Hi Everyone. Well, after 15 years the RV-Dreams Community Forum is coming to an end. Since it began in August 2005, we've had 58 Million page views, 124,000 posts, and we've spent about $15,000 to keep this valuable resource for RVers free and open. But since we are now off the road and have settled down for the next chapter of our lives, we are taking the Forum down effective June 30, 2021. It has been a tough decision, but it is now time.
We want to thank all of our members for their participation and input over the years, and we want to especially thank those that have acted as Moderators for us during our amazing journey living and traveling in our RV and growing the RV-Dreams Family. We will be forever proud to have been founders of this Forum and to have been supported by such a wonderful community. Thank you all!!
I am a newbie / lurker, still reading your blog. Yes, I'm one that started at the beginning and I'm up to Spring 2007 I believe. I'm learning a lot everyday.
I would love to either get a copy of your budget spreadsheet or make one of my own if you could explain how you do the categories and such. Do you make one monthly or annually? Is there a way to make a workbook with the months split up and then have the numbers for the month transfer over to the last page with annual totals? Or do I have to do that manually?
I'm fairly proficient with Excel and I use a spreadsheet now for my business and personal budget. I'm just always looking for a way to make it better.
If you know what you are doing and have a little patience in setting up and testing formulas, much can be automated in spreadsheets. In fact, mine could use a little more automation to cut down some of my time at each month end.
I haven't released any financial spreadsheets to anyone at this point for various reasons. But I hope to make some generic templates available in the near future.
To answer your questions, I have a spreadsheet for each month and then I transfer the category totals for that month into another spreadsheet that provides me with a running year-to-date total for the year by category and overall. I currently do the transfer manually, but it can be automated if I would just take the time to set up my monthly spreadsheets properly and do the formulas.
My monthly spreadsheets include entries for every transaction for every day of the month. My columns are "Date", "Description" (Payee and/or nature of the expense), "Expense Type" (Categories using "validation" to create a drop-down list), "Amount", and "Payment Type" (Cash, Check, or Debit Card).
Instead of the "Expense Type" being in a single column with a drop-down list of categories, all of the categories could have their own column. That makes the monthly spreadsheet a lot bigger for viewing and data input, but it makes it easier for totaling categories and transferring those totals automatically to a summary spreadsheet.
I like to keep the data input as simple and compact as possible, so that I don't dread doing it any more than necessary. However, the downside to that is I have to do more manual work at the end of the month. You have me thinking I probably should take some time and revamp my process.
Yes, you can do a workbook where each month is a spreadsheet and then the monthly totals automatically transfer to an annual total spreadsheet. As long as each monthly spreadsheet is laid out exactly the same, it's a fairly easy formula and the "Help" files explain how to do it.
I would love to see your generic template as well, just to get ideas about how to set up one of my own. I'm a document junkie and spreadsheets are among my favorites...
I suspect you didn't notice that this thread is nearly 1 year old (easy to do!)
Go to Howard's home page and click "financial information". You will see the downloads that Howard has made available. I just recently began using them and they are great.
GREAT meeting you and Linda! My question is specific to a line item on your spreadsheet: property taxes. Why do you need to pay property taxes on your RV and truck? Is that a standard expense in most states?
Cheryl
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Cheryl B. in her new RV
(well, not new any more! Full timing since 6/25/14)
2008 DRV MS 36TKBS3 (the CoW: Castle on Wheels), 2005 Ford F550 hauler (the Bull)
Personal property taxes on the value of vehicles exists in some states, including Kentucky where we are domiciled. Therefore, we include it as a line item on the spreadsheets.
However most states where full-timers establish residency do not have personal property taxes.