When you first decide to get serious about your money, two ideas usually pop up right away:
Both are solid instincts. But if you’re trying to get traction quickly - and without burning yourself out - cutting expenses is usually the better place to start.
Let’s talk about why.
Here’s an annoying but important truth:
You don’t just spend dollars - you spend after-tax dollars.
A penny saved is MORE than a penny earned.
If you’re in a 25% tax bracket, spending $100 means you have to earn about $133 to do it. That fancy dinner didn’t just cost you $100 - it cost you extra hours of your life.
This is one of the most overlooked ideas in personal finance, and it’s a big reason why expense reduction punches above its weight.
Growing your income is great - but it often comes with strings attached:
All of those take time, energy, and sometimes money upfront.
Cutting expenses, on the other hand, can start today:
You don’t need permission. You don’t need training. You don’t need a second job. You just need awareness - which is exactly what a budgeting app like FreeBudget is built to give you.
Here’s another underrated benefit:
Most expense cuts stick.
Canceling a $15/month subscription saves you $180 every year.
Switching a $60 phone plan to a $15 one (like Mint Mobile) saves you $540 annually.
That’s money you never have to earn again.
Outside of a full time job, Income increases almost always require time / effort / energy to continue those increased earnings. Increasing income is still great - and something to pursue at the right time. If we had to choose a starting place, though, it’d be cutting expenses first.
Cutting expenses builds a strong financial foundation that future income increases can sit on top of.
Trying to grow income can feel like pushing a boulder uphill. Cutting expenses feels more like cleaning out a closet. Not glamorous, but surprisingly satisfying.
When you see where your money is actually going (thanks to FreeBudget), you regain control. And control reduces stress - something no paycheck alone can fix.
This doesn’t mean growing your income is a bad idea. It’s just about sequence.
A simple approach:
When you do increase your income later, it actually sticks instead of vanishing into mystery spending.
If you’re just starting out, don’t feel pressure to “hustle harder” right away. Start by making your money work smarter.
Because saving one dollar is often easier - and more powerful - than growing income at first.
And that’s a budget win worth celebrating. 🎉