These 5 Costly Habits Are Ruining Your Budget

2020-11-21
Joe
Joe Donan
Community Voice

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Something’s not right. It’s nearly the end of the month, and you just realized a good chunk of your money has slipped away under your very nose. To make matters worse, you are completely clueless as to how it happened.

Your mistake? You forgot to take ant-expenses into account. These are the small and unnecessary expenditures we do habitually and often compulsively. And even though they seem harmless and inconsequential at the beginning, they can have considerable repercussions on our finances over time.

Habits based on ant-expenses are no joke. A study by SlickDeals concluded that the amount the average person spends each week exceeds their budget by $143. Multiply that by the fifty-two weeks in a year, and that extra expending translates to $7,436. Scary, isn’t it?

Here’s a list of easily-overlooked, costly habits you should watch out for and how to break them effectively.

1. Giving in to cravings

You may think a daily bag of potato chips is harmless to your wallet, when in fact, it isn’t. A survey conducted by OnePoll shows that Americans spend an average of $9.22 on snacks per week, which adds up to $479.44 per year. Over an average lifetime, the total comes to $28,766.40 spent on junk food. Whoa!

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What you can do:

2. Letting credit card interest accumulate

More than ever, it is convenient to use credit cards to pay for our purchases, especially online. Credit cards, however, are double-edged swords: use them recklessly and you’ll soon find yourself deep in debt as interest charges accumulate over time.

According to Money.com, Americans paid $122 billion in credit card interest in 2019. Considering that in the US there were 374 million open credit card accounts in the same year, the average debt per user was $326.20.

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Also, according to NerdWallet’s annual analysis of U.S. household debt, households carrying monthly credit card debt paid an average annual interest of $1,162; whereas a couple with children paid an average of $1,382 in credit card interest charges.

What you can do:

3. Overspending on beverages

Insignificant as it may seem, beverage consumption can also harm your finances. A study by the Beverage Marketing Corporation revealed that Americans consumed 14.4 billion gallons of bottled water in 2019, spending $34.6 billion in total. Also, data by GoBankingRates shows that the average person spends $1,100 a year on coffee.

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Alcohol consumption is another budgetary concern. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Americans spend about 1% of their gross annual income on alcohol. For the average household, that’s $565 a year, $5,650 in ten years, or $254,250 over a forty-five-year period. That’s over a quarter of a million dollars spent on booze.

What you can do:

4. Purchasing impulsively

Resisting the urge to splurge is not easy. A survey carried out by Slickdeals revealed that the average person spends $5,400 a year on impulse purchases, with respondents identifying food, clothing, household, takeout, and shoes as their most common impulse expenditures. 85% of the same respondents said their impulse purchases were triggered by deals and discounts.

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What you can do:

  1. “Do I need this, or do I just want it?
  2. “How many hours did I have to work to buy this?”
  3. “Is it worth it?”
  4. “Is it urgent, or can it wait?”
  5. “Is there a more important purchase I should be making?”

5. Going overboard with streaming services

Upgrades in TV entertainment come with a price. According to a new study from OnePoll, on average, Americans are subscribed to four streaming services, each costing around $8.99 per month. Also, PCMag found that people pay about $33.27 a month for all of their services combined, coming to a total of nearly $400 a year. This tendency has increased in 2020 due to home confinement.

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What you can do:

How to deal with ant expenses

Ant expenses are, for the most part, avoidable. Here are some tips to deal with them and save yourself some money in the process:

At the end of the day, it’s your money that you’ll be taking care of, and consequently, you’re the one who will decide how to spend it most wisely. Getting rid of ant-expenses doesn’t mean you’ll be depriving yourself of food, products, or entertainment. It means you will manage your monetary resources more effectively so that these purchases won’t end up affecting you in the long run.

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Joe
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Joe Donan
Salvadoran writer, father, husband, educator, and artisan. I write about love and relationships, family, life lessons, and personal g...