Staying on top of your money feels good. When you know what’s coming, saving gets easier, bills stay under control, and your goals stop feeling so far away.
That’s exactly what a financial calendar helps you do.
Instead of reacting to money stress as it pops up, you create a simple rhythm that keeps everything running smoothly in the background.
What a financial calendar gives you
A financial calendar is a plan for your recurring money moments, the tasks that show up every week, month, or year.
It helps you:
Stay consistent with payments
Save regularly without effort
Avoid last-minute surprises
Feel more in control month after month
The goal isn’t to spend more time managing money. It’s to spend less time worrying about it.
Start Small With One Monthly Check-In
The best financial system is the one you’ll actually stick with, so don’t try to schedule everything at once.
Start with one simple habit: a monthly money reset. Pick a day that’s easy to remember, like the first Saturday of the month.
Add a recurring calendar event such as:
Monthly money reset (15 minutes)
Reminder: the day before
That small routine alone can make a huge difference over time.
Build a Financial Calendar That Works Long-Term
Once your monthly reset feels natural, you can expand your calendar with a few bigger check-ins throughout the year.
A good financial calendar has three layers: monthly, quarterly, and annual.
Monthly: Stay on Track
Once a month, take a few minutes to:
Check upcoming bills
Review subscriptions
Look at your spending categories
Move money into Savings Goals
Confirm recurring payments are still correct
Small habits add up fast.
And if you like keeping things extra organized, bunq lets you open up to 25 Bank Accounts, each with their own IBAN, so you can separate your expenses and Savings Goals without any extra effort.
Quarterly: Adjust as Life Changes
Every three months, schedule a slightly bigger review. This is where you zoom out and make sure your plan still fits your life.
Use it to:
Adjust your budget if life has changed
Review savings progress
Cancel subscriptions you don’t use
Plan for bigger upcoming expenses
Quarterly check-ins help you stay aligned without needing to think about money every day.
Annual: Don’t Forget The Big Things
Once a year, set reminders for the financial tasks that are easy to delay until the last minute:
Tax prep
Insurance review
Updating financial goals
Planning major purchases
Add these early so they feel manageable when they come around.
Use Reminders to Make It Effortless
A calendar only works if it actually helps you stay ahead.
Try simple reminders like:
Bills: 3 days before
Monthly reset: 1 day before
Quarterly review: 1 week before
Annual tasks: 1 month before
Short, clear, and easy to follow.
Automate What You Can
The easiest financial calendar is one where the important things happen automatically.
With bunq, you can set up Scheduled Payments for rent, utilities, subscriptions, or weekly savings. And with Instant Notifications, you always know when payments go through.
Once it’s set up, bunq keeps everything running in the background, so your financial calendar feels less like work and more like peace of mind.
Build It Once, Benefit All Year
A financial calendar isn’t about doing more. It’s about making money feel simpler.
With a few recurring check-ins, plus bunq features like Scheduled Payments, Instant Notifications and up to 25 Bank Accounts, you can build a system that keeps you organized all year with minimal effort.





