12 Tips for Living on One Income | SoFi (2024)

By Alice Garbarini Hurley ·July 30, 2024 · 9 minute read

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12 Tips for Living on One Income | SoFi (1)

Figuring out how to live on one income, either by design or circ*mstance, can seem daunting. And it may put a lot of financial pressure on that one wage earner.

That said, plenty of American households live on a single income. According to the latest government statistics, only one spouse was employed in around a third of families with children and nearly one quarter of married couples without children. There’s strength in those numbers, proving that it can be done.

If you are learning how to live off one income, read on for 12 smart strategies that will help you make the most of your money and live well, including:

• Making a realistic budget

• Reducing food expenses but still eating well

• Downsizing your home

• Earning extra income

• Focusing on what you have

Is It Possible to Live on One Income (After Living on Two?)

It’s certainly possible to live on one income, even after being accustomed to two. Maybe you or your spouse is now a stay-at-home parent or caring for an elderly relative, or one of you lost your job. Whatever the reason, going from a dual income to a single income household will likely take some careful planning and adjustments. For example, you may need to sit down and go through all of your household expenses, then make some adjustments — perhaps even consider downsizing your lifestyle. Adaptability and a proactive approach are key to successfully making this transition.

12 Tips for Living on a Single Income

How to make it on one income? Consider starting with a newly streamlined (but livable) budget and moving on to other changes one by one.

1. Making a Budget

First step, reality check. To successfully live off one income, you’ll want to document your household’s take-home pay. It’s also a good idea to take stock of the kinds of income you could count among your assets, such as money you might earn from a side hustle or dividends from any stocks you might own.

Then, tally all expenses that are musts, such as:

• Mortgage or rent

• Groceries (even that annual Costo membership fee)

• Health insurance costs

• Transportation, such as car payments, gas, insurance, and repairs

• Utilities

• Child care

• Work-related expenses (commuting, clothing, etc.)

Discretionary income is what is left after your “fixed” or “necessary expenses” are covered. This would be money to use on a weekend brunch with friends, taking the kids to the theme park, or other moderate splurges. But you don’t necessarily want to spend all of that money; you also want to allocate some towards paying down debt and saving towards other financial goals, such as an emergency fund or retirement. For savings you may need in the next few months or years, consider opening a high-yield savings account, then setting up an automatic recurring transfer from checking into this account on the same day each month.

To streamline the budget-making process, you may want to use an online tool (many banks provide them) or try an app that helps with this process. If you’re raising kids on your own with one paycheck, it can be especially important to learn how to budget as a single parent.

2. Freezing Extra Food

This can save a lot of money and consolidate your food prep time, too. Consider taking a few hours a week to cook foods that freeze and reheat well, such as lasagna, chili, soup, or pot pie. You might also bake and stash muffins and bread for weekday or game-day breakfasts. The homemade food you prepare is likely to be more wholesome (no preservatives) and less expensive than store-bought.

To make freezing a breeze, make sure you have some containers and foil wrap on hand; then use masking tape or stickers to mark and date contents and reheating instructions.

3. Transitioning to One Car

Becoming a one-car household is not only better for your budget (gas, insurance, new tires, car repairs) but it helps the planet, too. Perhaps your partner can take public transportation to work and leave the car home for grocery runs, doctor appointments, and shuttling kids.

If one of you has to drive to work and thereby leaves the other without wheels, drill down on clear communication and scheduling. For instance, you need the car back by 6 p.m. to make a meeting. Otherwise, you might take public transportation or call the occasional Uber to get places. Carpools can also work for kids’ activities and work commutes.

If you’re a newly single parent balancing car costs along with everything else, you’ll want to create a reasonable post divorce budget to guide you. Transportation is often vital but can often be obtained at a reasonable price.

4. Monitoring Utilities and Electricity

Saving money on utilities is increasingly easy with tools like smart thermostats. A good rule of thumb is to lower your thermostat when the family is out (say, during school hours) and at night when everyone is under blankets in winter. In summer, consider keeping the house warmer if you’re at work; no need to cool an empty house.

It’s also wise to keep up with maintenance appointments for your home’s heating and cooling systems; just like a car, it needs tune-ups to run best. Teach the whole family to switch off lights and T.V. when they leave a room. Target “phantom” energy use, which is the energy appliances (especially electronics) use when “sleeping” but still plugged in. These dollars add up.

