Can’t Save Money? Here’s Why (And How to Fix It)

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“I just can’t save money.” I’ve said it, you’ve probably said it, and millions of people say it every single day. But here’s the thing—it’s rarely about how much you earn. I’ve seen people making £60k a year living paycheck to paycheck, and I’ve seen people on £25k building impressive savings accounts.

So if it’s not about income, what’s really going on? Why can’t you save money, even when you genuinely want to?

After 11+ years of managing my own finances (with plenty of mistakes along the way), working overtime to save for a house deposit, and helping others through Abundant Cents, I’ve identified the real culprits. And more importantly, I’ve found solutions that actually work—not the generic “just spend less” advice you’ve heard a thousand times.

Let’s dig into the honest truth about why you can’t save money, and what you can actually do about it.


The Real Reasons You Can’t Save Money

Reason 1: You’re Trying to Save What’s Left Over (Instead of Saving First)

This is the number one mistake, and I made it for years.

Here’s what most people do:

  1. Get paid
  2. Pay bills
  3. Spend on whatever
  4. Try to save what’s left at the end of the month

The problem? There’s never anything left.

The psychology: When money sits in your current account, your brain sees it as “available to spend.” You’ll unconsciously find ways to use it—an extra takeaway here, an impulse Amazon purchase there, a “treat yourself” shopping trip.

The fix: Pay yourself first

Flip the script entirely:

  1. Get paid
  2. Immediately transfer your savings goal (even if it’s just £50)
  3. Pay bills
  4. Live on what’s left

Set up an automatic transfer for the day after payday. If the money never hits your main account, you can’t spend it. I use Monzo pots for this—the money’s technically accessible but psychologically “gone.”

Real example: When I started doing this with just £100/month, I suddenly “found” that money. My spending naturally adjusted because I had no choice.


Reason 2: You Have No Clear Savings Goal (So There’s No Motivation)

Saving “for the future” is too vague. Your brain doesn’t connect with abstract concepts—it needs something concrete to work toward.

The problem: “I should save more” isn’t compelling enough to override the instant gratification of buying something now.

The psychology: Humans are wired for immediate rewards. Future-you feels like a different person, so sacrificing today for tomorrow feels pointless.

The fix: Create specific, emotional savings goals

Instead of “save money,” try:

  • “Save £3,000 for a holiday to Greece next summer”
  • Build a £1,000 emergency fund so I never have to stress about car repairs again”
  • “Save £15,000 for a house deposit in 18 months”
  • “Put aside £500 for Christmas so I’m not broke in January”

Make it visual:

  • Create a savings tracker (printable or digital)
  • Put a photo of your goal on your phone wallpaper
  • Use apps like Plum that show progress bars

My experience: When I shifted from “I should save” to “I’m saving £X for a house deposit,” everything changed. Suddenly, skipping that £30 takeaway meant I was £30 closer to my own home. That’s motivating.

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💰 Savings Goal Calculator

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Reason 3: Lifestyle Creep Is Eating Your Raises

Ever notice how a pay rise never seems to improve your financial situation? That's lifestyle creep in action.

The problem: As your income increases, your spending increases proportionally (or worse, faster). You "deserve" nicer things now that you're earning more.

The psychology: It's called hedonic adaptation—we quickly get used to improvements and want more. The £1,200/month flat becomes "too small," the 5-year-old car becomes "embarrassing," the budget phone becomes "inadequate."

The fix: Lock in raises before you spend them

When you get a pay rise:

  1. Immediately increase your automatic savings by at least 50% of the raise
  2. Enjoy the other 50% guilt-free
  3. Don't upgrade your lifestyle until your savings goals are on track

Example:

  • You get a £200/month raise
  • Increase savings by £100/month automatically
  • Enjoy the extra £100 for lifestyle improvements

This way, you actually benefit from career progression instead of just spending more.

My mistake: I got a promotion once and immediately upgraded my lifestyle. The extra income vanished into impulse buys and wasted money. I was no better off financially, just had nicer things.


Reason 4: You're Underestimating Small, Frequent Purchases

The "latte factor" is real, but it's not just about coffee. It's about dozens of small purchases that feel insignificant individually but devastate your finances collectively.

The problem: £3 here, £5 there, £8 for lunch—none of it feels like "real" spending, so you don't track it or worry about it.

The psychology: Small amounts don't trigger our "this is expensive" alarm. We're more careful about a £200 purchase than 40 separate £5 purchases, even though they're the same total.

