afrexai-personal-finance

Complete personal finance system — budgeting, debt payoff, investing, tax optimization, net worth tracking, and financial independence planning. Use when managing money, building wealth, paying off debt, planning retirement, or optimizing taxes. Zero dependencies.

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Install skill "afrexai-personal-finance" with this command: npx skills add aaaaqwq/claude-code-skills/aaaaqwq-claude-code-skills-afrexai-personal-finance

Personal Finance Mastery

Complete personal finance system covering budgeting, debt elimination, investing, tax optimization, insurance, estate planning, and financial independence. Works for any income level, any country.


Quick Financial Health Check

Run /finance-check to score current financial health:

SignalHealthyWarningCritical
Emergency fund3-6 months expenses1-3 months< 1 month
Savings rate> 20%10-20%< 10%
Debt-to-income< 36%36-50%> 50%
Housing cost< 28% of gross28-35%> 35%
Net worth trendGrowing quarterlyFlatDeclining
Insurance coverageAll critical coveredGaps existMajor gaps
Investment allocationAge-appropriateSlightly offWay off
Tax optimizationUsing all vehiclesSome unusedNone used

Score: /16. Below 10 = immediate action needed.


Phase 1: Financial Snapshot

Net Worth Statement

net_worth:
  date: "YYYY-MM-DD"
  assets:
    liquid:
      checking: 0
      savings: 0
      money_market: 0
    investments:
      retirement_401k: 0
      retirement_ira: 0
      brokerage: 0
      hsa: 0
      crypto: 0
    property:
      home_value: 0
      vehicles: 0
      other: 0
  liabilities:
    mortgage: 0
    student_loans: 0
    auto_loans: 0
    credit_cards: 0
    personal_loans: 0
    other_debt: 0
  net_worth: 0  # assets - liabilities
  monthly_income_gross: 0
  monthly_income_net: 0
  monthly_expenses: 0
  savings_rate: 0  # (income_net - expenses) / income_net
  debt_to_income: 0  # total_debt_payments / gross_income

Income Inventory

Document ALL income sources:

SourceTypeMonthly AmountStabilityGrowth Potential
Primary jobW-2/salaryHighModerate
Side business1099/self-empVariableHigh
InvestmentsDividends/interestModerateModerate
Rental incomePassiveModerateModerate
Other

Monthly Cash Flow Map

INCOME (net take-home)
├── Fixed Expenses (needs) — target: ≤50%
│   ├── Housing (rent/mortgage + insurance + tax)
│   ├── Utilities (electric, water, gas, internet, phone)
│   ├── Transportation (car payment, insurance, fuel, transit)
│   ├── Insurance (health, life, disability)
│   ├── Minimum debt payments
│   └── Groceries (baseline)
├── Financial Goals (savings/investing) — target: ≥20%
│   ├── Emergency fund
│   ├── Retirement contributions
│   ├── Investment contributions
│   ├── Debt extra payments
│   └── Specific savings goals
└── Lifestyle (wants) — target: ≤30%
    ├── Dining out
    ├── Entertainment/subscriptions
    ├── Shopping/clothing
    ├── Travel
    ├── Hobbies
    └── Personal care

This is the 50/30/20 framework — adjust ratios to your situation but track against these benchmarks.


Phase 2: Emergency Fund

Priority #1 — Before Investing

StageTargetTimelineWhere to Keep
Starter$1,000 (or 1 month)1-3 monthsHigh-yield savings
Basic3 months expenses3-6 monthsHigh-yield savings
Full6 months expenses6-12 monthsHYSA + money market
Enhanced12 months expensesOptionalHYSA + I-bonds + money market

When to Use Emergency Fund

YES — True emergencies:

  • Job loss
  • Medical emergency
  • Essential home/car repair
  • Urgent family situation

NO — Not emergencies:

  • Vacations
  • Sales/deals
  • Predictable expenses (insurance premiums, taxes)
  • Lifestyle upgrades

Replenishment Rules

  • After any withdrawal, replenish becomes priority #1
  • Redirect all non-essential spending until restored
  • Set automatic transfer to rebuild over 3-6 months

