In this final assignment of the Organize and Refine Your Home Challenge, learn how to organize bills and create your bill payment system.
Drumroll please…you made it to THE FINAL assignment of the Organize & Refine Your Home Challenge!
You DID IT!
December is Organize Your Finances Month here in the Challenge. Last week’s assignment was to complete a yearly review to get an overall picture of your financial situation as you head into the new year. This week, we’re going to zero in on how to organize bills.
I loathe the idea of having to pay interest, penalties, or late fees associated with lost bills and delinquent payments. Having an organized system for tracking and paying bills will save you money by avoiding these unnecessary expenses.
How to Organize Bills: A Simple Bill Paying System
1. Reduce the volume of bills coming in
Remember how the first step in taming paper clutter is to reduce the amount of paper that enters your home? Apply this principle to your bills by finding ways to reduce the volume of paper bills that you receive.
Some helpful strategies include:
- consolidating bills as much as possible (e.g., consolidating multiple credit cards/loans)
- switching to online billing statements in lieu of paper statements
Reducing the number of bills that you have to manage each month has several added benefits. It reduces the possibility of a bill getting lost or slipping through the cracks somehow (which could result in late fees). In addition, you might be able to better capitalize on a particular reward program if all of your debt is consolidated into one account.
2. Designate ONE HOME for Incoming Bills
Paper Bills
Have one place in your home where all incoming paper bills will live. When I process my mail each day, I place bills in the Bills to Pay folder of my action file system . Make sure your bill organizer is portable if you typically complete bill paying tasks elsewhere in your home.
Electronic Bills
For bills that you receive electronically via email, create a folder within your email client for incoming bills to be stored.
For bills that are set up on automatic payment – file any incoming electronic bill statements into a reference folder within your email system (name it something like MONTHLY BILLING STATEMENTS). You’re simply filing them away as reference, since they do not require any action on your part.
For bills that you need to manually pay – set up a folder to file incoming bills to be paid in within your email system (name it BILLS TO BE PAID or something similar). Take advantage of filtering features that your email client offers to automatically divert those incoming bills to your BILLS TO BE PAID folder as they arrive in your inbox.
BONUS TIP: If your monthly cash flow is such that you can swing it, I HIGHLY recommend setting up as many bills as possible on automatic payment through your bank. Doing so frees up so much of your time and minimizes the risk of missing a payment (and incurring that dreaded late fee!)
3. Create a Bill Paying Kit
If you pay the majority of your bills the conventional way, a bill-paying kit expedites the process by ensuring that you have everything you need to pay those bills on hand when the time comes to complete this task each week. Your bill-paying kit should include the following:
- checkbook
- calculator
- stamps
- return address labels
- envelopes
- pens
- password tracker (for logging into online accounts if necessary)
- printable monthly bill tracker (see below).
4. Schedule a Regular Weekly Bill Paying Appointment
In order to avoid late payments, make it a habit to review and pay bills weekly at a regularly-scheduled time. For me, bill paying is part of my weekly paper processing appointment. During this appointment, pay both your paper bills as well as your electronic bills in your BILLS TO BE PAID email folder.
Paper bills – you can either shred the bill once it’s paid, or file it away with your tax documents if you need to keep it as part of this year’s tax documentation.
Electronic bills – once the bill is paid, move the bill statement from the BILLS TO BE PAID email folder to a folder PAID BILLS folder within your email system.
5. Create a Monthly Bill Payment Tracking System
As part of my weekly bill paying session, I like to keep track of which bills have been paid so far this month, and which bills will be coming down the pike. Having this information on hand helps me to make sure I have enough money in my account to cover upcoming bills as they come due. Another benefit of regular bill tracking is that I can easily determine if a bill is missing for some reason.
I’ve created a set of printable monthly bill trackers to make this step easier (see end of post for how to get yours).
How to Use Printable Monthly Bill Trackers
Download and print the Bill Due Date Tracker printable. Gather last month’s billing statements and record each bill on the day of the month it’s due.
For bills that have a fixed payment amount, record that figure in the AMOUNT DUE column. Put a check mark in the AUTO PAY column if you’ve set the bill up to be paid automatically.
Next, print out a copy of the Monthly Bill Payment Checklist.
Using the Bill Due Date Tracker as a guide, write down all of your bills in order of when they’re due each month and record the due day in the appropriate column. Put a check mark by any bills that are paid via automatic payment.
Simply check off when a particular bill is paid each month. The Monthly Bill Payment Checklist allows you to see at a glance if there’s a bill that you’ve forgotten or haven’t paid.
It’s a super easy system for organizing your bills!
The Organize Your Finances printable set is FREE to my newsletter subscribers. It includes:
- Annual Net Worth Worksheet
- Monthly Spending Plan template
- Annual Spending Plan Review Worksheet
- Annual Personal Finance Review Checklist
- Bill Due Date Tracker
- Monthly Bill Payment Checklist
All you have to do is subscribe to my email newsletter in the form below and you’ll get instant access to the Organize Your Finances Printable Set:
How to Organize Bills Assignment:
- Reduce the number of paper bills you’re currently receiving (explore options for consolidating debt and choosing electronic billing)
- Designate “homes” for incoming paper and electronic bills
- Create a bill-paying kit
- Schedule a weekly bill-paying appointment
- Implement a monthly bill payment tracking system
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This post is part of the Organize and Refine Your Home Challenge
Image Credit: © Depositphotos.com / @ monkeybusiness
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Pat says
Thank you
Janet Barclay says
Nice checklists! I like automatic payment for bills that are the same every month, but for those that fluctuate, I prefer to keep closer tabs on what’s happening and make sure I don’t get overdrawn (not that I can even remember the last time that happened but you never know)!
Vessy says
Great article and very nice looking printables! It is so easy to forget paying bills on time and create a mess.
Kind regards,
Vessy
Natalie Gallagher says
So happy you like them Vessy! Yes, unfortunately it’s way to easy to lose $ when your finances are disorganized
Angie ~ ambient wares says
Wow, such great tips and printables! If there’s one thing that makes life fly by, it’s a bill that’s due…already? Thanks for sharing this with us at Funtastic Friday! Pinning to share
Natalie Gallagher says
Ha ha ha!! So true Angie! 🙂