When your income swings month to month, the secret is to stop budgeting against what you hope to earn and start budgeting against what you reliably do earn. Begin by tracking your last 6–12 months of deposits and identify your lowest realistic month — that floor becomes your baseline budget that covers all essentials (rent, food, utilities, minimum debt payments). Pay yourself a fixed 'salary' from a buffer account each month rather than spending whatever lands in your account, so a $9,000 month and a $2,000 month feel the same to your daily life. In strong months, route the surplus into three buckets in order: a one-month emergency buffer, then taxes (set aside 25–30% since no employer withholds for you), then sinking funds for irregular costs like software renewals or quarterly bills. Review and 'true up' once a month, moving money from your buffer only when actual income falls short of your baseline. A ready-made variable income template makes this effortless — it automatically calculates your baseline, splits surplus into the right buckets, and flags your tax set-aside, so you can keep your finances steady without rebuilding a spreadsheet every time a payment clears.
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