Personal Finance Pack
Budgeting templates, investment analysis, debt payoff strategies, and financial planning prompts. Get the clarity of a financial advisor without the $200/hour price tag.
One-time purchase. Instant download. No subscription.
Prompt Categories
28 prompts across 4 categories. From daily budgeting to long-term wealth building, every financial goal is covered.
Who This Is For
Sample Prompts from This Pack
Real prompts. Real outputs. See what you're buying.
Create a zero-based monthly budget for someone earning [MONTHLY INCOME] after tax. My fixed expenses are:
- Rent: [AMOUNT]
- Utilities: [AMOUNT]
- Insurance: [AMOUNT]
- Subscriptions: [AMOUNT]
Allocate every remaining dollar using the 50/30/20 framework (needs/wants/savings). But adjust the ratios if my fixed costs don't fit the standard split. Include:
- A realistic grocery and dining budget
- An emergency fund contribution (I currently have [AMOUNT] saved)
- A "fun money" category so I actually stick with it
- Specific dollar amounts, not percentages
Zero-Based Budget — $4,800/month take-home
Fixed Needs (54% — $2,592):
Rent: $1,400 | Utilities: $180 | Car insurance: $142 | Phone: $65 | Subscriptions: $45 | Groceries: $400 | Gas/transport: $160 | Minimum debt payments: $200
Wants (24% — $1,152):
Dining out: $250 | Fun money: $200 | Clothing: $100 | Entertainment: $120 | Personal care: $80 | Gifts: $50 | Buffer (unexpected wants): $352
Savings & Debt (22% — $1,056):
Emergency fund: $400 (you need 3 more months of runway)...
[Continues with savings priorities, adjustment notes, and monthly review checklist...]
Compare the avalanche method vs. snowball method for paying off my debts. Here's what I owe:
- [DEBT 1]: $[BALANCE] at [INTEREST RATE]% — minimum payment $[AMOUNT]
- [DEBT 2]: $[BALANCE] at [INTEREST RATE]% — minimum payment $[AMOUNT]
- [DEBT 3]: $[BALANCE] at [INTEREST RATE]% — minimum payment $[AMOUNT]
I can put an extra $[AMOUNT] per month toward debt. For each method, show me:
- The payoff order
- Total months to debt-free
- Total interest paid
- A month-by-month payment schedule for the first 6 months
Then recommend which method is better for my specific situation and explain why.
Debt Payoff Comparison
Avalanche Method (highest interest first):
Order: Credit card (22.9%) -> Personal loan (11.5%) -> Car loan (5.9%)
Total months: 28 months
Total interest paid: $3,847
Snowball Method (smallest balance first):
Order: Personal loan ($2,100) -> Credit card ($6,400) -> Car loan ($12,300)
Total months: 31 months
Total interest paid: $4,392
My recommendation: Avalanche. You save $545 in interest and finish 3 months sooner...
[Continues with month-by-month schedule and psychological tips for staying on track...]