Simple and smart ways to save your money without sacrificing your joy

M
Mehdi Islam Mahi

Saving money often comes with a familiar fear, an apprehension that you will have to give up the things you enjoy. Fewer outings, fewer small indulgences, and a constant need to say no, but it does not have to work that way. The issue is not spending itself, but how unstructured it can be. With the right approach, saving can become something that happens quietly in the background, without making life feel smaller. Simply, build a system that works quietly in the background.

50-30-20 Rule

One of the easiest ways to start is the 50-30-20 Rule. It splits your income into three simple parts: 50 per cent for needs, 30 per cent for wants, and 20 per cent for savings or investments.

What makes this approach effective is that it does not treat enjoyment as something optional. It is already built into the plan. You are not cutting out your lifestyle, you are organising it.

Another useful habit is to save first, not last. As soon as your salary comes in, move a fixed amount into savings. It could be 10 per cent, it could be 20. What matters is consistency. Whatever is left is what you spend, without guilt.

Over time, this takes the pressure off. You are no longer deciding whether to save every day. It simply happens.

Photo: Collected / Andre Taissin / Unsplash

 

Value-based budgeting

Trying to cut down on everything rarely works for long. It often leads to frustration, and, eventually, overspending.

A better approach is to be more selective. Spend on things that genuinely matter to you, and be a bit stricter with the rest.

This is where something like value-based budgeting comes in. Instead of treating all expenses the same, you decide what actually improves your day-to-day life. For some, it might be eating out with friends. For others, it might be fitness, travel, or even small comforts like good coffee!

A simple trick that helps is the 24-hour rule. If you want to buy something that is not essential, give it a day. More often than not, the urge fades, and you realise it was just a momentary impulse.

Saving money is not really about spending less. It is about spending in a way that feels worthwhile.

Keep lifestyle inflation in check

As income grows, spending tends to grow with it. It happens gradually. A slightly better phone, more frequent takeaways, and a few extra subscriptions. None of it feels excessive on its own, but together it can quietly eat into your ability to save.

One way to manage this is to save part of every raise. If your income increases, set aside at least half of that increase instead of adjusting your lifestyle to match it completely.

You can also set small limits for yourself, like deciding in advance how much you are comfortable spending on eating out each month. These boundaries are not meant to restrict you, but to keep things from getting out of hand without you noticing.

At the end of the day, saving money is not about saying no to everything you enjoy. It is about making sure your money is going where it actually matters.

You can still go out, treat yourself, and enjoy your life. The difference is that you are doing it with intention, while quietly building something more stable in the background, and that balance is what makes it sustainable.