February No-spend Challenge to Save Money (2024)

I've decided to do monthly goal setting, and this month is a no-spend challenge. Part of Lining Up Ducks is all about helping you reach your goals one small duck at a time, getting them all lined up in a row.

One of the ways to get your financial ducks in a row is to set goals and cut your spending.

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Monthly goals

Our big goal for the year is to get our family paying cash into an RV by the end of the year. In order to make that happen, I needed to plan our monthly goals.

So breaking that big goal into small monthly chunks makes it much easier than just looking at this large number that we're supposed to be tackling by the end of the year.

I've decided that every month, I will set my goals for that month and write them down.

I'm hoping it makes you way more likely to reach your goals if you write them down, and I'm hoping that sharing them and helping you be my accountability partner makes me much more motivated to finish these monthly goals.

For this month, I chose the following goals; feel free to adjust to your own financial needs:

Spend-free February

Okay, so February is the shortest month of the year, and my husband and I decided this would be a perfect month to do a spending freeze. So we are doing a spend-free February, 28 days of no spending.

The rules we have set for ourselves are we are allowed $25 per week for grocery money. Now, we have a reasonably well-stocked fridge and pantry at this point, and it's not something that's usual in our house, but we needed to eat through all of this food. So this was a great time to do it.

We are allowing ourselves $25 a week for perishable grocery items and milk because we still have many kids in the house. That $25 is also if I'm missing one ingredient for a meal, but there won't be any going out and buying all the ingredients. $25 per week, that's it for groceries.

Also, in our spend-free February, I will be making dinner every night. My husband will bring his lunch to work, and we will cut down on our gasoline usage.

Now, we do have to use gasoline to take ourselves to and from work and get the kids to and from school, but for the most part, unless we agree on it together, we will not use any extra gasoline this month.

Hopefully, by the end of the month, we will have a large amount of money left in our cash envelopes that we can then put towards our RV savings.

February No-spend Challenge to Save Money (2)

Tax forms

Do our taxes

The second goal for the month is to do our taxes. I do our taxes every year, and getting those done is one of my top priorities this month because we are probably looking at a refund. I would love to get that money in, get some of our sinking funds fully funded, and put the rest into our RV fund.

Increase income by $1,000

Goal three for the month is to bring a thousand dollars into the house. That won't be easy, considering I have made $58 on my Etsy site. But hey, $58 is better than nothing. This month's goal is a thousand. It sounds like a lofty goal, but let's see if I can hustle and hit it.

House goals

My last two goals for the month revolve around my home. I still have lots of ducks I need to get in a row around my house. I am not the queen of housekeeping by any stretch of the imagination. Somehow, that gene missed me.

My fourth goal for the month will be to do one load of laundry every day. I have been doing laundry once or maybe twice a week, but with six people, it just mounds.

The volume of laundry that comes out of six people and then doing it all in one day is overwhelming. The sorting and putting away seem to be bogging us down, and you would not believe the current mound of laundry I have sitting on my couch waiting for me to sort and fold.

So I decided at church today that I was tired of the mounds of laundry, and my goal for February is one load of laundry every single day.

February No-spend Challenge to Save Money (3)

Coins

My fifth and last goal for the month will help my laundry situation drastically: finishing paring down everyone's clothes in the household. The kids' clothes and my husband's and mine, and getting us into one closet for all our clothes.

We'll have to pare everything down for the RV, so why not go ahead and start now?

We are moving all of my children's clothes into mine, my husband's, and my tiny little closet back here, and that will give us a good idea of the spatial limits of what we should and should not be keeping for our RV journey ahead.

No-spend challenge

So that's it for my no spend challenge, which started with my five goals for February.

Are you doing a no spend challenge? What tips do you have to make it successful? Share in the comments below.

Next, learn these 10 Simple Principles of Money to Help Your Family Budget.

February No-spend Challenge to Save Money (2024)

FAQs

What is the frugal February challenge? ›

This is similar to a spending fast, but instead of stopping all spending, you simply choose one or two categories to cut from your budget for the entire month. This may be entertainment, clothing, or any other category in which you feel like you are consistently overspending.

What is no spend in February? ›

It's basically a day where you don't use your debit card, cash, go to the store, or buy anything online. You spend nothing. And the challenge of February is to have as many of them as you possibly can. Ideally, you'd want to go the entire month without spending anything extra.

What is a no spend month challenge? ›

The "no-spend" challenge has been around for years but gained new life in 2024, thanks to TikTok and No Spend January at the beginning of the year. Participants are encouraged to go on a spending "fast" by abstaining from buying anything but the barest essentials.

What are the rules for the no spend calendar? ›

For the no-spend challenge, you pay for essentials only for a set period of time. Thirty days is pretty common, so you might hear it called a no-spend month too. Basically you're covering your Four Walls (food, utilities, shelter and transportation) and other necessities, but you're saying no to all the extras.

What is the $100 in 30 days challenge? ›

The goal of the Challenge is simple: save $100 in a 30-day time period through a series of gradually increasing deposits. November has 30 days so every day is a savings day. As shown in the picture below, daily savings deposits start at $1 a day for five days followed by $2, $3, and $4 each for five days.

What is a zero spend budget? ›

Zero-based budgeting is when your income minus your expenses equals zero. Perfect name, right? So, if you make $5,000 a month, everything you give, save or spend should add up to $5,000. Every dollar that comes in has a purpose, a job, a goal.

What are the rules for no spend January? ›

That means no new clothes, no going out to restaurants and no coffee runs. “I wanted to stop the bleed,” Kaden, who is currently doing her fifth No Spend January, told CNN. “I needed food on the table and to pay my mortgage but I didn't need all of the things I was buying.”

What is the $5000 challenge? ›

The 100-envelope challenge can make it fun to dedicate more cash to savings. Using envelopes labeled 1 to 100, you could set aside more than $5,000 over 100 days. If you can't afford to stash that much, you could halve the amount of cash you set aside or stretch out the number of days the challenge lasts.

What is the $10000 challenge? ›

"Save $10000 with this 52 Week Savings challenge will help you to meet all of your savings goals. Each week you tick of each amount in order to save the full 10000 in the amount of weeks in a year. Saving can be hard but with this you can make it a fun challenge. Save enough a week to add to the savings pot.

What's the $5 challenge? ›

You simply save every single $5 bill you get. So, whenever you get change you will be hoarding those $5 bills like a chipmunk collecting nuts for winter. You can use a piggy bank or simply make a $5 challenge envelope to keep your cold hard cash in.

What is the $5050 savings challenge? ›

The 100-envelope challenge is pretty straightforward: You take 100 envelopes, number each of them and then save the corresponding dollar amount in each envelope. For instance, you put $1 in “Envelope 1,” $2 in “Envelope 2,” and so on. By the end of 100 days, you'll have saved $5,050.

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