The math that'll shock you:

  • £4 coffee × 5 days/week = £20/week = £1,040/year
  • £8 meal deal × 5 days/week = £40/week = £2,080/year
  • £15 takeaway × 3 times/week = £45/week = £2,340/year
  • £10 impulse purchases × 2/week = £20/week = £1,040/year

Total: £6,500/year on things that feel "small"

The fix: Track everything for 30 days

Use apps like:

  • Monzo or Starling Bank - Automatic categorization
  • Emma - Connects all your accounts
  • Money Dashboard - Free budgeting app
  • Old-school spreadsheet - Sometimes manual tracking creates more awareness

Don't judge, just observe. After 30 days, you'll see exactly where your money goes. The awareness alone will change your behaviour.

My wake-up call: I tracked my spending for a month and discovered I was spending £180 on subscriptions. I genuinely thought it was maybe £60. The data doesn't lie.

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💸 Small Spending Calculator

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Reason 5: You're Keeping Up with the Joneses (Real or Digital)

Social comparison is killing your savings, whether it's your colleagues, friends, or Instagram influencers.

The problem: Everyone around you seems to be living better—nicer homes, better holidays, latest tech, designer clothes. You feel pressure to keep up or you're "falling behind."

The psychology: Humans are social creatures who measure success relatively, not absolutely. We'd rather earn £50k when everyone else earns £40k than earn £60k when everyone else earns £70k.

The social media multiplier: Instagram and TikTok show you everyone's highlight reel. You're comparing your behind-the-scenes to their showreel, and it's making you feel inadequate.

The fix: Unfollow, unsubscribe, and refocus

Immediate actions:

  1. Unfollow accounts that make you want to spend - Fashion influencers, luxury lifestyle accounts, "haul" videos
  2. Follow financial education accounts instead - People sharing savings wins, budget tips, financial independence journeys
  3. Mute or limit time with friends who pressure spending - The ones who always suggest expensive restaurants or shopping trips
  4. Remember: Most "wealthy" people are in debt - That colleague with the Range Rover? Probably financed. The influencer in Bali? Sponsored content.

Mindset shift: Redefine success as financial security, not material possessions. I'd rather have £20k in savings and drive a 10-year-old car than have a BMW and £0 in the bank.


Reason 6: You Have No Budget (Or a Completely Unrealistic One)

"I don't need a budget, I just need to spend less" is what broke people say. I know because I said it for years.

The problem: Without a budget, you're flying blind. You have no idea if you're overspending until you're already broke. Or worse, you create an impossibly strict budget, fail immediately, and give up entirely.

The psychology: Budgets feel restrictive, like diets. So we rebel against them or avoid them altogether.

The fix: Create a realistic, flexible budget

Use the 50/30/20 rule as a starting framework:

  • 50% Needs - Rent, bills, groceries, transport, minimum debt payments
  • 30% Wants - Entertainment, eating out, hobbies, subscriptions
  • 20% Savings - Emergency fund, house deposit, investments, extra debt payments

Adjust based on your situation:

  • High rent area? Maybe 60/20/20
  • Aggressive saver? Try 50/20/30
  • Paying off debt? Consider 50/15/35

Tools that make budgeting painless:

  • YNAB (You Need A Budget) - £99/year, worth every penny
  • Monzo - Free, built-in budgeting features
  • Emma - Free tier available

Budget in "fun money": This is crucial. If your budget has £0 for enjoyment, you'll fail. Give yourself permission to spend guilt-free within limits.

My system: I budget £100/month for "whatever I want"—no tracking, no judgment. Everything else is allocated. This prevents the "screw it" moments that blow up budgets.


Reason 7: You're Drowning in Debt (And Interest Is Eating You Alive)

If you're paying hundreds in interest every month, saving feels impossible—because it kind of is.

The problem: Credit card debt, personal loans, car finance, overdrafts—they're all bleeding money through interest. You're on a financial treadmill, running hard but going nowhere.

The math:

  • £5,000 credit card debt at 19.9% APR = £83/month in interest alone
  • That's £996/year just to stay in the same place
  • If you're only paying minimums, you'll be in debt for 20+ years

The psychology: Debt creates stress, which leads to emotional spending, which creates more debt. It's a vicious cycle.

