A famous quote by Tony Robbins says, “Complexity is the enemy of execution.” We can all think of an area where this has been true in our lives. Take exercise for example. Everyone has an opinion on the best workout routine. Some experts say cardio, others weight training. Then there’s yoga and cross fit and on and on. Before ever getting started, there’s so much information that many don’t even start. Can the same level of simplicity also allow you to pay off debt or invest without a budget? What if you simply took an approach to pay yourself first?

Humans are really good at making things more complicated than necessary. The book, The One Thing by Gary Keller, tells us to ask ourselves one simple question: “What’s the ONE thing I can do such that by doing it everything else will be easier or unnecessary?” I find myself asking this question in many different aspects of my life, including personal finance.

If you read through most personal finance blogs, many will say that budgeting is an essential part of any financial game plan. I agree that some people need a budget to stay disciplined. With that being said, budgets can be complex for simple-minded people like me. I’d much rather save my brain space for more interesting things than trying to plan out if I need a haircut that month. The below approach explains how you can establish your financial life using the pay yourself first approach to budgeting.

Pay Yourself First Approach to Budgeting

Before starting to dig in, I do want to note that this approach isn’t for everyone. If you are living paycheck-to-paycheck with no savings and a lot of consumer debt, then you may need to start out with a strict budget for awhile. In these types of situations, every dollar matters until you can build up a savings cushion. The pay yourself first approach to budgeting is less precise. With anything less precise, it does leave more room for error. Having at least a few thousand dollars saved up in an emergency fund will allow you to manage unexpected month-to-month spending fluctuations.

When You Don’t Have to Use a Traditional Budget

Throughout our debt payoff journey, we never had a traditional budget. A traditional budget involves writing down your expected expenses every month and tracking it every month. In the Dave Ramsey world this is the way to go. Even without a budget we were able to pay off $200,000 in debt in seven years. Now, I’ll fully admit that if we did have a budget it may have helped us stay more focused. Of course, that would be dependent on if we actually stuck with it.

Knowing our tendencies, there’s a good chance we would have become frustrated with the constricting nature of a budget. I didn’t want to keep receipts, write down every charge, and feel guilty about buying the $5 frozen lemonade when I’m at the zoo with the family. I’m also not sure how good it would have been for our marriage if I was nit-picking every purchase made by my wife (and vice-versa). While I’ll admit there are several excellent budgeting apps available that make this easier, I’m still not sure it would have been the right approach for us.

The Alternative: The “Pay Yourself First” or “Anti-Budget” Method

If you are in a situation where you do have some disposable income to save, invest, or paydown debt, then you can simplify the way you manage your finances every month. When we started, we called this the approach to pay ourselves first. The simple explanation is that before we do anything with our money we save and invest. That money comes right off the top before we do anything else. The remaining money is then used to pay bills, other expenses, and then discretionary purchases. We have been using this approach since 2011. Since then, the best name I’ve heard for this method is the “anti-budget” with credit given to Paula Pant at AffordAnything.com.

Below is a step-by-step approach if you decide to use the Pay Yourself First approach to budgeting:

Step 1: Track Your Spending

Wait, what? Isn’t this just budgeting? Well, kind of. Here’s the thing, you have to set a baseline when you’re starting out. You don’t have to do this forever, but track every dollar you spend for a month or two. Don’t change any behaviors at first. Just write it all down. Having a baseline will allow you to determine the current gap between income and spending so you can develop a plan. You’ll have a sense of how much money, if any, is left over at the end of every month that can be attributed to investing and saving.

Once you get through a couple months of tracking your spending, see if you’ve identified any opportunities where you think you can reduce expenses going forward. Maybe there is a gym membership that you’ve been paying for years, Hulu Plus subscription you rarely watch, or you’ve realized how much money is going to restaurants every month. Do whatever you can to attribute at least some dollars to investing and saving once you get your anti-budget started.

Step 2: Automate Your Monthly Payments

Now that you’ve tracked spending for a couple months and determined about how much you can invest and save in a given month, it’s time to set up your automated payments. This will be the key to success if you use this approach. You won’t get this perfect at first but the key is to get started.

The key to this step is to pull money immediately out of your primary checking account and move it to a savings or brokerage account. I’m going to assume you get paid by direct deposit on some type of regular interval. This could be monthly, bi-weekly, twice a month, or maybe whenever you receive an invoice if self employed. The more stable your income is every month, the better this approach will work.

Automating your finances allows you to essentially hide money from yourself. As silly as it may sound, the psychology of this is powerful. If you never see money in your account, you won’t find reasons to spend it. This approach also helps with lifestyle inflation. If you get a raise, you don’t ever have to let that money hit your account. Have it go straight to investments, savings, or debt paydown.

There are a few ways that you can get started with automating your finances. First, check if your employer will allow you to deposit money directly into a different account. Many employers will allow you to send as much or as little money to several different accounts. You could have one as your primary checking, one to a savings account, and one to a college savings account.

After paying yourself first, it’s now time to automate your bills. I know there are a lot of them. Heating, cooling, water, sewer, insurance, phone, internet, daycare, groceries, credit cards, student loans, mortgage, gasoline and on and on and on. Where you can, automate payments to immediately pay bills as soon as money hits your checking account. This may take a few months to sort out when getting started.

For bills that don’t clearly fall on the date you get paid, you can hold back and wait until the next pay day to make the payment. For expenses that don’t have a clear pay date such as groceries, consider taking the money out of your account immediately and putting it in an envelope.

The key here is to get any regular expenses out of your bank account as soon as possible.

Step 3: Spend the rest

Many individuals do not have the luxury of saving/investing, paying bills, and then having extra spending money. This method is going to require that you have a gap in your income and spending. When you first start out, you may not have much if anything in the “saving/investing” or “spend the rest” category. However, as you pay down debt, reduce expenses, or increase your income you will start to widen the gap between income and expenses.

As our family’s income has increased, we have put 80-90 percent towards out debt payments and 10-20 percent towards “spending the rest” (otherwise known as lifestyle inflation). To build wealth, you have to continually look for opportunities to save more than you earn and eventually invest the difference.

This gives us the freedom to spend the remaining money on whatever we want, guilt free. After a few days of getting paid, we usually know exactly how much we have left to spend on everything else including outings with the kids, trips to the hardware store, convenient store purchases, and a variety of other smaller purchases. In many people’s budgets this is referred to as fun money; we’re just getting to the number in a different way.

This inexact approach can sometimes lead to inexact results. This is where an emergency fund or savings cushion comes into play. Again, if you don’t have a buffer then you’ll need a detailed budget for a while.

Paying Off Debt Without a Budget

We used the pay yourself first or anti-budget approach over the last seven years to pay off all our debt, including the mortgage. I’m not suggesting that this approach will work for everyone. In fact, given the depressing statistics regarding the number of individuals who live paycheck-to-paycheck, this approach may not work for most.

However, for others, simplicity may keep you in the game for longer. If you are struggling with the complexity of a budget, consider paying yourself first and then automating your bills and other expenses. We realized early that budgeting wasn’t for us. It felt too constricting and we didn’t want to feel guilty every time we decided to go out to eat, got a haircut, or made a small impulse purchase. As long as we have money in our account after paying ourselves and expenses, we should be able to spend the rest guilt free even without a budget.

Thanks for reading! If you have thoughts on the anti-budget or pay yourself first approach to budgeting share below in the comments.