5. Downsizing Your Home

If you’re living on one income and housing costs are eating up a big chunk of your budget (which is common in today’s housing market), you might want to consider moving to a smaller house, apartment, or condo. You’ll be on trend with the tiny-house movement and the shift toward minimalist living.

When you shrink your footprint, you generally save money on property taxes, utilities, electricity, and lawn and snow care. In most cases (depending on location), the smaller the space, the lower the bills. All of this can feel freeing.

Another way to downsize (though not literally) can be to move to a home with fewer amenities or one that’s in a neighborhood a bit farther away from downtown. You may be able to get the same square footage for less.

Recommended: What’s Net Worth vs. Income?

6. Doing Meal Planning and Buying Groceries on Sale

Even on a budget, you can eat well — even better than grabbing unhealthy, overpriced takeout. Consider planning meals around what’s in your pantry and what’s on sale each week. It can be fun to explore the budget-priced recipes online; plenty of sites have “meals under $10” and similar categories to help provide inspiration.

You might enjoy scheduling meals by day of the week (Meatless Monday, Taco Tuesday, and Sunday Roast Chicken are a few examples), and shop based on what’s in season and on sale. Summer tomatoes (maybe from your garden) yield gazpacho or homemade spaghetti sauce. Winter vegetables like carrots are perfect for roasting and or adding to soups.

Recommended: 23 Tips to Help Save Money on Groceries

Get up to $300 when you bank with SoFi.

Open a SoFi Checking and Savings Account with direct deposit and get up to a $300 cash bonus. Plus, get up to 4.60% APY on your cash!

7. Paying Off High-Interest Debt

High-interest debt, the kind you accumulate on credit cards, can have steep annual percentage rates (APRs). The currently average APR on credit cards is 27.62%. If you carry a balance, that means everything you buy with plastic is costing you significantly more than what the receipt says because you take on that hefty APR.

If you’re dogged by this kind of debt, you’ll want to work whittling it down. You might also consider consolidating your debt with a lower-interest personal loan or making the switch to a balance transfer card that offers no or low interest for a period of time.

Recommended: How Does APR on Credit Cards Work?

8. Getting a Roommate

Sharing housing expenses by renting out a spare room can immediately free up funds in your budget. This option actually comes with more than one advantage. Many people get a budget boost by sharing the costs of rent, laundry detergent, coffee, utilities, and the cable bill. And you may also like having an additional member of the household with whom you can chat and bond.

9. Using Credit Cards Responsibly

The old rule still holds: Don’t use credit, generally not even for gas or food, unless you can pay off the balance every month. If not, you will incur interest that will build and build.

Before making a big, unplanned purchase, you might try the wait-and-see method, which means walking away for anywhere from 48 hours to 30 days (it’s your choice), and then seeing if, after some time has elapsed, you still feel you have to have it. In many cases, the desire has faded.

Still having trouble with debt? Consider working with a non-profit like the National Foundation for Credit Counseling (NFCC ).

10. Earning Extra Income

Another angle on being a single-income household is to see how you might bring in more money. It’s not just side hustles (moonlighting as a writer or web designer, for instance) or cleaning offices at night after your full-time job at school.

Consider new ideas for how to create your own passive income, from rental properties to advertising on your car.

Recommended: Ways to Create Residual Income

11. Finding a Travel Buddy

When budgeting for single-income life, you don’t have to give up vacations indefinitely. Instead, find ways to save money on travel. Whether you’re visiting the West Coast or the Mediterranean, sharing a hotel room or Airbnb with a friend can bring big savings.

A travel buddy can also chip in for the rental car, gas, tolls, park entrance fees, and taxi/Uber costs. Or you could consider camping with a friend or family member; that’s another great way to enjoy an inexpensive getaway.

12. Focusing on What You Have

As you trim expenses and get into your groove as a one-paycheck household, don’t lose sight of the gifts you have, riches that can supersede a second income. That includes more family time, good health, companionship, a roof over your head, heat, food in the freezer, a car that runs. Remember, wealth comes in many forms.

One last tip: If luxury-focused social media accounts are making you feel as if you’re missing out on the good life, unfollow them! Most are unrealistic representations that fail to reflect real life.

The Takeaway

Learning how to live on one income after having two may take practice and require some smart budgeting hacks, but it can often be done without major deprivation. By experimenting with a variety of strategies, you’ll find the ones that work best for you, financially and personally. You’ll also likely feel a surge of pride when you hit on the right combination of moves that lessen any money stress and enhance your financial well-being.

