Close X
Thursday, October 31, 2024
ADVT 
Wealth & Finance

10 tips for becoming financially independent

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Aug, 2022 11:44 AM
  • 10 tips for becoming financially independent

What does it mean to be independent financially? It goes beyond just being able to cover your essential living needs like rent, food, utilities, and medical care. Saving money, protecting it against inflation and wasteful spending, and building up your capital over time are all important components of financial independence. Your personal financial system should be able to support you even if your primary source of income declines or vanishes altogether.

OctaFX offers its top 10 advice for achieving financial independence. Keep in mind that the advice will only be effective if you make it a habit to use it. Though time and effort are required, it is worthwhile.

Track your spending

Start by learning your financial inflow and outflow. It might be hard to keep your daily purchases in your head or on a piece of paper, so if your banking app does not do that automatically, install one of the expense tracker apps.

Come up with a realistic budget

Next, craft a realistic budget that fits your lifestyle. Doing so is not about cutting back on spending: if you are accustomed to having coffee every morning, cutting it out from the budget won't work. Instead, try to plan ahead what you are going to spend your money on.

Create an emergency fund

Creating an emergency fund will help you deal with unforeseen circumstances without borrowing money with interest or selling your things to get out of the situation urgently. Putting aside 1 USD a day will give 30 USD more to your account at the end of the month.

Pay your bills on time

Tracking your monthly bills is actually a part of your budgeting plan. Paying your bills on time is an easy way to manage your spending and avoid fees.

Get rid of unnecessary recurring charges

If you have ever signed up for a free trial to a streaming service, you might have recurring charges you have forgotten about. Check your credit card statements and ensure you don't pay for something you can live without. Unsubscribe and put that money aside for your emergency fund!

Pay cash for expensive things (most of them)

Loans help you with major life purchases like a house or a car. For other big purchases, say a 65" TV, cash is often the best way to go as it saves you the monthly interest payment you would otherwise have to pay.

Use credit cards wisely

Most credit cards nowadays come with a free annual fee, and promotional offers could sometimes be beneficial. However, be sure your repayments are on time, keep your credit card limit for tight situations, and repay purchases within a month to avoid additional fees.

Diversify your savings

To protect your savings from inflation and other negative market factors, try diversifying them with different currencies, precious metals, and real estate income (earned from renting out a property). This will make your portfolio more resilient.

Start saving for retirement

Regardless of your age, start saving for old age-the younger you are, the more you will get. Set up a separate fund or term deposit to ensure you don't access the funds for purposes other than savings.

Create an investment strategy

Choose wisely. There are many forms of investment: some are more easily accessible, while others are more complex. However, even a small contribution to your investment is a potential for additional income and financial independence.

Let's say it again: the tips above will help you create a more independent personal financial system only if adhered to daily. Being independent is not a hobby-it's a lifestyle.

MORE Wealth & Finance ARTICLES

Millennial Money: Is it OK to never have a credit card?

Millennial Money: Is it OK to never have a credit card?
Thanks to quick online applications and, in some cases, instant approval, credit cards make it as easy to build your credit history as it is to make purchases. But they can also make it easy to fall into debt if you struggle to pay on time or tend to spend more than you have.

Millennial Money: Is it OK to never have a credit card?

Liz Weston: Probate workarounds can save heirs time, money

Liz Weston: Probate workarounds can save heirs time, money
A reader recently reached out after his elderly mother died, asking how soon he could distribute the $10,000 she had earmarked in her will for each of her two grandchildren.

Liz Weston: Probate workarounds can save heirs time, money

Millennials and boomers: Pandemic pain, by the generation

Millennials and boomers: Pandemic pain, by the generation
Millennials, you're taking a big hit — again. And you're not OK, either, boomers. Sometimes at odds, America's two largest generations now have something to agree on: The coronavirus pandemic has smacked many of them at a pivotal time in their lives.

Millennials and boomers: Pandemic pain, by the generation

Indian Businessman Mukesh Ambani becomes richest person in the world at the number 7 spot leaving Warren Buffet behind

Indian Businessman Mukesh Ambani becomes richest person in the world at the number 7 spot leaving Warren Buffet behind
The Chairman of Reliance Industries and the wealthiest industrialist in India Mukesh Ambani has now reached the seventh spot as the richest man in the world. He has left Berkshire Hathaway’s Warren Buffett, Google’s Larry Page , and Serge Brin.

Indian Businessman Mukesh Ambani becomes richest person in the world at the number 7 spot leaving Warren Buffet behind

Millennial Money: Lessons learned while sheltering at home

Millennial Money: Lessons learned while sheltering at home
Shelter in place. Lockdown. Quarantine. Whatever you call it, it’s been a few months since the COVID-19 pandemic taught us what staying home for an extended period of time actually looks and feels like.

Millennial Money: Lessons learned while sheltering at home

Second wave of virus closures wallops California restaurants

Second wave of virus closures wallops California restaurants
Homayoun Dariyani was training servers and cooks for his soon-to-open gourmet hamburger grill in March when California abruptly shut down dine-in restaurants to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

Second wave of virus closures wallops California restaurants