Monthly Budget Calculator — Montana

Build your monthly budget for Montana. Enter your take-home pay and expense categories to see where your money goes, your savings rate, and whether you’re on track financially. Pre-filled with typical Montana expense estimates.

Your Monthly Budget

Enter your net income after taxes. Estimate your take-home pay

Monthly Expenses

Typical Monthly Expenses in Montana

Montana has a slightly above-average cost of living that has risen significantly with in-migration. Bozeman in particular has become dramatically more expensive. Montana has no sales tax, which helps with everyday purchases. Outdoor recreation (hiking, skiing, fishing) is a major lifestyle element but can be done cheaply on public lands. Budget for vehicle costs — Montana is large and driving is unavoidable.

Expense CategoryTypical Montana Amount
Housing (1BR rent)~$1,250/month
Food (single person)~$400/month
Transportation~$500/month
Utilities & Internet~$180/month
Healthcare & Insurance~$320/month
Personal & Entertainment~$200/month
Recommended Savings15%+ of gross income
Emergency Fund Target3–6 months of expenses

The 50/30/20 Budget Rule

The 50/30/20 rule is a simple budgeting framework popularized by Senator Elizabeth Warren in her book All Your Worth. It divides after-tax income into three buckets:

CategoryTarget %What It Covers
Needs50%Housing, food, utilities, transportation, minimum debt payments, basic healthcare
Wants30%Dining out, entertainment, subscriptions, hobbies, travel, clothing above basics
Savings & Debt Payoff20%Emergency fund, retirement contributions, extra debt payments, goal savings

In high-cost areas like major Montana cities, the 50% needs target may not be realistic without a high income. If housing alone takes 40% of take-home pay, cut wants to 15-20% and protect the 20% savings target. The 20% savings rate is the most important number to protect — it's the engine of long-term wealth.

Frequently Asked Questions — Budgeting in Montana

A typical single-person budget in Montana includes: Housing ~$1,250, Food ~$400, Transportation ~$500, Utilities ~$180, Healthcare ~$320, Personal ~$200, and Savings ~$400/month. Total essential expenses of approximately $2,850/month. Adjust based on your specific situation using the calculator above.

The 50/30/20 rule allocates 50% of after-tax income to needs, 30% to wants, and 20% to savings and debt payoff. In Montana, if baseline essential expenses (housing, food, utilities, transport, healthcare) are around $2,650/month, you'd need take-home pay of at least $5,300/month for the math to work. The calculator above will show your exact percentages.

The traditional 30% rule says housing should not exceed 30% of gross income. With typical Montana rents around $1,250/month, you'd need gross income of at least $4,166/month ($50,000/year). If housing exceeds 35% of take-home pay, consider reducing other expenses, getting a roommate, or moving to a less expensive area within Montana.

The highest-impact expense reductions in Montana: (1) Housing — get a roommate, move to a less expensive neighborhood, or negotiate rent. Housing cuts have the biggest dollar impact. (2) Transportation — consider reducing from two cars to one, switching to a more fuel-efficient vehicle, or using transit where available. (3) Food — meal prepping and reducing restaurant meals can cut food budgets by 30-40%. Subscriptions and entertainment are easier but smaller wins.

Start with a target of $6,450 (3 months of essential Montana expenses including housing, food, utilities, and healthcare). Open a high-yield savings account (HYSA) paying 4-5% APY. Set up automatic transfers on payday. Once you hit $1,000, start contributing to retirement while continuing to build to the full 3-month target. A funded emergency fund prevents expensive debt when unexpected costs hit.