Interested in opening an online bank account? When you sign up for a SoFi Checking and Savings account with direct deposit, you’ll get a competitive annual percentage yield (APY), pay zero account fees, and enjoy an array of rewards, such as access to the Allpoint Network of 55,000+ fee-free ATMs globally. Qualifying accounts can even access their paycheck up to two days early.


Better banking is here with SoFi, NerdWallet’s 2024 winner for Best Checking Account Overall.* Enjoy up to 4.60% APY on SoFi Checking and Savings.

FAQ

How do you budget for a single income?

To budget for a single income, start with the take-home earnings you will live on and subtract essential expenses, such as a roof over your head, food, debt, and health insurance. Then look at wrangling your negotiable costs, such as owning one car vs. two or how much you budget for meals, to make ends meet. An online budgeting tool or consumer finance app can help.

How many families live off of one income?

According to the latest government statistics, only one spouse is employed in 33% of families with children and 23.5 % of married couples without children.

What is the average income for a single person in the U.S.?

The average U.S. annual salary in Q4 of 2023 was $59,384, according to government data.

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SoFi members with direct deposit activity can earn 4.60% annual percentage yield (APY) on savings balances (including Vaults) and 0.50% APY on checking balances. Direct Deposit means a recurring deposit of regular income to an account holder’s SoFi Checking or Savings account, including payroll, pension, or government benefit payments (e.g., Social Security), made by the account holder’s employer, payroll or benefits provider or government agency (“Direct Deposit”) via the Automated Clearing House (“ACH”) Network during a 30-day Evaluation Period (as defined below). Deposits that are not from an employer or government agency, including but not limited to check deposits, peer-to-peer transfers (e.g., transfers from PayPal, Venmo, etc.), merchant transactions (e.g., transactions from PayPal, Stripe, Square, etc.), and bank ACH funds transfers and wire transfers from external accounts, or are non-recurring in nature (e.g., IRS tax refunds), do not constitute Direct Deposit activity. There is no minimum Direct Deposit amount required to qualify for the stated interest rate.

As an alternative to direct deposit, SoFi members with Qualifying Deposits can earn 4.60% APY on savings balances (including Vaults) and 0.50% APY on checking balances. Qualifying Deposits means one or more deposits that, in the aggregate, are equal to or greater than $5,000 to an account holder’s SoFi Checking and Savings account (“Qualifying Deposits”) during a 30-day Evaluation Period (as defined below). Qualifying Deposits only include those deposits from the following eligible sources: (i) ACH transfers, (ii) inbound wire transfers, (iii) peer-to-peer transfers (i.e., external transfers from PayPal, Venmo, etc. and internal peer-to-peer transfers from a SoFi account belonging to another account holder), (iv) check deposits, (v) instant funding to your SoFi Bank Debit Card, (vi) push payments to your SoFi Bank Debit Card, and (vii) cash deposits. Qualifying Deposits do not include: (i) transfers between an account holder’s Checking account, Savings account, and/or Vaults; (ii) interest payments; (iii) bonuses issued by SoFi Bank or its affiliates; or (iv) credits, reversals, and refunds from SoFi Bank, N.A. (“SoFi Bank”) or from a merchant.

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Financial Tips & Strategies: The tips provided on this website are of a general nature and do not take into account your specific objectives, financial situation, and needs. You should always consider their appropriateness given your own circ*mstances.

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SOBNK-Q324-030

12 Tips for Living on One Income | SoFi (2024)

FAQs

12 Tips for Living on One Income | SoFi? ›

Our 50/30/20 calculator divides your take-home income into suggested spending in three categories: 50% of net pay for needs, 30% for wants and 20% for savings and debt repayment.

How to live comfortably on one income? ›

Living on a one-income budget
  1. Assess your financial situation. Start by understanding your current financial status. ...
  2. List fixed expenses. ...
  3. Track changing expenses. ...
  4. Differentiate needs vs. ...
  5. Set financial goals. ...
  6. Create an emergency savings fund. ...
  7. Allocate for savings. ...
  8. Start a debt repayment plan.