The fix: Aggressive debt payoff strategy

Choose your method:

1. Debt Avalanche (mathematically optimal)

  • List debts by interest rate (highest to lowest)
  • Pay minimums on everything
  • Throw all extra money at the highest-interest debt
  • Once paid off, move to the next

2. Debt Snowball (psychologically effective)

  • List debts by balance (smallest to largest)
  • Pay minimums on everything
  • Throw all extra money at the smallest debt
  • Once paid off, move to the next
  • Quick wins keep you motivated

I recommend snowball for most people. The psychological boost of clearing debts fast is worth more than the small amount of extra interest.

Practical steps:

  1. Stop adding new debt - Cut up credit cards if necessary
  2. Negotiate lower interest rates - Call your credit card company and ask (seriously, this works)
  3. Consider a balance transfer - 0% cards like Barclaycard or MBNA can save thousands
  4. Increase income temporarily - Side hustle, overtime, sell stuff (check out my guide on how to make your first £50 online)

Use a debt payoff calculator: I've got one on Abundant Cents that shows exactly when you'll be debt-free and how much interest you'll save.

Real talk: I once had £3,000 in credit card debt. The minimum payments were keeping me broke. I took on extra shifts, cut down on spending, and paid it off in 8 months. The relief was indescribable.


Reason 8: Emergencies Keep Derailing You (Because You Have No Emergency Fund)

Life happens. Cars break down, boilers fail, phones crack, pets get sick. Without an emergency fund, these "surprises" (which aren't really surprises—they're inevitable) destroy your savings progress.

The problem: You save £500, then your car needs £400 in repairs. You're back to £100. You save another £300, then your washing machine dies. Back to square one. It feels hopeless.

The psychology: This creates learned helplessness—"What's the point of saving? Something always comes up."

The fix: Build an emergency fund FIRST, before any other savings goal

Emergency fund targets:

  • Starter fund: £500-£1,000 (covers most small emergencies)
  • Full fund: 3-6 months of expenses (covers job loss, major repairs)

Where to keep it:

  • Easy-access savings account - You need it quickly when emergencies hit
  • High-interest options: Chase (currently 5.1%), Marcus by Goldman SachsChip
  • NOT in your current account (too tempting to spend)
  • NOT in investments (emergencies don't wait for market recoveries)

How to build it fast:

  1. Make it your ONLY savings goal until you hit £1,000
  2. Sell stuff you don't need
  3. Take on a short-term side hustle
  4. Redirect all "extra" money (tax refunds, bonuses, gifts)

Once you have it: Only use it for true emergencies. A sale at your favorite shop is not an emergency. A broken boiler in January is.

My experience: Before I had an emergency fund, I was constantly stressed. One unexpected expense would wreck my month. Now? I've got £3,000 set aside. That peace of mind is priceless.


Reason 9: You're Trying to Save for Everything at Once

Multiple savings goals sound responsible, but they're actually sabotaging you.

The problem: You're trying to save for:

  • Emergency fund
  • Holiday
  • House deposit
  • New car
  • Christmas
  • Retirement

So you put £20 toward each, feel like you're making no progress on anything, get discouraged, and quit.

The psychology: Progress motivates us. Slow progress on multiple fronts feels like no progress at all.

The fix: Sequential goal setting

Priority order:

  1. £1,000 emergency fund (3-6 months to build)
  2. Pay off high-interest debt (6-24 months depending on amount)
  3. Full emergency fund (3-6 months expenses) (6-18 months)
  4. Specific short-term goal (holiday, car, Christmas)
  5. Long-term goals (house deposit, retirement)

Focus on ONE goal at a time (except retirement—always contribute if your employer matches).

Example:

  • Months 1-4: Build £1,000 emergency fund (£250/month)
  • Months 5-16: Pay off £3,000 credit card debt (£250/month)
  • Months 17-28: Build full emergency fund to £6,000 (£500/month)
  • Months 29+: Save for house deposit (£500+/month)

The power of focus: You'll hit each goal faster, get motivational wins, and build momentum.


Reason 10: You're Not Earning Enough (And That's Okay to Admit)

Sometimes the brutal truth is that you genuinely don't earn enough to cover basics AND save. This isn't a personal failing—it's economics.

The problem: All the budgeting advice in the world can't help if your income barely covers rent, bills, and food. You can't cut expenses that don't exist.

The psychology: Society makes you feel like a failure for not saving, even when the math literally doesn't work. This shame prevents people from addressing the real issue: income.