Phase 3: Debt Elimination

Debt Inventory

debt_inventory:
  - name: "Credit Card A"
    balance: 0
    interest_rate: 0
    minimum_payment: 0
    type: "revolving"
    tax_deductible: false
  - name: "Student Loan"
    balance: 0
    interest_rate: 0
    minimum_payment: 0
    type: "installment"
    tax_deductible: true

Strategy Selection

MethodHow It WorksBest ForPsychology
AvalanchePay highest interest firstMathematically optimal, saves most moneyDisciplined people
SnowballPay smallest balance firstFastest "wins", builds momentumNeed motivation
HybridPay any debt < $500 first, then avalancheQuick wins + math optimizationMost people

Debt Priority Order

  1. Payday loans / title loans (300%+ APR) — eliminate immediately, even if it means selling things
  2. Credit cards (15-30% APR) — aggressive payoff
  3. Personal loans (8-15% APR) — steady payoff
  4. Auto loans (4-8% APR) — pay minimum unless rate > 6%
  5. Student loans (3-7% APR) — pay minimum, invest the difference if rate < 5%
  6. Mortgage (3-7% APR) — usually don't accelerate, invest instead

The Crossover Rule

If debt interest rate > expected investment return (historically ~7-10% stocks): → Pay off debt first

If debt interest rate < expected investment return: → Pay minimum on debt, invest the difference

Grey zone (4-7%): → Split extra money 50/50 between debt payoff and investing

Debt Payoff Accelerators

  1. Balance transfer — 0% APR cards (watch transfer fees, 3-5%)
  2. Refinance — lower rate on student loans, mortgage, auto
  3. Consolidation — single payment, potentially lower rate
  4. Income boost — side income dedicated 100% to debt
  5. Expense audit — cancel subscriptions, negotiate bills
  6. Sell assets — unused items → debt payoff

Credit Score Management

FactorWeightHow to Optimize
Payment history35%Never miss a payment — automate minimums
Credit utilization30%Keep below 30%, ideally below 10%
Length of history15%Don't close old cards
Credit mix10%Installment + revolving is good
New credit10%Limit hard inquiries

Phase 4: Budgeting System

Budget Template

monthly_budget:
  month: "YYYY-MM"
  income:
    salary_net: 0
    side_income: 0
    other: 0
    total: 0
  
  fixed_expenses:  # ≤50% of income
    housing: 0
    utilities: 0
    transportation: 0
    insurance: 0
    debt_minimums: 0
    groceries: 0
    childcare: 0
    subscriptions_essential: 0
    subtotal: 0
    percent_of_income: 0
  
  financial_goals:  # ≥20% of income
    emergency_fund: 0
    retirement: 0
    investments: 0
    debt_extra: 0
    savings_goals: 0
    subtotal: 0
    percent_of_income: 0
  
  lifestyle:  # ≤30% of income
    dining_out: 0
    entertainment: 0
    shopping: 0
    travel_fund: 0
    hobbies: 0
    personal_care: 0
    gifts: 0
    subscriptions_fun: 0
    subtotal: 0
    percent_of_income: 0
  
  variance: 0  # income - all expenses (should be ≥ 0)

Expense Tracking Methods

MethodEffortBest For
Envelope systemHighCash-heavy, needs discipline
App tracking (YNAB, Mint)LowTech-savvy, automated
SpreadsheetMediumControl-oriented, custom
Agent-trackedLowLet AI categorize + alert
Reverse budgetingLowestAuto-transfer savings first, spend rest

Reverse Budgeting (Recommended)

The simplest effective system:

  1. Day 1 of month: Auto-transfer savings/investment target to separate accounts
  2. Day 1 of month: Auto-pay all fixed bills
  3. Remaining: Spend freely — guilt-free because goals are already funded
  4. Monthly: Review if remaining amount felt tight or generous → adjust

Subscription Audit

Run quarterly:

  • List every recurring charge
  • Score each 1-5 (value received)
  • Cancel anything scoring ≤ 2
  • Downgrade anything scoring 3
  • Keep 4-5s
  • Common waste: streaming services (how many do you actually watch?), gym memberships (do you go?), software trials, news subscriptions

Annual Expenses Calendar

Don't let irregular expenses surprise you:

MonthExpenseAmountFunded?
JanInsurance renewal
MarTax preparation
AprTax payment (if owed)
JunCar registration
AugBack to school
NovHoliday gifts
DecAnnual subscriptions

Sinking fund: Divide annual expenses by 12, save monthly. No surprises.