How to live off of one income in 2024? ›

7 strategies for living on a single income
  1. Have an emergency fund. Having a healthy emergency fund can help reduce anxiety about living on one income. ...
  2. Set a new budget. ...
  3. Start cutting costs early. ...
  4. Pay down debt. ...
  5. Consider tax withholding. ...
  6. Spend time, not money. ...
  7. Determine how you're going to manage finances.

What is the 30 20 income rule? ›

Our 50/30/20 calculator divides your take-home income into suggested spending in three categories: 50% of net pay for needs, 30% for wants and 20% for savings and debt repayment.

How to live off a small income? ›

These seven tips may be able to help.
  1. Understand your current financial habits. Not sure how to start spending less? ...
  2. Create an effective budget and stick to it. ...
  3. Look for ways to reduce spending. ...
  4. Set financial goals for future success. ...
  5. Save for emergencies or major purchases. ...
  6. Pay down debt. ...
  7. Stay aware of lifestyle creep.

What is a livable salary for one person? ›

But just how much does a single person in California need to make to live comfortably? A new study from Smart Asset determined that a person must make at least $ 89,190 to get by comfortably.

Is $1000 dollars a month livable? ›

But it is possible to live well even on a small amount of money. Surviving on $1,000 a month requires careful budgeting, prioritizing essential expenses, and finding ways to save money. Cutting down on housing costs by sharing living spaces or finding affordable options is crucial.

Is $2000 a month livable? ›

Retiring on $2,000 per month is very possible,” said Gary Knode, president at Safe Harbor Financial. “In my practice, I've seen it work. The key is reducing expenses and eliminating any market risk that could impact your savings if there were a major market downturn.

How much money does a person need to make in a year to survive? ›

Key Findings. On average, an individual needs $96,500 for sustainable comfort in a major U.S. city. This includes being able to pay off debt and invest for the future.

Is $50,000 a year livable? ›

Generally speaking, yes. An annual salary of $50,000 is considered a middle-class income, and can be a comfortable wage for a recent graduate or a person starting a new career. A single person may not be able to live large in some areas of the country, but that doesn't mean they can't live comfortably elsewhere.

What is the 10x income rule? ›

The financial giant says you should aim to have 10-times your final salary socked away in an IRA or 401(k) by the age of 67, which is when people born in 1960 or later can claim their Social Security benefits in full.

How much savings should I have at 50? ›

By age 35, aim to save one to one-and-a-half times your current salary for retirement. By age 50, that goal is three-and-a-half to six times your salary. By age 60, your retirement savings goal may be six to 11-times your salary. Ranges increase with age to account for a wide variety of incomes and situations.

What is the 10 rule of money? ›

The 30:30:30:10 income planning rule offers a structured approach where individuals allocate 30% of their income to living expenses, another 30% to retirement savings, 30% to investments and 10% for unexpected needs.

What is considered low income in America? ›

2021 POVERTY GUIDELINES FOR THE 48 CONTIGUOUS STATES AND THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Persons in family/householdPoverty guideline
1$12,880
2$17,420
3$21,960
4$26,500
5 more rows

How to survive on a single income? ›

To budget for a single income, start with the take-home earnings you will live on and subtract essential expenses, such as a roof over your head, food, debt, and health insurance. Then look at wrangling your negotiable costs, such as owning one car vs. two or how much you budget for meals, to make ends meet.

What is the lowest income to live on? ›

States Requiring the Least Money to Earn a Living Wage

Rounding out the top five least expensive states to live are Oklahoma, Alabama, Kansas and Arkansas, all requiring less than $47,500 to earn a living wage.

What is a great income for a single person? ›

Salary Needed to Live Comfortably in Each State
RankStateSalary needed for a single working adult
3California$113,651
4New York$111,738
5Washington$106,496
6Colorado$103,293
11 more rows
Apr 10, 2024

What is the ideal salary to live comfortably? ›

Key Findings. On average, an individual needs $96,500 for sustainable comfort in a major U.S. city. This includes being able to pay off debt and invest for the future.

What salary is considered rich for a single person? ›

Being in the top 20% of earners in California means making at least $171,387 a year. The Golden State, known for its pricey real estate and high cost of living, particularly in cities like San Francisco and Los Angeles, demands a substantial income to be considered wealthy.

How do you survive living alone financially? ›

Sticking to your well-planned budget diligently is key, especially in the first few months of living solo. It may take some discipline, but gets easier over time as monitoring your spending becomes a habit. Consider using money management tools and apps to set spending alerts and track where every dollar goes.

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