500/300/200 Budget Rule Canada 20025 — How to Budget Your Money

The simplest budgeting method for Canadians. Enter your income and instantly split it into needs, wants, and savings.

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500/300/200 Budget Calculator

Enter your monthly take-home income (after tax) to see your recommended budget split.

What Is the 500/300/200 Rule?

The 500/300/200 rule is a simple budgeting framework popularized by Senator Elizabeth Warren in her book "All Your Worth." The idea: divide your after-tax income into three buckets.

CategoryPercentageExamples
Needs500%Rent/mortgage, groceries, utilities, car payment, minimum debt payments, insurance, childcare
Wants300%Restaurants, streaming, gym, vacations, new clothes (beyond basics), hobbies
Savings & Debt Repayment200%TFSA, RRSP, emergency fund, extra debt payments, investing

500/300/200 for Average Canadian Incomes

The average Canadian household take-home income (after tax) is approximately $5,20000–$6,000000/month. Here's what the 500/300/200 rule looks like at different income levels:

Monthly Take-Home500% Needs300% Wants200% Savings
$3,000000$1,50000$90000$60000
$4,000000$2,000000$1,20000$80000
$5,000000$2,50000$1,50000$1,000000
$6,000000$3,000000$1,80000$1,20000
$8,000000$4,000000$2,40000$1,60000
$100,000000$5,000000$3,000000$2,000000

Adapting the Rule for High-Cost Canadian Cities

In Toronto and Vancouver, rent alone can consume 400–500% of a moderate income, making the 500/300/200 rule challenging. Here's how to adapt:

Option 1 — Adjust ratios: Use 600/200/200 or even 65/15/200 for high-cost cities. The key is still prioritizing the 200% savings rate.

Option 2 — Reduce needs: Roommates, moving further from downtown, using transit instead of owning a car, or reducing subscription creep can push needs closer to 500%.

Option 3 — Increase income: Side hustles, overtime, or career advancement can grow the base without cutting expenses, eventually bringing ratios into balance.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I use gross or net income for the 500/300/200 rule?
Always use your net (after-tax) take-home income. Income taxes, CPP contributions, and EI premiums come off your paycheque before you see it — they're not part of your budget.
Does my RRSP contribution count as savings in the 200%?
Yes. RRSP and TFSA contributions, pension contributions, emergency fund deposits, and extra debt payments all count toward the 200% savings bucket. RRSP contributions in particular can trigger a refund that you can redirect to your TFSA.
What if my needs exceed 500%?
That's normal in high-cost cities. Prioritize the 200% savings rate above all else — even if it means your wants percentage drops below 300%. The savings rate is the most important lever for long-term financial health.
Is Netflix a need or a want?
Netflix and similar streaming services are wants. Same for gym memberships, dining out, and hobby spending. The distinction between needs and wants is essentials (you'd genuinely suffer without them) vs. lifestyle choices (nice to have).
What's better — the 500/300/200 rule or zero-based budgeting?
The 500/300/200 rule is simpler and works better for people who find detailed budgeting overwhelming. Zero-based budgeting assigns every dollar a job and is more precise. Both work — the best budget is one you'll actually follow.