Phase 5: Investing

Investment Priority Order

Follow this exact sequence:

  1. Employer 401(k) match — FREE money, always max this first (typically 3-6% match)
  2. High-interest debt payoff — anything > 7% APR
  3. Emergency fund — 3-6 months
  4. HSA (if eligible) — triple tax advantage ($4,150 individual / $8,300 family, 2024)
  5. Roth IRA — $7,000/year ($8,000 if 50+), tax-free growth
  6. 401(k) beyond match — up to $23,000/year ($30,500 if 50+)
  7. Taxable brokerage — no limits, more flexibility
  8. 529 plan (if kids) — tax-free education growth
  9. Real estate / alternatives — only after 1-8 are solid

Asset Allocation by Age

Simple rule: Age in bonds, rest in stocks (adjust for risk tolerance)

Age RangeStocksBondsAlternativesRisk Level
20-3590%10%0%Aggressive
35-4580%15%5%Growth
45-5570%25%5%Moderate
55-6560%35%5%Conservative
65+40-50%40-50%0-10%Preservation

Simple Portfolio Models

3-Fund Portfolio (Bogleheads recommended):

  • US Total Stock Market (VTI/VTSAX) — 60%
  • International Stock Market (VXUS/VTIAX) — 30%
  • US Total Bond Market (BND/VBTLX) — 10%

2-Fund Portfolio (even simpler):

  • Target Date Fund (e.g., Vanguard 2055) — 100%
  • Adjust nothing until retirement

Income Portfolio (retirees):

  • Dividend stocks (VYM/SCHD) — 30%
  • Bonds (BND/AGG) — 40%
  • REITs (VNQ) — 15%
  • Cash/money market — 15%

Investment Rules

  1. Never invest money you need within 5 years — use HYSA/CDs for short-term
  2. Dollar-cost average — invest consistently regardless of market conditions
  3. Don't time the market — time IN the market beats timing THE market
  4. Keep fees below 0.2% — index funds, not active management
  5. Rebalance annually — sell winners, buy losers (back to target allocation)
  6. Ignore daily market news — check portfolio quarterly at most
  7. Tax-loss harvest in taxable accounts — offset gains with losses
  8. Never panic sell — downturns are buying opportunities

Compound Growth Reference

$500/month invested at 7% average return:

YearsContributedPortfolio ValueGrowth
5$30,000$35,800$5,800
10$60,000$86,500$26,500
20$120,000$260,500$140,500
30$180,000$607,000$427,000
40$240,000$1,320,000$1,080,000

The message: Start early. Time is the biggest factor.


Phase 6: Tax Optimization

Tax-Advantaged Account Summary

AccountContribution Limit (2024)Tax TreatmentBest For
Traditional 401(k)$23,000 ($30,500 50+)Pre-tax in, taxed outHigh earners now
Roth 401(k)$23,000 ($30,500 50+)After-tax in, tax-free outExpect higher tax later
Traditional IRA$7,000 ($8,000 50+)Pre-tax in, taxed outNo employer plan
Roth IRA$7,000 ($8,000 50+)After-tax in, tax-free outUnder income limits
HSA$4,150/$8,300Pre-tax in, tax-free outTriple tax advantage
529 PlanVaries by stateAfter-tax in, tax-free for educationKids' college
Mega Backdoor RothUp to $69,000 totalAfter-tax → Roth conversionHigh earners

Tax Reduction Strategies

For employees:

  1. Max 401(k) contributions — reduces taxable income
  2. Use FSA/HSA for medical expenses
  3. Itemize deductions if > standard deduction ($14,600 single / $29,200 married, 2024)
  4. Charitable donations — donor-advised fund for bunching
  5. State/local tax (SALT) deduction — up to $10,000

For self-employed:

  1. SEP IRA or Solo 401(k) — up to $69,000/year
  2. Qualified Business Income deduction — 20% of QBI
  3. Home office deduction — dedicated space required
  4. Business expenses — equipment, software, travel, meals (50%)
  5. Health insurance premium deduction
  6. Retirement plan contributions
  7. Vehicle expenses — mileage or actual costs

For investors:

