Budgeting

Best Free Budgeting Templates for 2026 (UK)

SYM

A good budget doesn't need to cost anything. Whether you prefer spreadsheets, printable planners, or digital dashboards, there are excellent free budgeting templates designed specifically for UK finances. Pair any template with the SYM app to set savings goals and track your progress automatically.

Google Sheets Budget Templates

Google Sheets is one of the best platforms for budgeting because it's free, accessible from any device, and easy to share with a partner. Google's own template gallery includes a monthly and annual budget template that you can customise with UK-specific categories like council tax, TV licence, and National Insurance. For something more tailored, search the Google Sheets template gallery for '50/30/20 budget' or 'zero-based budget'. These pre-built formulas automatically calculate your spending splits so you don't need to do any maths yourself. The real power of Google Sheets is automation. You can link your budget to Google Forms to log expenses on your phone, or use simple formulas to flag when you're overspending in a category. Once set up, it takes just a few minutes a week to maintain.
  • Free to use with any Google account on desktop or mobile
  • Built-in templates for monthly and annual budgets
  • Easy to customise with UK categories (council tax, NI, ISA contributions)
  • Share with a partner for joint household budgeting
  • Link to Google Forms for quick mobile expense logging

Microsoft Excel Budget Templates

Microsoft Excel remains the gold standard for spreadsheet budgeting, and you don't need a paid subscription to use it. The free web version of Excel at office.com includes dozens of budget templates, from simple monthly trackers to detailed annual planners. Excel's 'Money in Excel' feature (available with Microsoft 365) can even connect to your UK bank accounts and import transactions automatically. For free users, the manual templates are still excellent — search for 'personal budget', 'household budget', or 'savings tracker' in the template gallery. If you're comfortable with formulas, Excel lets you build powerful conditional formatting rules that highlight overspending in red and underspending in green. This visual approach makes it much easier to spot problem areas at a glance.
  • Free web version at office.com includes budget templates
  • Money in Excel connects to UK banks for auto-importing transactions
  • Conditional formatting highlights overspending visually
  • Download templates for offline use on desktop Excel
  • PivotTables let you analyse spending by category, month, or payee

Notion Budget Dashboards

Notion has become hugely popular for personal finance tracking, especially among younger budgeters who want something more visual than a spreadsheet. The Notion template gallery includes free budget dashboards that combine expense tracking, savings goals, and bill calendars in one place. The advantage of Notion over traditional spreadsheets is flexibility. You can create databases for recurring bills, link them to calendar views, and build custom views that show you exactly what's due this week, this month, or this quarter. Adding UK-specific fields like council tax band or student loan plan is straightforward. Notion's free plan is generous enough for personal budgeting, with unlimited pages and blocks. You can also duplicate community templates from creators who've shared their UK-specific setups, saving you the effort of building from scratch.
  • Free plan includes unlimited pages for personal budgeting
  • Visual dashboards combine expense tracking and savings goals
  • Calendar views show upcoming bills and payment due dates
  • Duplicate free community templates tailored for UK finances
  • Works on desktop, mobile, and tablet for on-the-go tracking

Printable PDF Budget Planners

Not everyone wants to budget on a screen. Printable budget planners are ideal if you prefer writing things down by hand — research suggests that physically writing expenses makes you more conscious of your spending. Sites like Vertex42, Template.net, and the Money Advice Service (now MoneyHelper) offer free printable budget templates in PDF format. MoneyHelper's budget planner is specifically designed for UK households, with categories for council tax, TV licence, water rates, and other UK-specific expenses. You can print a fresh sheet each month and keep them in a folder for an easy year-end review. Some people find that the ritual of sitting down with a pen and their bank statement each week keeps them far more engaged with their budget than any app.
  • MoneyHelper offers a free UK-specific printable budget planner
  • Writing expenses by hand increases spending awareness
  • Print monthly sheets and file them for easy year-end review
  • Vertex42 and Template.net offer dozens of free PDF templates
  • Great for people who find apps and spreadsheets overwhelming

The 50/30/20 Template

The 50/30/20 rule is one of the simplest budgeting frameworks: 50% of your after-tax income goes to needs, 30% to wants, and 20% to savings and debt repayment. Many free templates are built around this framework because it's so easy to follow. For a UK worker earning £30,000 (roughly £2,000 per month after tax), this means £1,000 for needs (rent, bills, food, transport), £600 for wants (eating out, subscriptions, hobbies), and £400 for savings and debt. Adjust the percentages if your housing costs are higher — in London, 50% on needs might not be enough. The beauty of this approach is that you don't need to track every penny. As long as your three categories are roughly in balance, you're doing well. Many free 50/30/20 templates include a categorisation guide to help you decide what counts as a need versus a want.
  • 50% needs, 30% wants, 20% savings — simple and effective
  • Adjust percentages for high-cost areas like London or the South East
  • No need to track every penny — just keep the three buckets balanced
  • Free templates available for Google Sheets, Excel, and PDF
  • Great starting point if you've never budgeted before

Zero-Based Budget Templates

Zero-based budgeting assigns every pound of your income a specific job, so your income minus your expenses equals exactly zero. This doesn't mean you spend everything — savings and investments are line items in your budget, just like rent or groceries. This method is more detailed than the 50/30/20 approach and works well for people who want complete control over their money. Free zero-based templates are available for Google Sheets and Excel, with pre-built categories for UK expenses including council tax bands, energy direct debits, and water rates. The main benefit is visibility. When every pound is accounted for, there's no mystery about where your money went. It also forces you to be intentional about discretionary spending — if you want to spend £50 on takeaways this month, it has to come from somewhere in the budget.
  • Every pound gets assigned a purpose — income minus expenses equals zero
  • Savings and investments are budget line items, not afterthoughts
  • Provides complete visibility over where every pound goes
  • Best for people who want detailed control over spending
  • Free templates pre-built with UK expense categories

How to Choose the Right Template

The best budgeting template is the one you'll actually use. If you love spreadsheets, go with Google Sheets or Excel. If you prefer something visual and flexible, try Notion. If screens drain your energy, print a PDF and use a pen. Consider your financial complexity too. If you have a straightforward salary and regular bills, a simple 50/30/20 template is probably enough. If you have irregular income, multiple debts, or complex tax situations, a zero-based budget gives you more control. Don't be afraid to try a few templates before settling on one. Most people go through two or three before finding the format that clicks. The important thing is to start — even an imperfect budget is better than no budget at all.
  • Choose based on how you naturally like to organise things
  • Simple salary and bills? The 50/30/20 template is enough
  • Irregular income or complex finances? Try zero-based budgeting
  • Try 2–3 templates before committing to one
  • An imperfect budget you use beats a perfect one you abandon
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