Stop tracking every dollar you spend—and start questioning the dollars you keep.
The Quiet Problem With “Tracking Expenses”
Scroll through any finance advice and you’ll see the same message:
- Track your spending
- Cut your expenses
- Budget better
All helpful. All incomplete.
Because here’s the truth most people miss:
You can track every dollar… and still not build wealth.
At 1 Practical Gal, we’re not just trying to manage money—we’re trying to move it forward.
That’s where a Savings Audit comes in.
What Is a Savings Audit?
A Savings Audit flips the script.
Instead of asking:
👉 “Where did my money go?”
You ask:
👉 “Did my money go where I intended it to go?”
It’s a simple but powerful shift.
Step 1: Do You Even Have a Savings Goal?
Not a vague idea. Not “I should save more.”
A real goal.
- Emergency fund: $5,000
- Roth IRA: Maxed this year
- Vacation fund: $1,500 by June
- First apartment fund: $3,000
If you don’t have a target, you don’t have direction.
A goal gives your money a job.
Step 2: Is It Written Down? (This Matters More Than You Think)
There’s a reason this shows up again and again in research and personal development:
People who write down their goals are significantly more likely to achieve them.
Not because writing is magic—but because it forces clarity.
At 1PG, we keep it simple:
- Write the goal
- Write the amount
- Write the timeline
Example:
“I will save $2,400 in 12 months by setting aside $200/month.”
Now your brain has something concrete to work toward.
Step 3: Look Back 90 Days (Without Judgment)
This is where the audit becomes real.
Pull up your last 3 months:
- Bank account
- Savings account
- Investment contributions
Ask:
- Did I save what I said I would?
- Was it consistent?
- If not—what happened?
And here’s the key:
👉 No guilt. Just data.
You’re not trying to shame yourself—you’re trying to understand your system.
Because your results are always a reflection of your system.
Step 4: Build a System That Makes Saving Easier Than Spending
This is where we borrow from Atomic Habits:
Make good habits easy. Make bad habits harder.
Let’s translate that into money.
Make Saving Easy
- Automate transfers on payday
- Use separate accounts (out of sight = out of spend)
- Set up direct deposit splits
- Use employer retirement auto-contributions
Make “Leaking Money” Harder
- Remove saved cards from apps
- Add a 24-hour pause before purchases
- Keep checking balance slightly “tight”
- Move savings to a different bank
The goal is not willpower—it’s design.
Design wins every time.
Step 5: Know Your “Why” (Or You’ll Drift)
Savings without purpose doesn’t stick.
Your “why” is what turns discipline into direction.
Ask yourself:
- What does this money do for me?
- What stress does it remove?
- What opportunity does it create?
Examples:
- “I want a $5,000 emergency fund so I never have to rely on a credit card again.”
- “I want to invest so future me has choices.”
- “I want my first apartment to feel like freedom—not financial stress.”
When your goal has meaning, your habits have momentum.
Your 1PG Challenge: 5 Actions You Can Take This Month
Let’s bring this to life.
Pick 5 of these and complete them this month:
- Write down one clear savings goal
- Open a separate savings account
- Set up an automatic weekly transfer
- Increase your 401(k) contribution by 1%
- Start a “no-spend weekend” habit
- Delete saved payment methods from apps
- Track your savings rate (not just spending)
- Move one subscription fee into savings instead
- Round up purchases and save the difference
- Review your last 3 months and write 3 observations
(You don’t need 50 actions—you need a few that stick.)
The Bottom Line
Tracking expenses tells you where your money went.
A savings audit tells you whether your money is working for you.
And over time, that difference compounds. Its a Superpower: Savings is a superpower
Call to Action (1PG Style)
This week, take 15 minutes.
- Write your savings goal
- Check your last 90 days
- Set up one automatic transfer
That’s it.
Because financial peace isn’t built in big moments—
It’s built in small, deliberate actions… repeated daily.
Festina Lente
Discover more from 1PracticalGal.com- Building Financial Peace Foundations
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