The reality check:

  • UK living wage (outside London): £12/hour
  • London living wage: £13.15/hour
  • If you're earning minimum wage (£11.44/hour) in an expensive area, saving is genuinely difficult

The fix: Increase your income

Short-term income boosts:

  1. Ask for a raise - If you've been in your role 12+ months and perform well, ask. Worst case? They say no.
  2. Side hustle - Check out my guide on making your first £50 online this weekend
  3. Overtime - I'm currently taking all available overtime to save for my house deposit
  4. Sell unused items - eBayVintedFacebook Marketplace
  5. Freelance your skills - FiverrUpworkPeoplePerHour

Long-term income growth:

  1. Upskill - Free courses on FutureLearnCoursera
  2. Switch jobs - Job hoppers earn 10-20% more than loyal employees
  3. Career pivot - Consider higher-paying industries (tech, finance, trades)
  4. Build online income streams - Affiliate marketing, content creation, digital products

My honest take: I work evening shifts (6-11 PM) and take every overtime opportunity. It's exhausting, but it's temporary. I'm building my house deposit and online income streams so I won't have to forever.

Important: If you're genuinely struggling to afford basics, prioritize survival over savings. Food and shelter come first. Once you're stable, then focus on building savings.


How to Actually Start Saving Money (Your Action Plan)

Right, enough diagnosis. Let's fix this. Here's your step-by-step plan:

Week 1: Awareness & Assessment

Day 1-2: Track your spending

Day 3-4: Calculate your numbers

  • Total monthly income (after tax)
  • Total monthly expenses (fixed + variable)
  • Current debt (amounts, interest rates, minimum payments)
  • Current savings (if any)

Day 5-7: Set your first goal

  • Choose ONE specific savings target
  • Make it emotional and visual
  • Calculate how much you need to save monthly
  • Set a realistic timeline

Week 2: System Setup

Day 8-9: Open the right accounts

Day 10-11: Automate everything

  • Set up automatic transfer to savings (day after payday)
  • Set up automatic bill payments
  • Create standing orders for irregular expenses (annual insurance, etc.)

Day 12-14: Create your budget

Week 3: Cut the Fat

Day 15-16: Audit subscriptions

  • List every subscription (streaming, gym, apps, magazines)
  • Cancel anything you haven't used in 30 days
  • Downgrade services you rarely use
  • Use Emma to find hidden subscriptions

Day 17-18: Reduce major expenses

Day 19-21: Tackle small leaks

  • Pack lunch instead of meal deals (save £40/week)
  • Make coffee at home (save £20/week)
  • Walk/cycle short journeys (save £10/week)
  • Use library instead of buying books (save £20/month)

Week 4: Build Momentum

Day 22-23: Find extra money

Day 24-25: Increase income

Day 26-28: Review and adjust

  • Check your progress
  • Celebrate small wins (saved your first £50? Awesome!)
  • Identify what's working and what isn't
  • Adjust your budget if needed

Month 2+: Consistency & Growth

Weekly habits:

  • Check your budget every Sunday
  • Review spending every Friday
  • Transfer any "leftover" money to savings
  • Track progress toward your goal

Monthly habits:

  • Review and categorize all spending
  • Look for new areas to optimize
  • Increase savings amount if possible
  • Celebrate milestones

Quarterly habits:


Savings Strategies That Actually Work

The "Round-Up" Method

Apps like Monzo, Chip, and Plum round up purchases to the nearest pound and save the difference.

Example: Buy coffee for £2.80, they save £0.20 automatically.

Why it works: Painless micro-savings add up. You'll save £50-£100/month without noticing.

The "No-Spend Challenge"

Pick one category and don't spend on it for 30 days.

Popular challenges:

  • No eating out/takeaways
  • No new clothes
  • No entertainment spending
  • No alcohol

Why it works: Breaks spending habits and shows you can live without certain expenses. Plus, you'll save £100-£300 in a month.

The "Pay Yourself First" Method

Already covered this, but it's worth repeating: Automate savings the day after payday.

Amount to save:

  • Beginner: 5-10% of income
  • Intermediate: 15-20% of income
  • Aggressive: 30%+ of income

Why it works: You can't spend what you don't see.

The "Sinking Funds" Strategy

Create separate savings pots for irregular expenses.

Examples:

  • Car maintenance fund (£50/month)
  • Christmas fund (£40/month)
  • Holiday fund (£100/month)
  • Home repairs fund (£30/month)

Why it works: Irregular expenses won't feel like emergencies because you've planned for them.

The "Cash Envelope" System (Digital Version)

Allocate specific amounts to spending categories.

