Always have money for annual costs with 'personal escrow' account
Every year in July, my bank account suddenly goes wonky as a few annual fees hit it. (One, for hosting a web site, and the other for Amazon Prime membership.) I'm barely able to recover before I'm charged my water bill (about $250 every three months) and have to pony up my portion of the Hood-to-Coast costs (my team of mamas and papas and I run a race, and vacation at the beach afterwards, every August). What a great way to spend my summer, juggling bills.Next summer I have a better way thanks to the brilliant concept of the "personal escrow account." Much like a mortgage escrow account -- in which the bank collects a few hundred dollars a month in order to pay the annual costs of property insurance and taxes -- to run a personal escrow account, you'd estimate the annual or semi-annual bills you pay, divide them into a monthly amount, which you'd then set aside each month. Charlotte, who wrote to the excellent personal finance blog Get Rich Slowly, keeps her money in a separate bank account in order to keep it "safe" from her other expenses.
For me, here's how this would work. I'd take my annual and semi-annual costs, such as:
- Hood-to-Coast entrance fee and my portion of gas, food and beach house: $250
- Web site hosting: $160
- Amazon Prime membership: $79
- Water/sewer bill ($225 every three months): $900
- Wall Street Journal subscription: $119
- Other subscriptions: $60
- Annual fees for children's activities: $250
- Annual donations: $600
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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
7-10-2008 @ 1:38PM
shawnna said...
I've been doing this since January. It's worked out well. My cat needed to go to the vet, and the $100 didn't blow my budget for the month.
I take this a few steps further, however, and I have 4 separate savings accounts. I budget my next year's Christmas and save for it during the year preceding it. Also, I anticipate my 1.5 year old car will at some point need service, so I put a little money aside for that. Turns out, I've been riding my bike a lot more, and my bike needed a new tire, so I used the money in my 'car' fund to purchase the replacement.
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