  1. Hold investments > 1 year — long-term capital gains rate (0/15/20% vs ordinary income)
  2. Tax-loss harvesting — sell losers to offset gains
  3. Asset location — bonds in tax-advantaged, stocks in taxable
  4. Qualified dividends — taxed at capital gains rate
  5. Roth conversion ladder — convert in low-income years
  6. Donate appreciated stock — avoid capital gains + get deduction
  7. Opportunity Zones — defer and reduce capital gains

Tax Planning Calendar

MonthAction
JanuaryGather W-2s, 1099s, receipts
FebruaryEstimate tax liability
MarchFile or extend (April 15 deadline)
AprilQ1 estimated tax payment (if self-employed)
JuneQ2 estimated tax payment
SeptemberQ3 estimated tax payment
OctoberExtended filing deadline
NovemberTax-loss harvesting review
DecemberMax retirement contributions, charitable donations, Roth conversions
JanuaryQ4 estimated tax payment

Phase 7: Insurance & Protection

Essential Coverage Checklist

InsuranceNeed LevelNotes
Health insuranceCriticalACA marketplace if no employer plan
Auto insuranceCritical (if driving)Liability + collision/comprehensive
Renters/homeownersCriticalCovers belongings + liability
Life insuranceCritical (if dependents)Term life = 10-12x annual income
Disability insuranceImportant60-70% income replacement
Umbrella liabilityImportant (high net worth)$1M+ coverage, cheap
Long-term careConsider (age 50+)Protect retirement assets

Life Insurance Decision Tree

Do you have dependents who rely on your income?
├── YES → Buy term life insurance
│   ├── Coverage: 10-12x annual income
│   ├── Term: until youngest child is 25 or mortgage is paid
│   └── Type: TERM (not whole life — invest the difference)
└── NO → Skip for now, reassess when situation changes

Rule: Never buy whole life insurance as an investment. Buy term, invest the difference.

Insurance Optimization

  1. Bundle policies — same insurer for home + auto = 10-25% discount
  2. Raise deductibles — $500 → $1,000 deductible saves 15-30% on premiums
  3. Shop annually — rates vary wildly between insurers
  4. Review coverage yearly — life changes mean coverage changes
  5. Don't over-insure — match coverage to actual risk and assets

Phase 8: Major Purchase Planning

Home Buying Readiness

FactorReadyNot Ready
Emergency fund3-6 months AFTER down paymentDrained by purchase
Down payment20% (avoids PMI)< 10%
Debt-to-income< 36% with mortgage> 43%
Credit score740+ (best rates)< 680
Job stability2+ years steady incomeRecent job change
Plan to stay5+ years< 3 years (rent instead)
Monthly cost< 28% of gross income> 35%

Rent vs Buy Decision

Monthly cost comparison:

  • Renting: rent + renters insurance
  • Buying: mortgage + property tax + insurance + HOA + maintenance (1-3% of value/year) + opportunity cost of down payment

Buy if: staying 5+ years AND total ownership cost < rent AND you want the stability. Rent if: < 5 years OR high mobility OR local market is overpriced (price-to-rent > 20x).

Car Buying Rules

  1. Total vehicle cost < 35% of annual income (purchase price)
  2. Buy used (2-4 years old) — avoid 30-40% depreciation
  3. Pay cash if possible — if financing, keep loan < 48 months
  4. Total transportation < 15% of take-home (payment + insurance + fuel + maintenance)
  5. Never lease unless business write-off justifies it

Phase 9: Financial Independence (FI)

FI Number Calculation

FI Number = Annual Expenses × 25

Based on the 4% rule (Trinity Study — 4% withdrawal rate has historically survived 30-year retirements).

