The classic savings advice is "spend less, save more." The problem is that it puts saving last — whatever is left after everything else goes in the savings pot. Which, for most people, is nothing.
"Pay yourself first" flips this. Before you budget for food, fun, or anything else, you move money into savings. Then you live on what's left.
Why the order matters
When savings is the last item, every other expense competes for priority and usually wins. When it's the first item, your spending automatically adjusts to the lower amount — without willpower.
This is the same reason pension contributions work so well: the money is gone before you can spend it.
Start smaller than you think
€10 per period is not a life-changing amount. But it builds the habit, and habits compound. Most people who start at €10 increase it within a few months because they realize they don't miss it.
In Repikue, set your savings goal before you start spending. It's deducted from your available budget so it's never available to spend in the first place.
- Set a savings goal you won't miss — not an aspirational one
- Automate the transfer on payday so it never sits in your current account
- Increase it by a small amount each period — even €5 more makes a difference
