1. Pay yourself structure-first, not stress-first
Most financial pressure doesn’t come from spending too much—it comes from not planning what’s already predictable.
“Most people do not need a forensic audit of every dirham they spend. They need a system that keeps the important parts of life running properly,” says Datta. The shift: Cover essentials immediately when income arrives: Rent, school fees, groceries, transport, utilities, insurance, and debt repayments. Then automate everything possible so money is allocated before it can be spent impulsively.
2. Turn yearly expenses into monthly calm
The biggest budgeting mistake is treating predictable costs like surprises.
“Car servicing, insurance renewals, school costs, visa expenses – these happen every year,” Datta explains. “If families set aside money for them monthly, they stop feeling like emergencies.”
This single shift removes the emotional panic that often derails budgets.
3. Stop spending by default, not by desire
A major source of overspending is invisible: habit.
“People spend money on things they do not even care about that much, usually because they are influenced by what they see around them,” says Datta.
He warns that lifestyle pressure, social media and comparison culture distort spending decisions. The fix is clarity: know what you actually value, and ignore the rest.
4. Plug the small leaks before they become floods
Not all savings come from big sacrifices—many come from small behavioural tweaks.
As Kartik Iyer, personal finance content creator, puts it: “Working from home for one day a week can help meet your fixed fuel costs. Fuel costs are up 30 per cent so reduce drive time by 30 per cent.”
He adds: “Meal prepping and cutting out takeout will go a long way in helping the pocket and the waistline,” and warns, “Cut at least one ongoing subscription. If you can’t recollect all your subscriptions, good chance you have too many.”
5. Make every dirham work harder
Saving isn’t only about spending less, it’s about extracting more value from what you already spend.
Armin Moradi, CEO and Founder of Qashio, explains: “Certain cards offer 5,10 per cent cashback on everyday categories like groceries and essentials. This way, a large family spending Dh10,000 on food and groceries, gets Dh500-1,000 back.”
He also recommends loyalty programmes and bulk buying essentials to stretch household budgets further.
6. Re-evaluate ‘big life upgrades’ regularly
Some expenses grow until they reshape your entire financial structure.
“Then there are smaller costs that don’t seem significant at first but add up over time,” says Beth Clay, founder of Financed Well. “Gym memberships, delivery services and subscriptions.”
She also flags education and transport decisions: “It’s important to review school choices every few years and ask whether the cost still aligns with your priorities and financial goals.”
7. Use the 50/30/20 rule, but flex it smartly
The classic budgeting framework still works as a starting point.
“However, during times when salaries or job roles feel less predictable, I would encourage families to be flexible with the latter two categories,” says Clay, “Adjust them to prioritise building an emergency fund.”
Structure matters more than precision.
8. Break debt into something psychologically manageable
Debt takes an emotional toll.
“The pile looks too big, so they lose momentum before they begin,” says Datta. “That is why I think there is real value in paying off the smallest debts first.”
The small wins build momentum. But high-interest credit card debt still needs urgent attention because credit card interest is usually brutal, as he says.
9. Choose your debt strategy based on personality
There is no single correct repayment method.
Clay explains two approaches:
Furthermore, she explains that credit cards deserve special attention. Credit card interest rates typically run at 3-3.5% per month – that’s 36-42% annually. “If you’re only making minimum payments, it can be difficult to make progress. Even paying an extra Dh 200 above the minimum each month can significantly shorten the repayment timeline.
10. Treat savings as non-negotiable, not leftover
Most families save “if something remains.” Experts say that approach guarantees failure. “Saving needs to happen upfront,” Datta notes.
Clay reinforces it: “Families should treat savings as a non- negotiable expense, even if the amount is modest.”
Even small, consistent contributions build financial resilience over time.
11. Separate emergency security from future growth
Families need two parallel systems: safety today and freedom tomorrow.
“Emergency savings protect you now. Long-term investing protects you later,” says Datta. A practical emergency fund should cover 3–6 months of expenses before investing surplus funds into long-term assets.
Moradi adds it should ideally stretch to “6–12 months of essential expenses and should be held in accessible accounts.”
12. Expand income instead of only cutting costs
There is a natural limit to how much you can reduce spending.
“There are only so many lattes and subscriptions you can cut from your life,” says Kartik Iyer. “Your 9-6 pays for your livelihood, but 6-9 pays for your lifestyle.”
In other words, long-term financial stability doesn’t come only from saving, it comes from earning more, upskilling, or building side income streams.
Lakshana is an entertainment and lifestyle journalist with over a decade of experience. She covers a wide range of stories—from community and health to mental health and inspiring people features.
A passionate K-pop enthusiast, she also enjoys exploring the cultural impact of music and fandoms through her writing.
