budeting for living expenses abroad

Creating a Budget When You Don’t Know Your Expenses

Creating a Budget

Creating a budget can be very overwhelming – especially when you’ve just moved and you don’t know what your expenses will be. I’ve definitely been there. When I arrived in Spain in 2015, I came with $2000 as my starter budget, but without a plan in place, I blew through over half of it before receiving my first paycheck. If I could do it again, what would I do differently? This is what I recommend for incoming auxiliares de conversacion.

I would begin by creating a budget using the 50/20/30 Rule. Here’s how it breaks down:

  • 50% of your income goes to cover your NEEDS – Things like rent, food, electricity, transportation, internet, etc. These are the absolute basics you will pay for every month.
  • 20% of your income goes to SAVINGS – You may need to buy a plane ticket at the end of the year. Or, if you’re staying in Spain over the summer, you’ll need a summer fund for when other opportunities dry up.
  • 30% of your income can go to WANTS – things that you could do without in a pinch, but make life more enjoyable: eating out, drinks, travel, new clothes, etc. These things are likely the reason you are here.

Creating a Budget with the Auxiliar Income

So how would it look for an auxiliar creating a budget based on this plan?

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Living Expenses in Spain

Living Expenses in Spain

Research Your Living Expenses

Before moving to Spain  to teach English with the Auxiliares de Conversacion program, I did a lot of research to try to figure out what my living expenses would be. There are some really great resources with sample budgets from different cities, like this series by COMO Consulting. Obviously, there won’t be information for every possible city. Neither of my two cities (Huelva, Andalusia and Vitoria-Gasteiz, Basque Country) were included, but you can still use them as a benchmark to get a pretty good idea.

Something to keep in mind when looking at other people’s living expenses is that even though you see WHAT they spend, you don’t often get a glimpse into HOW they spend. That is what I intend to do with this post. I’m going to use examples of my living expenses from Huelva and from Vitoria-Gasteiz, but the techniques for cutting costs should be applicable in any city.

MY LIVING EXPENSES

Rent: 225

Groceries: 65

Phone: 10

Electricity: 25

Internet: 16

TOTAL: 341 euros

budeting for living expenses abroad
Core Living Expenses: Make a list and check it twice.

 

This is my share of required monthly living expenses in northern Spain. Everything else is variable. If you can keep your core living expenses at around half of your income, you’ll have a lot more flexibility for some of the other things you’d like to do, such as traveling, shopping, and saving.

But how do you keep your expenses so low? The cost of living difference does most of the work for you. The north of Spain is considered an expensive region in comparison to other communities in Spain, but with a little planning, you can make it work. Here is a breakdown of my living expenses in the north and the south, and how different choices affect the price.

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