We want to be transparent about how we are compensated. Some links in articles are from our sponsors. Learn more about how we make money.

Want to change your money mindset? Try a no-spend month.

A no-spend month is exactly what it sounds like. You pick a month and decide you simply won’t spend any money until the month is over. How drastic you are with the concept is up to you. You’re not expected to starve or default on your utility bills. You are expected to avoid all unnecessary spending, and be fairly strict with yourself over what you define as necessary. Does it have to be a month? Not necessarily. You can do a 7 day no-spend challenge, or a 100-day no-spend challenge. Some people take it further, complete a no-spend year, and write a book about it.

Obviously you will have to buy food and other depletable items such as personal care products and cleaning products, but it can be helpful to set boundaries around this too. Many people decide that they will only buy food when they’ve eaten everything already in their fridge and store cupboard, or that they’ll only buy personal care or beauty products if they run out of something specific (and don’t have anything else on their shelf that can function as a perfectly good alternative).

In the spirit of the no-spend challenge, you should probably agree not to eat out or spend on entertainment, although you can of course make exceptions for previously planned social events so as to not let other people down. So that covers how to do a no-spend challenge. But why would you want to?

You’ll save money

Perhaps the most obvious benefit of a no-spend month is that you’ll save money. Potentially quite a lot of money. A no-spend month isn’t a replacement for tracking your spending and setting a proper budget, but it is one way to see just how much of your spending is ‘discretionary’ which roughly translated means unnecessary.

If you lack motivation or enthusiasm for this no-spend idea, make a plan for what to do with the money you save. You might want to pay off debt, build up investments, or save toward something important to you that there just isn’t room for in your current budget.

You’ll eliminate impulse spending

As we’ve discussed here at Wealthtender before, impulse spending carries a lifetime price tag of over $300,000 for the average American. If you’re not spending, you’re not impulse spending, and you may even start to reset your brain as you realize you don’t really miss the buzz of those ‘fun’ impulse buys at all.

You might lower your stress

Spending impulsively sounds like a fun thing to do, but in reality, decisions are stressful. Many of us make dozens of decisions a day about whether to spend or not spend, and use precious energy debating with ourselves, justifying purchases, or trying to employ willpower to resist the impulse to spend. Removing the option to spend can be surprisingly freeing. You simply don’t have any extra decisions to make in that area of your life. The decision is already made. You’re not spending this month.

You’ll become more resourceful

Depending on how strict you are with yourself, you may find yourself trying new recipes, making things from scratch, or reusing, repurposing and upcycling what you already have. All these things can deliver a hefty dose of self-accomplishment, not to mention being more environmentally sustainable than hitting the mall.

You’ll use what you have

A no-spend month is a great time to re-organize your home and take stock of what you have. In Western countries many of us have store cupboards, medicine cabinets, and random drawers full of depletable products we don’t use and eventually throw out. Learning to be less wasteful is another mini mindset reset that can actually make us feel better about ourselves and our choices.

You’ll rediscover that (some of) the best things in life are free

A no-spend month can make you get creative with how you use your time. Many people report that it forces them to do things with their time that they’d forgotten they even enjoyed, like playing games with their kids, taking long walks in nature, and re-connecting with their significant other. Once your entertainment budget is on hold, you’ll discover (or rediscover) that some of the things you enjoy doing really are free, and some of them may even improve your health, happiness, and relationships.

And the drawback?

A no-spend month is a great challenge, but it’s tempting to see it as just that. A challenge. A short-term experiment. You may go back to your normal spending patterns the day it finishes. You may even find you spend more money immediately after a no-spend month, as you ‘make up’ for the deprivation you’ve been feeling.

A no-spend month can be an interesting way to focus attention on how much of your day-to-day spending is unnecessary, wasteful, and even stressful. But ultimately most of us living in consumer-oriented societies need a more permanent solution. I’ll be honest. I’d no longer get any benefit from a no-spend month, because I’ve finally reached a point in my life where I practice considered, mindful, spending almost all the time. Yes, I said ‘almost’. None of us are perfect.

If you’re considering a no-spend challenge, try to look at it as a chance to implement a total reset on your money mindset, attitudes and spending patterns. Don’t end the month and go straight back to your pre-challenge spending habits. Leverage the fact that you now know you don’t need to buy as much stuff as you thought you did. Switch from ‘no spending’ to ‘mindful spending’. Stop, consider and assess before pulling your wallet out. Make your no-spend month a stepping stone to a lifetime of smart, considered choices when it comes to how you spend your money.