Annual ExpensesFI NumberMonthly Savings Needed (25 years at 7%)
$30,000$750,000$940/month
$50,000$1,250,000$1,567/month
$75,000$1,875,000$2,350/month
$100,000$2,500,000$3,134/month

FI Stages

StageDescriptionWhat Changes
Coast FIEnough invested that compound growth alone will fund retirement by 65Can take lower-paying fulfilling work
Barista FIInvestments cover most expenses, need small incomePart-time work for insurance/extras
Lean FI25x minimal expenses savedCan stop working, frugal lifestyle
FI25x comfortable expenses savedFull financial independence
Fat FI25x generous expenses savedIndependence with luxury

FI Tracking Dashboard

fi_tracker:
  date: "YYYY-MM-DD"
  annual_expenses: 0
  fi_number: 0  # expenses × 25
  current_invested: 0
  fi_percentage: 0  # invested / fi_number × 100
  monthly_savings: 0
  savings_rate: 0
  years_to_fi: 0  # calculated from savings rate
  coast_fi_number: 0  # what you need now to coast to 65
  coast_fi_reached: false

Savings Rate → Years to FI

Savings RateYears to FI
10%51 years
20%37 years
30%28 years
40%22 years
50%17 years
60%12.5 years
70%8.5 years
80%5.5 years

The lever: Cutting expenses is 2x as powerful as earning more (reduces FI number AND increases savings).

Safe Withdrawal Strategies

StrategyRateBest For
Fixed 4%4% of initial portfolio, adjusted for inflationSimple, traditional
Variable %3-5% based on market conditionsAdapts to market
Guardrails4% base, increase/decrease if portfolio deviates 20%Balanced
Bucket strategy2 years cash + 5 years bonds + rest stocksSequence risk protection

Phase 10: Estate Planning Essentials

Documents Everyone Needs

DocumentWhat It DoesPriority
WillDistributes assets, names guardian for childrenCritical
Power of AttorneySomeone manages finances if incapacitatedCritical
Healthcare DirectiveMedical wishes if you can't communicateCritical
Beneficiary designationsOverride will for 401k, IRA, life insuranceCritical
Trust (optional)Avoids probate, privacy, controlImportant if assets > $500K

Digital Estate Checklist

  • Password manager shared with trusted person
  • List of all financial accounts and institutions
  • Crypto wallet recovery phrases stored securely
  • Social media legacy contacts set
  • Email account recovery instructions
  • Insurance policies documented and locatable
  • Safe deposit box key location documented

Phase 11: Financial Review Cadence

Weekly (5 minutes)

  • Check bank/credit card for unauthorized charges
  • Log any large or unusual expenses
  • Verify automated transfers went through

Monthly (30 minutes)

monthly_review:
  month: "YYYY-MM"
  income_actual: 0
  expenses_actual: 0
  savings_actual: 0
  savings_rate_actual: 0
  budget_variances:
    over_budget: []
    under_budget: []
  net_worth_change: 0
  debt_paid_this_month: 0
  investments_contributed: 0
  action_items: []

Quarterly (1 hour)

  • Update net worth statement
  • Review investment allocation (rebalance if > 5% drift)
  • Subscription audit
  • Insurance coverage check
  • Update financial goals progress

Annually (half day)

  • Full financial plan review
  • Tax planning for next year
  • Insurance shopping/comparison
  • Beneficiary designation review
  • Will/estate document review
  • Set next year's financial goals
  • Negotiate bills (insurance, phone, internet, subscriptions)

Financial Scoring Rubric (0-100)

DimensionWeight0-255075100
Emergency fund15%< 1 month1-3 months3-6 months6+ months
Debt management15%High-interest debt, no planPlan existsOnly low-interestDebt-free
Savings rate15%< 5%10-15%15-25%> 25%
Investment strategy15%Not investingInvesting but no planDiversified + tax-optimizedFull optimization
Insurance coverage10%Major gapsBasic coverageSolid coverageFully optimized
Tax optimization10%No tax planningUsing some accountsMaxing accountsFull strategy
Net worth growth10%DecliningFlatGrowingAccelerating
Estate planning10%NothingBasic willWill + POA + directiveComplete plan

Scoring Guide

  • 90-100: Financial mastery — maintain and optimize
  • 70-89: Strong foundation — optimize tax and estate
  • 50-69: Building — focus on savings rate and debt
  • 30-49: Getting started — emergency fund + debt payoff
  • 0-29: Crisis mode — stabilize cash flow, minimum debt payments

