I don't know about you, but I feel like the end of 2019 really snuck up on me. I set some financial goals for 2019, so let's see how I did.
For 2019, I made sure that I had SMART goals:
- Specific
- Measurable
- Achievable
- Relevant
- Time-bound
I wrote about it last year, and you can read more details at the link. This year, I set three SMART financial goals.
Goal 1 - Pay off my car loan
My first goal for 2019 was to pay off my car loan. I still had a few years left on it, but I just didn't like having the debt hanging over me. The interest rate wasn't bad, but I had bigger things I wanted to do with that money, so from the day I got the loan, I had been paying more than the minimum in order to pay it off. To pay it off in 2019, I knew that I needed to increase my payments and also apply any bonus money received towards the loan.
I met this goal in the first half of the year, earlier than anticipated. I found that after years of being very against acquiring debt, having a car loan was more stressful than I realized it would be. While I'm not bothered by my mortgage, seeing that car loan come due every month always felt painful, so it was worth it to me to get it paid off.
Goal 2 - Get to Rule 4
My second goal had to do with the You Need a Budget (YNAB) rules. Rule 4 is that you live completely on last month's income. That way, you always have padding in your bank account if you need it and you don't have to worry if you end up with more or less income one month.
This year, I got to Rule 4. I started the year quite far away - I was about one paycheck ahead, and wanted to be two paychecks ahead. By October, I made it to Rule 4. I was completely living on last month's income. Unfortunately, I didn't stay there. I didn't budget enough for Christmas gifts and upcoming travel, so I've had to dip into my December paychecks for my December expenses. It's not bad, by any means. But I have some big travel planned for 2020, so I'm going to need to tighten the purse strings and get back to Rule 4 as quickly as possible.
Over all, I'm pretty pleased. December is the month of some big expenses, including my property tax payment, so I'm happy where I ended up.
Goal 3 - Increase Savings by $5000
I completely failed on this one. I did not manage to increase my savings at all. I also didn't take money out of my savings, even with my bike crash and subsequent medical expenses. The goal here was to have money available for my upcoming trip. So I've got some significant work to do. I'm working on increasing my income streams right now, got a promotion at work, and will be taking on a temporary promotion as well this year, so I have a lot of opportunities to increase my savings.
I realize now that one mistake I made here was not prioritizing this goal. I didn't check in on my goals and just assumed they would happen if I did everything right. Clearly, that's not how goal setting should work. I needed to remind myself of this goal and keep pushing towards it. Even if I hadn't managed to hit the $5k goal, I still would be ahead.
I'm still working on my 2020 goals. Did you set financial goals for 2019? How did they go? Are you going to join me for 2020?