Family B spent $700 more than they earned last month — here's where it went

Family B spent $700 more than they earned last month — here's where it went

This week's audit: a four-person household earning $5,800/month take-home who spent $6,500. Three flags — insurance, delivery food, and underfunded retirement. Three fixes with dollar estimates.

Family Budget Audit
2026/6/12 · 10:23
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Family B: four people, one income, one bad month

Family B — a couple with two school-age children in the South — takes home roughly $5,800/month after taxes. Last month they spent $6,500. The $700 gap came from somewhere: a credit card balance, an emergency fund, or both.
Here's where it went.

The breakdown

CategoryFamily BBLS avgDelta
Housing (rent/mortgage + utilities)$2,210$2,189+$21
Transportation$1,380$1,110+$270
Food at home$820$519+$301
Food away from home$690$329+$361
Healthcare$430$516−$86
Personal insurance & retirement$290$816−$526
Entertainment & subscriptions$310$301+$9
Apparel$115$167−$52
Personal care$95$82+$13
Miscellaneous$160$102+$58
Total$6,500$6,131+$369
Benchmarks from the BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey, 2024 full-year release. The BLS average household has 2.4 people; Family B has four — which explains some of the overages, but not all.
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Three flags

Flag 1 — Transportation at $1,380 (124% of benchmark)
Family B runs two financed vehicles with combined insurance premiums of $410/month. That's above even the elevated national average: the BLS reported households paid $1,993/year on vehicle insurance in 2024, up 12.3% year-over-year. The $270 overage here isn't a lifestyle choice — the policies haven't been shopped in over three years.
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Flag 2 — Food away from home at $690 (210% of benchmark)
The BLS national average for restaurants, delivery, and takeout is $329/month. Family B is spending more than twice that. Four people cost more than 2.4 — but not by a factor of two. Delivery apps with fees and tips are almost certainly in the mix, with stress and time pressure behind the orders.
Flag 3 — Retirement contributions at $290 (35% of benchmark)
This is the most consequential flag because it's invisible in the monthly numbers. The BLS benchmark for personal insurance and pensions is $816/month; Family B is at $290. If the employer offers a 401(k) match and it isn't being fully captured, part of that $526 gap is free money left on the table.

Three fixes

Fix 1: Shop auto insurance — potential savings $80–$150/month

Insurance carriers reprice risk continuously but don't notify existing customers when a better rate exists elsewhere. A 20-minute comparison across three direct carrier quotes — not a lead-gen aggregator — typically surfaces a 15–30% savings opportunity for drivers who haven't switched in three-plus years. At $410/month, that's $60–$120. Add a bundling discount and it reaches $80–$150, without changing coverage. One afternoon, no lifestyle change.
(NerdWallet's budgeting guide covers how to evaluate competing quotes without falling into lead-gen traps.)

Fix 2: Replace two delivery nights with a batch-cook Sunday — savings $120–$180/month

A delivery order for four with fees and tip runs $55–$75 in most mid-size cities. Two per week is $440–$600/month. Moving two of those nights to a Sunday batch cook — one protein, one grain, one vegetable, portioned for weeknight heat-and-eat — costs $40–$55 in groceries and about 90 minutes.
Net saving on two nights: $30–$45 per switch, or $120–$180/month.
Family B's grocery spending ($820) is already elevated, which is usually a good sign. The problem: delivery didn't come down when grocery spending went up. Both are running high simultaneously, which means the batch-cook habit isn't happening yet.

Fix 3: Raise retirement contributions to at least capture the full employer match

A top-down flat-lay of a retirement savings notebook, piggy bank, and coins on a wooden desk
Retirement savings planning — AI-generated illustration for Budget Audit Lab
The most common 401(k) structure is a 50% match on contributions up to 6% of salary — meaning a 6% contribution earns a 3% employer add-on for free. (Fidelity's spending and saving guidelines explain how to model this against take-home.)
At ~$75,000 gross annual salary, 6% is $375/month. Family B is currently at $290. Closing that gap costs $85/month in take-home — but earns a $188/month employer match. Net position improves by $103/month.
If no match exists, skip to Fix 1 and Fix 2 first — free up cash before adding to the contribution.

What the numbers add up to

FixEst. monthly savingsNotes
Shop auto insurance$80–$150One-time effort, locks in for 12 months
Replace 2 delivery nights$120–$180Requires Sunday cooking habit
Capture full employer matchNet +$103Take-home drops $85, gains $188 employer funds
Combined$303–$433Plus ongoing retirement account growth
Closing the $700 deficit doesn't require a second income. It requires fixing two structural overspends — insurance and delivery — and redirecting money currently funding a 401(k) at half-speed.
Next week: single-person household, high-income professional, three-zip-code restaurant habit.

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