Italy
Italy 50/30/20 budget calculator
The 50/30/20 rule is a quick way to give every pound, dollar or euro of your take-home pay a job before the month runs away with it. Half goes to needs, the things you have to pay for. Three tenths goes to wants, the things that make life enjoyable. The last fifth goes to savings and clearing debt faster than the minimum. Enter your monthly take-home pay and this splits it into those three pots in seconds, then shows what the savings slice adds up to over a year. If your cost of living is high, or money is tight, you can switch to a 60/20/20 or 70/20/10 split and watch the figures change.
Needs are the bills you cannot skip: rent or mortgage, food, utilities, transport, minimum debt payments. Wants are everything optional. The last slice clears debt faster or builds savings. Use your take-home pay, the amount that actually reaches your account.
How it works
- Enter your monthly take-home pay, the amount that actually lands in your account after tax and contributions.
- Pick a rule: 50/30/20 is the balanced default, 60/20/20 suits higher fixed costs, and 70/20/10 fits a tight month.
- The tool multiplies your pay by each share to give a needs budget, a wants budget and a savings budget.
- It also shows what the savings slice builds up to across a full year, so the habit has a visible payoff.
needs = pay x 50%, wants = pay x 30%, savings = pay x 20% (or your chosen split)
The rule divides your take-home pay by three fixed percentages that always add up to 100. Needs are the non-negotiables: housing, food, utilities, transport to work and the minimum payments on any debt. Wants are everything you choose: eating out, subscriptions, hobbies, holidays. The final share is for building savings and overpaying debt beyond the minimum. Because the splits are percentages, the budget scales with your income and you do not have to rebuild it every time your pay changes.
- pay
- monthly take-home pay after tax
- 50%
- share for needs (essential bills)
- 30%
- share for wants (optional spending)
- 20%
- share for savings and extra debt repayment
What counts where
| Needs | 50% | rent, food, utilities, transport, minimum debt |
| Wants | 30% | dining out, hobbies, subscriptions |
| Savings and debt | 20% | emergency fund, pension, extra repayments |
| Common alternative | 60/20/20 | where housing eats more of the budget |
Worked example
On 3,000 a month of take-home pay with the 50/30/20 rule: 1,500 goes to needs, 900 to wants, and 600 to savings and extra debt payments. That last pot adds up to 7,200 over a year, which is most of the way to a six-month emergency fund for many households.
Key facts
- The rule was set out by Elizabeth Warren and her daughter Amelia Warren Tyagi in their 2005 book All Your Worth.
- It works on take-home pay, not gross salary, because that is the money you actually control.
- The 20 percent savings slice covers both building savings and paying down debt faster than the minimum.
- It is a guide, not a law; the value is in giving every part of your pay a purpose.
Tips
- If needs come to more than half your pay, trim wants before raising the needs share, or look at the biggest fixed cost, usually housing.
- Automate the savings slice on payday so it leaves before you can spend it.
- Review the split whenever your rent, pay or debts change, since the right shares shift with your life.
- Count the employer-matched part of a pension toward the savings goal, since it is real money put aside for you.
Frequently asked questions
Should I use gross or take-home pay?+
Take-home pay, the amount that reaches your account after income tax and contributions. The rule is about the money you can actually direct, so using gross pay would overstate every pot.
What if my needs are more than 50 percent?+
That is common, especially where rent is high. Treat 50 percent as a target to work toward. In the meantime, fund needs first, then split what is left between wants and savings as best you can.
Do pension contributions count as savings?+
Yes. Money going into a pension, including any employer match, is part of the savings and investing slice. Just be sure you are also keeping some accessible savings for emergencies.
Is 50/30/20 better than other budgets?+
It is popular because it is easy to remember and flexible. Detailed line-by-line budgets can be more precise, but many people stick with the percentage rule because it takes minutes, not hours.
What goes in needs versus wants?+
Needs are costs you cannot avoid without real consequences: housing, basic food, utilities, commuting, minimum debt payments. Wants are the upgrades and extras. A basic phone plan is a need; the top-tier plan is partly a want.
Things to watch
- On a low income the needs share alone can exceed 50 percent, and that is a budgeting reality, not a failure of the plan.
- High-interest debt should usually be cleared before stretching the wants pot, since the interest outruns most savings.
- The rule does not set how much to keep for emergencies or retirement; use it alongside dedicated goals for those.
Last updated: 2026
This is an estimate for general guidance, not financial, tax, legal or medical advice. Figures can change and individual circumstances vary. Always confirm with the official sources listed before making decisions.
Reviewed by Vikas Dulgunde.