1.
Divide your income into three categories
2.
A spending plan based on income and expenses
3.
Using envelopes to budget
4.
The amount of money needed to cover basic expenses
5.
An expense that can be subtracted from a taxpayer's gross income in order to reduce the amount of income that is subject to taxation
6.
An excess of expenditure or liabilities over income or assets in a given period
7.
A sum of money that a buyer pays in the early stages of purchasing an expensive good or service
8.
Cost the same amount each month
9.
The cost required for something; the money spent on something
10.
An individual who earns money on a per-job or per-task basis, usually for short-term work as an independent contractor
11.
Labor marker for free-lancers
12.
An individual's total earnings throughout a given period before any deductions are made
13.
Your daily expenses and your short-term spending. (ex. groceries, gas, car payments, rent, mortage payments ect.)
14.
Expenses that you can comfortably live without and is not essential for survival
15.
Take-home pay or the amount employees earn after all payroll deductions are subtracted from their gross pay
16.
Pay your own savings and investment accounts before spending anymore
17.
Protects your personal property in a rented apartment, condo or home from unexpected circumstances
18.
A legal, binding contract outlining the terms under which one party agrees to rent property owned by another party
19.
A fixed regular payment, typically paid on a monthly or biweekly basis but often expressed as an annual sum, made by an employer to an employee
20.
The amount of an asset or resource that exceeds the portion that's actively utilized. A surplus can refer to a host of different items, including income, profits, capital, and goods
21.
Price The price at which a single quantity of a product is being sold. This can refer to the price per unit of measure, such as the price per pound, ounce, or pint
22.
The usefulness or enjoyment a consumer can get from a service or good
23.
The remuneration paid to an employee, usually on an hourly, daily, or piece rate basis
24.
Measures the value of all the assets of worth owned by a person, community, company, or country
25.
A budgeting technique in which all expenses must be justified for a new period or year starting from zero, versus starting with the previous budget and adjusting it as needed
26.
A repayment of funds from the original payee to the original payer
27.
The opposite of fixed expenses