $30/month. A $600 car service twice a year is $100/month. Add these to your fixed costs before calculating your daily budget.
How to find them
- Scroll 12 months of bank statements and flag anything non-monthly
- Check your email for annual renewal notices
- Think about car, health, home, pets, subscriptions, and gifts separately
- When in doubt, round up — it's better to have a slightly conservative budget
Once you've added these to your fixed expenses in Repikue, your daily budget will be more accurate — and those "surprise" charges will stop feeling like surprises.