Using Monzo or Starling:

  • Create pots for: Groceries, Entertainment, Eating Out, Shopping
  • Transfer your budgeted amounts on payday
  • Only spend from those pots
  • When it's empty, you're done for the month

Why it works: Visual limits prevent overspending. You see exactly what's left.

The "One In, One Out" Rule

For every new item you buy, donate or sell one you already own.

Why it works: Reduces impulse purchases and clutter. Makes you think twice before buying.


Tools & Apps to Help You Save

Banking Apps with Built-In Savings:

  • Monzo - Pots, round-ups, instant spending notifications
  • Starling Bank - Spaces, goals, spending insights
  • Chase - 5.1% interest on savings, cashback on spending

Dedicated Savings Apps:

  • Chip - AI-powered automatic savings
  • Plum - Smart savings, investment options
  • Moneybox - Round-ups with investment options

Budgeting Apps:

  • YNAB - £99/year, best for serious budgeters
  • Emma - Free tier, connects all accounts
  • Money Dashboard - Free, comprehensive tracking

Comparison & Money-Saving Sites:


Frequently Asked Questions

Why can't I save money even though I earn a decent salary?

It's usually not about income—it's about systems and habits. The most common culprits are: paying yourself last instead of first, lifestyle creep eating your raises, underestimating small purchases, and having no specific savings goals. High earners often struggle more because they assume they "should" be able to save without trying, so they never implement proper systems.

How much should I be saving each month?

A good starting target is 20% of your after-tax income, but this varies based on your situation. If you're paying off debt, 10-15% might be more realistic. If you're debt-free with low expenses, aim for 30%+. The key is starting with something—even £50/month builds the habit. You can always increase later.

Should I save money or pay off debt first?

Build a small emergency fund first (£500-£1,000), then aggressively pay off high-interest debt (anything over 7-8%), then build your full emergency fund (3-6 months expenses), then focus on other savings goals. The exception: always contribute enough to get your employer's pension match—that's free money.

What if I genuinely can't afford to save anything?

First, track every penny for 30 days to confirm this is true—most people find hidden spending. If you truly can't save after cutting non-essentials, focus on increasing income through overtime, side hustles, or job switching. Even £10/month builds the savings habit. Also check you're claiming all benefits you're entitled to using the Turn2us calculator.

How do I stop impulse buying and emotional spending?

Implement a 48-hour rule: wait 48 hours before any non-essential purchase over £20. Unfollow social media accounts that trigger spending. Delete shopping apps from your phone. Use cash or a separate "fun money" account with a fixed monthly limit. Address the emotional triggers—are you bored, stressed, seeking validation? Find free alternatives that meet those needs.

What's the best savings account in the UK right now?

As of 2025, Chase offers 5.1% on easy-access savings, Marcus by Goldman Sachs has competitive rates, and Chip offers good returns with automated saving features. For long-term savings, consider Cash ISAs to protect interest from tax. Always check MoneySavingExpert for the latest best buys.

How long does it take to build an emergency fund?

For a starter £1,000 fund: 3-6 months if saving £200-£300/month. For a full 3-6 month emergency fund (typically £6,000-£15,000): 12-36 months depending on your savings rate. The key is starting immediately and staying consistent. Even if it takes 2 years, that's better than never having one.


Conclusion

Look, I'm not going to lie to you—saving money is hard. If it were easy, everyone would be doing it. But here's what I've learned after years of financial struggles, mistakes, and eventually figuring it out: you can't save money isn't a permanent truth about you. It's a temporary situation caused by specific, fixable problems.

Maybe you're trying to save what's left over instead of paying yourself first. Maybe lifestyle creep is eating your raises. Maybe you're drowning in small purchases that feel insignificant but add up to thousands. Maybe you genuinely need to earn more. Whatever the reason, now you know—and more importantly, you know how to fix it.

Start small. Pick ONE thing from this guide and implement it this week. Not ten things. Not everything at once. Just one.

Maybe it's setting up an automatic £50 transfer to a savings account. Maybe it's tracking your spending for 7 days. Maybe it's canceling three subscriptions you don't use. Maybe it's selling five items on eBay.

One action. One week. Then build from there.

I promise you, that first £100 you save will feel incredible. Not because £100 is life-changing money, but because it proves you can do this. And if you can save £100, you can save £1,000. And if you can save £1,000, you can save £10,000.

Your financial situation can change. It just starts with one decision, one action, one pound at a time.

Now stop reading and go set up that automatic transfer. Future you will thank you.