A budget spreadsheet is the free, zero-subscription alternative to budgeting apps. With Google Sheets or Excel, you get full control over your categories, no data sharing with third parties, and no monthly fees. Here are the best templates for Canadians in 2025 — and how to build your own if you prefer.
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Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYAGeneric budget templates from US personal finance sites often miss Canadian-specific elements. A good Canadian budget spreadsheet should include:
Google Sheets has a built-in monthly budget template (File > New > From template). It's basic but functional. The key advantage: it's free, cloud-synced, and shareable with a partner in real time. Customize the categories to add RRSP/TFSA lines.
Best for: People starting their first budget who want zero setup time.
Excel's template gallery includes monthly budget, annual budget, and personal expense tracker templates. If you have Microsoft 365 (common for Canadians through employers or students), Excel offers more powerful formulas and pivot tables for deeper analysis.
Best for: Data-oriented people who want charts and analysis.
Many Canadians find the most useful spreadsheet is one they build themselves over a weekend. Sheet 1: monthly budget with income and expense categories. Sheet 2: yearly overview tracking actual vs. budgeted by month. Add RRSP room and TFSA room as tracked fields.
Best for: Control-oriented people who want exactly what they need.
| Category | Subcategories |
|---|---|
| Income | Net employment, freelance, government benefits, investment income |
| Housing | Rent/mortgage, property tax, insurance, maintenance, utilities |
| Transportation | Car payment, insurance, gas, maintenance, transit pass |
| Food | Groceries, restaurants, coffee shops |
| Personal | Clothing, haircuts, gym, personal care |
| Health | Prescriptions, dental, glasses, therapy |
| Entertainment | Streaming, events, hobbies, travel |
| Savings | RRSP, TFSA, FHSA, emergency fund |
| Debt | Credit card, student loan, line of credit |
| Irregular | Gifts, car repairs, annual fees, subscriptions |
The downside of a manual spreadsheet is the same as any manual system — you have to actually use it. Most Canadians start strong in January and abandon their spreadsheet by March. Tips to stay consistent:
Neither is universally better — it depends on your habits. Spreadsheets give you more control and cost nothing. Apps automate the tracking burden but cost money and require connecting to your bank. KOHO is the exception: it's a bank account with automatic tracking built in, making it the closest thing to a free app that doesn't require connecting to a third party.
A Canadian budget spreadsheet is a powerful free tool when used consistently. Start with Google Sheets, adapt the categories for Canadian accounts (RRSP, TFSA, FHSA), and review it every week. Pair it with KOHO as your spending account for semi-automatic tracking without a separate app subscription.