Savings Rate Calculator
Your savings rate is the percent of your income you keep (instead of spend). This simple calculator helps you see the trade-off between spending, saving, and long-term goals.
Savings rate = (Income − Spending) ÷ Income. Use take-home income for the most realistic “budget view.”
Savings Rate FAQs
What is a savings rate?
Your savings rate is the percentage of income you don’t spend. In this calculator, it’s calculated as (income − spending) ÷ income. It’s a simple way to measure how much of your monthly cash flow you’re keeping for goals like an emergency fund, investing, or debt payoff.
Should I use gross income or take-home income?
For a practical budget view, use take-home income (after taxes and payroll deductions) because it reflects the money you can actually allocate. Some people also calculate a “gross savings rate,” but it’s less useful for month-to-month planning.
What should I include in spending?
Include essentials and discretionary spending: housing, utilities, groceries, transportation, insurance, subscriptions, dining out, and entertainment. Exclude transfers to savings/investing accounts so you don’t count savings as spending.
What if my savings rate is negative?
A negative savings rate means spending is higher than income for the month. That can happen because of irregular bills, one-time purchases, or relying on credit. If this repeats, look for expense cuts, income increases, or a plan to reduce reliance on debt.
What’s a “good” savings rate?
There isn’t one perfect number—goals and costs vary—but many people aim for steady progress (even 5–10%), then build toward higher rates over time. The best savings rate is one you can maintain while still covering essentials and meeting your priorities.
Educational use only. Estimates are simplified and don’t include irregular bills, debt interest, or taxes.
If you’re new, a helpful first milestone is 5%, then 10%, then 15%+ over time. Even small improvements matter because consistency beats perfection.
Educational use only. This is simplified math and not financial advice.