Common Mistakes

MistakeWhy It HurtsFix
No emergency fundOne crisis = debt spiralBuild $1K starter, then 3 months
Lifestyle inflationRaises never turn into wealthSave 50%+ of every raise
Paying minimums on high-interest debtInterest compounds against youAvalanche or snowball method
Not investing earlyMissing compound growthStart with $50/month today
Timing the marketMiss best days = miss most gainsDollar-cost average, always
Whole life insuranceExpensive, bad returnsBuy term, invest the difference
No tax planningLeaving thousands on the tableMax tax-advantaged accounts
Ignoring insuranceOne event = financial ruinCover the catastrophic risks
Emotional spendingBudget-busting48-hour rule for purchases > $100
Keeping up with othersComparison drives overspendingTrack YOUR net worth, ignore others

Edge Cases

Irregular Income (Freelance / Commission)

  • Budget based on lowest 3-month average from past year
  • In good months, build buffer to 3 months ahead
  • Separate business and personal accounts
  • Set aside 25-30% for taxes immediately (estimated payments quarterly)
  • Variable expenses flex, fixed expenses stay locked

Dual Income / Couples

  • Decide: fully joint, fully separate, or hybrid (joint for shared + separate for personal)
  • Hybrid recommended: joint account for bills/goals + personal "fun money" accounts
  • Monthly money meeting — review budget, goals, upcoming expenses together
  • Life insurance on BOTH incomes
  • Estate planning is critical — both wills, beneficiaries aligned

High Income ($200K+)

  • Max ALL tax-advantaged accounts (401k, backdoor Roth, HSA, mega backdoor if available)
  • Donor-advised fund for charitable giving
  • Umbrella liability insurance ($1-2M)
  • Estate planning with trusts
  • Consider tax diversification: pre-tax + Roth + taxable + real estate
  • Beware lifestyle creep — savings rate matters more than income

Fresh Start (Post-Bankruptcy / Major Setback)

  • Secured credit card to rebuild credit
  • Budget with zero-based budgeting (every dollar assigned)
  • Emergency fund is priority #1 (even $500 helps)
  • No new debt until existing is managed
  • Focus on income growth — skills, certifications, side income

International / Multi-Currency

  • Track in primary currency, note exchange rates for foreign accounts
  • Understand tax obligations in BOTH countries (US citizens taxed on worldwide income)
  • FBAR filing if foreign accounts > $10K aggregate
  • FATCA reporting for foreign financial assets
  • Currency hedging for large foreign holdings

Agent Automation

Daily

  • Categorize new transactions
  • Flag unusual spending (> 2x category average)
  • Check account balances

Weekly

  • Generate spending summary by category
  • Compare actual vs budget
  • Alert if any category > 90% of monthly budget

Monthly

  • Generate full budget report with variances
  • Update net worth tracking
  • Calculate savings rate
  • Debt payoff progress update
  • Investment contribution tracking

Quarterly

  • Net worth trend chart
  • FI percentage update
  • Insurance review reminder
  • Rebalancing check (portfolio drift > 5%)

Annually

  • Full financial health score (0-100)
  • Year-over-year net worth comparison
  • Tax optimization review
  • Estate document review reminder
  • Goal setting for next year

File Structure

finance/
├── net-worth-YYYY-MM.yaml      # Monthly net worth snapshots
├── budget-YYYY-MM.yaml         # Monthly budgets
├── debt-tracker.yaml           # Debt inventory and payoff progress
├── investment-allocation.yaml  # Current portfolio allocation
├── fi-tracker.yaml             # Financial independence progress
├── annual-expenses.yaml        # Sinking fund calendar
├── insurance-coverage.yaml     # All policies
├── estate-checklist.yaml       # Documents and beneficiaries
└── reviews/
    ├── monthly-YYYY-MM.md      # Monthly review notes
    └── annual-YYYY.md          # Annual review

Natural Language Commands

  • "What's my net worth?" → Calculate from latest snapshot
  • "How's my budget this month?" → Compare actual vs plan
  • "When will I be debt-free?" → Calculate based on current payoff rate
  • "Am I on track for FI?" → Show FI percentage and years remaining
  • "Score my finances" → Run 0-100 scoring rubric
  • "What should I do with an extra $500?" → Apply to priority order
  • "Review my subscriptions" → List all recurring charges with value scores
  • "Tax optimization check" → Review which accounts are maxed
  • "How much house can I afford?" → Calculate based on income and debts
  • "Compare my spending this month vs last" → Category-by-category comparison
  • "Rebalance check" → Compare current allocation to target
  • "Set a savings goal" → Create goal with timeline and monthly amount

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