What Is the Difference Between Wants and Needs?

Understanding your spending is key to taking control of your budget

Serious young couple planning budget over laptop at table.
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When you're creating a monthly budget, one of the most important steps you need to take is categorizing your spending by whether it is a "need" or a "want."

It is also one of the most challenging steps because what is a need vs. a want can vary from person to person. It is also easy to miscategorize wants as needs if you are so accustomed to them that you have trouble imagining living without them.

Learn how to budget more successfully by separating your expenses into needs and wants.

Key Takeaways

  • Needs are the things you can't get by without, such as a place to live and food to eat.
  • Wants are things that are nice to have but not absolutely necessary, such as entertainment or gym memberships.
  • Some things you buy might seem like needs but are really wants because you're choosing a version that's more than you actually need.
  • When you use the 50/30/20 budgeting method, you make room for both needs and wants as well as savings.

What Are Wants vs. Needs?

When you fill out a budgeting worksheet, you categorize your spending as either wants or needs. This separates your expenses into what is absolutely necessary for your well-being and survival (needs) compared to what you would like to have but do not require (wants).

Note

You may also see needs referred to as "mandatory" or "fixed" expenses and wants as "discretionary" or "variable" expenses.

Examples of Needs

Needs are usually your basic living expenses, things necessary for your health, or expenses that are required for you to do your job. These could be:

  • Rent or mortgage
  • Utility bills
  • Health care and therapy
  • Medication
  • Food
  • Work uniform
  • Commuting

Examples of Wants

Wants are things you choose to buy but could live without, such as:

  • Entertainment
  • Dining out
  • Home purchases
  • Travel
  • Electronics
  • Monthly subscriptions or memberships
  • TV or music streaming accounts
  • New clothing

Wants are not inherently bad. They are pleasant and often can help you accomplish important goals like keeping in touch with loved ones, having fun, or staying healthy. But they are not necessary to your survival or well-being.

'Needs' That Are Really 'Wants'

The line between wants and needs is sometimes blurry, and it can be hard to separate out which expenses belong in which category. There can be different reasons for this.

Lifestyle

Whether an expense is a need or a want often depends on how and why you use it. Home internet may be a need for you if you work from home. However, if you only use your home internet for entertainment, such as browsing social media or playing video games, it is actually a want.

Split Expenses

Parts of an expense may be categorized as a need while others are a want. A grocery bill is a need because you need to eat. But if, along with your produce, protein, and whole grains, you also buy chips and soda, then some of those things are wants rather than needs.

Which Option You Choose

Other times, the category of expense is a need, but the specific option you choose within that category is a want. For example, having some kind of phone may be a need so that you can communicate with family or coworkers, order your medication, or contact your landlord.

All those things, however, can be accomplished with a $20 flip phone. If you choose to spend hundreds of dollars on a new smartphone, that extra expense is suddenly a want.

Choosing that option that is a want rather than a need is not always bad. For example, purchasing organic food may be an ethical choice that is worth the money for you.

But it is a choice. Understanding which expenses are and are not optional will help you more effectively create a household budget.

Is Saving a Need or a Want?

If your budget is tight, it can be easy to stop putting money towards savings or long-term financial goals such as:

  • Emergency savings
  • Paying off debt
  • Retirement funds
  • Life insurance
  • Disability insurance

This sort of spending feels like a want because it is not an immediate need. You can survive this month even if you don't put away money for retirement or build an emergency fund.

However, saving and getting out of debt should also be considered needs because these are investments in your long-term financial and personal well-being.

Having life insurance, for example, might not be something you need this month. But if you should pass away unexpectedly, it will certainly be a need for your family when it is time for them to pay for your funeral or provide for your children.

Because of this, saving and getting out of debt should be considered a need. Whether you are saving $10 a month or $10,000, planning for your long-term well-being should be taken care of along with other mandatory expenses.

Note

Some financial experts recommend that saving and paying off debt should be prioritized even before expenses like rent and food in order to motivate yourself to accomplish them. This is known as "paying yourself first."

The 50/30/20 Budgeting Rule

If you use the 50/30/20 budget system, your expenses will break down to:

  • 50% of your after-tax income spent on needs
  • 30% spent on wants
  • 20% spent on savings and debt reduction

This division of expenses means there's nothing wrong with buying fancy bread and milk or subscribing to Netflix. The 50-30-20 budgeting rule of thumb allows you to spend 30% of your take-home pay on things you want.

By assigning a concrete value to your wants, you prevent yourself from overspending and ending up in debt.

The key to budgeting is to become more aware of how you are spending money. This allows you to spend within your means and also make sure that your spending aligns with your values and priorities.

Adjusting Your Spending on Wants

When you need to cut your spending to save money, eliminating wants is often the easiest and first place to make changes. For example, you may give up your gym membership and start running around the neighborhood for exercise. But just because something is a need does not mean its cost is set in stone.

For example, if you are paying $1,700 a month in rent, you can save money by:

  • Moving to a smaller apartment
  • Getting a roommate
  • Temporarily moving in with family

Or, you might need to get to work every day with a commute, but instead of spending money on parking and gas, you could save money by:

  • Walking
  • Taking public transit
  • Carpooling with a coworker or neighbor
  • Biking

Needs often make up the largest portion of your budget, especially if you are following the 50/30/20 rule. By rethinking how your needs look, you can often make the biggest change in your monthly spending.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What is a budget?

A budget is a plan for your spending during a set period. A budget should be based on your income and ensure you spend less than you make. Many also incorporate goals like paying down debt and saving for retirement into their budget. You can develop a budget on paper, using a spreadsheet, or using a budgeting app.

What is a zero-based budget?

A zero-based budget allocates all of your income to expenses. It's designed to ensure all of your income has a purpose, including paying down debt and saving. Instead of having a broad category for savings, those using a zero-based budget will put their savings into specific categories, such as saving for emergencies, vet bills, home repairs, car repairs, or vacations.

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Sources
The Balance uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
  1. Insider. "A Pay-Yourself-First Budget Is a Simple Way To Amp Up Your Savings. Here's How It Works."

  2. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. "Analyzing Budgets."

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