Your Financial Spring-Cleaning Checklist
Money Makeover: Your Financial Spring-Cleaning Checklist
Spring is a natural reset. While you’re cleaning and organizing your home, take time to refresh your finances too – using this checklist to refocus your money for the months ahead.
Clear Financial Clutter
Review all recurring subscriptions and cancel unused services
Close or consolidate old checking or savings accounts
Organize digital and paper financial documents
Shred outdated statements you no longer need
The average consumer underestimates subscription spending by more than $100 per month. Small recurring charges are easy to ignore, but they quietly drain cash flow over time.
Refresh Your Budget
Review the last 60–90 days of spending
Identify categories that increased
Adjust spending targets to reflect current costs
Set one realistic spending goal for next month
Most people set budgets once, and rarely revisit them. But income shifts, prices rise, and habits change. A quarterly review dramatically improves follow-through.
Create a Clear Debt Strategy
List all balances, interest rates, and minimum payments
Choose a payoff strategy (highest interest first or smallest balance first)
Set up automatic minimum payments to avoid late fees
Explore options if interest rates are slowing progress
Structured repayment options like a Debt Management Program may help simplify payments and potentially lower interest so more of your money goes toward principal.
Review Your Credit Reports
Request your free reports at AnnualCreditReport.com
Check for unfamiliar accounts
Verify balances and payment history accuracy
Dispute any inaccuracies you find
Regular reviews are one of the simplest ways to protect your financial reputation and catching mistakes protects your future borrowing power.
Strengthen Your Emergency Fund
Confirm how much you currently have saved
Set a short-term target ($500–$1,000)
Set a long-term target (3–6 months of essentials)
Automate a small recurring transfer - even $25 helps
Unexpected expenses are one of the leading reasons people turn to high-interest credit or payday loans. Even a modest emergency cushion reduces reliance on costly borrowing.
Align Money With What Matters
Write down one financial priority for the next 6–12 months
Identify one action you can take this month
Put a date on your calendar to review progress
People who write down specific financial goals are significantly more likely to achieve them than those who keep them in their heads. Written goals create accountability.
Support Makes Progress Easier
Use Fort Worth City Credit Union’s budgeting and savings tools, and consider free, confidential counseling from GreenPath Financial Wellness to build a personalized plan for paying off debt and strengthening your finances.