Learn how to budget for car repairs, birthdays, and other lumpy expenses with simple sinking funds, monthly targets, and a no-stress system.
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Get it on Play StoreI used to think I was “bad with money” because my budget kept exploding. Then I realized the problem wasn’t groceries or rent. It was the sneaky stuff — car repairs, birthdays, school events, annual subscriptions, wedding gifts, dentist bills.
Stuff like that doesn’t show up neatly every month. But it does show up. And usually at the worst possible time.
So if your budget feels fine one week and completely cursed the next, this is probably why. The fix isn’t being richer or more disciplined. It’s planning for the lumpy stuff on purpose.
This is the big mindset shift.
A car repair isn’t an emergency if your car is old enough to be dramatic every 11 months. A birthday isn’t an “unexpected” expense if you have 8 people you care about and they all have calendars.
And once I started treating irregular expenses like predictable future costs, my budget got so much calmer.
Here’s the rule I wish someone had told me earlier: if it happens every year, it belongs in your budget.
That includes:
Not glamorous. Very necessary.
Grab a notebook or open your notes app. Brain dump everything that doesn’t happen monthly but still hits your wallet.
I like to split them into 3 buckets:
1. Annual or semi-annual bills
Insurance, subscriptions, property tax, service plans, memberships.
2. Variable life stuff
Birthdays, gifts, weddings, festivals, travel, school events.
3. Repair-and-replace costs
Car repairs, appliances, phone replacement, laptop issues, plumbing, AC servicing.
And don’t make the list tiny just because you want to feel “organized.” Be honest. If you spent money on it last year, it probably deserves a line on the list this year too.
This part is boring, but boring is where the magic is.
Look at your bank statements, receipts, and old messages if needed. Figure out what you spent last year on each irregular category. If you don’t have exact numbers, estimate high. I’d rather over-budget than start begging my savings account in November.
Example:
Total: ₹69,000 a year
That sounds scary until you divide it down.
₹69,000 ÷ 12 = ₹5,750 a month
And suddenly, it’s not a disaster. It’s just a line item.
A sinking fund is just money you set aside every month for a future expense. Fancy name. Simple idea.
And I’m pretty opinionated about this: sinking funds are non-negotiable if you want a budget that doesn’t constantly fall apart.
You can keep them in separate savings buckets, envelopes, spreadsheet tabs, or even one account with labels in your notes app. The method matters less than the consistency.
For example:
If birthdays always hit you hard in the same three months, set aside a little each month all year. If car repairs are unpredictable, build the fund steadily so you’re not using credit cards every time something squeaks.
And this is where people mess up: they budget the exact amount they think they’ll spend, right down to the last rupee. That’s too neat for real life.
Instead, budget on:
So if birthdays cost you ₹18,000 last year, plan for ₹20,000 this year. If car repairs were ₹24,000, maybe budget ₹27,000.
That buffer saves you from two very common problems:
This is where your budget starts feeling smart.
Don’t dump all your “extra” money into one vague savings pot and hope for the best. That’s how you accidentally spend birthday money on a tire replacement and then panic later.
Separate the categories, even if it’s just mentally.
Here’s a simple setup:
And if your app or spreadsheet supports it, track each one separately. Clarity is underrated.
If your income isn’t fixed, a flat monthly amount can feel annoying. So use percentages instead.
A simple way:
If you earn more one month, the funds grow faster. If you earn less, you still stay in the game.
And honestly, that’s the whole point — making your budget flexible enough to survive real life, not just a perfect spreadsheet fantasy.
Birthdays sound small until you’ve got parents, siblings, cousins, friends, kids, coworkers, and that one friend who insists on “just something low-key” and then orders a restaurant cake.
So make a birthday list at the start of the year.
Write down:
Then divide the total across 12 months.
Example:
And once you’ve got that fund, birthdays stop feeling like financial ambushes.
Cars are expensive little chaos machines.
Even if you drive carefully, things wear out. Batteries die. Tires go flat. The AC stops working right when it gets hot. That’s not bad luck. That’s just owning a car.
A decent rule:
So if your car is worth ₹8,00,000, you might want to set aside ₹8,000 to ₹16,000 a year at the low end — and honestly, for an older car, I’d go higher.
And don’t wait until something breaks. That’s how small repairs turn into debt.
Some expenses are irregular. Some are just straight-up disasters.
A car repair is predictable. A cracked windshield during a storm is less predictable. A birthday is planned. A medical bill isn’t always.
So keep a separate mini emergency fund for the stuff that can’t wait and can’t be planned neatly.
Start with:
This isn’t your birthday fund. Don’t mix them up unless you enjoy future stress.
This is the part people skip, and then they wonder why the system fails.
Your life changes. Prices change. People get married. Cars get older. Kids grow. Your birthday list gets longer somehow.
So every 3 months, review:
Then tweak the numbers.
And if you overspent in one category, don’t beat yourself up. Just adjust next month. Budgeting isn’t a moral test. It’s a planning tool.
The easiest budget is the one you don’t have to remember every single month.
So if possible:
Out of sight is good here. Out of sight means your birthday fund stays safe when you’re tempted by random online shopping.
If you want a basic version, try this:
That’s it. No finance wizardry required.
If you’re starting from zero, begin with the biggest pain points first — car repairs, birthdays, and annual bills. Those are usually the ones that blow up the budget fastest.
Budgeting for irregular expenses isn’t about being perfect. It’s about removing the stupid, avoidable stress from your life.
And there’s something weirdly calming about knowing your next car repair or birthday gift already has money waiting for it.
That’s the whole win — fewer surprises, fewer credit card apologies, fewer “how am I already broke?” moments.
If you want help sticking to the system, Trider (myhabits.in) makes it a lot easier to keep those money habits going without overthinking every step.
Try Trider and make your budget feel a lot less chaotic.