04/13/2026

Spring cleaning your finances: A family-friendly guide

Spring isn’t just about finally opening the windows and pretending you enjoy cleaning. It can also be a good time to take a look at your finances and give them a bit of a reset.

Nothing dramatic. No spreadsheets that take over your life. Just a few simple tweaks to make things feel more organised and easier to manage.

Start by taking stock

Before you do anything else, it helps to know what you’re working with. Most families have a mix of accounts like current accounts, savings, maybe a joint account for bills, and they can quietly pile up over time.

Take a few minutes to list them out and check the balances. You might spot an old account you’ve forgotten about or realise one account is doing most of the heavy lifting while others sit quietly in the background.

At this stage, you’re not changing anything. Just getting the full picture.

Make your money easier to follow

If your money feels a bit all over the place, a simple budget can help bring some order to it. This doesn’t need to be strict or complicated.

Think of it more like a monthly snapshot: what’s coming in, what’s going out. This will help you understand where it tends to go.

Most families find it useful to group spending into a few broad categories:

  • Household bills
  • Everyday spending (food, petrol, bits and bobs)
  • Extras (meals out, treats, days out)

That’s usually enough to spot patterns. You might notice small things adding up (like subscriptions), or areas where money could be redirected without much effort.

Let automation do the hard work

Once you’ve got a rough idea of your spending, you can make life easier by automating a few things. We like to call this setting and forgetting.

Setting up regular transfers into savings means you don’t have to think about it every month. It just happens in the background, which is often the easiest way to build a habit. You’re paying your future self first without even thinking about it, letting your savings quietly stack up and grow in the background.

Some families split their money into different “pots” for different goals. They keep spending separate from things like holidays or emergencies. It’s not about having loads of accounts, just about making things clearer at a glance. It can also help you see how far you’ve come saving for each goal.

Automating saving can also help you take advantage of the magic of products like a Cash Individual Savings Account aka Cash ISAs (there are many types of ISAs – you can read about them here). Think of an ISA as your money’s little tax-efficient savings. You keep whatever it earns, no cut for the taxman.

Small, regular amounts can build up over time when they’re set aside consistently.

Give each account a job

Accounts tend to work best when they have a clear purpose. Otherwise, everything blends together and it’s harder to keep track.

For example:

  • An easy access account is often used for money you might need quickly, like an emergency fund
  • A fixed-term account holds money for a set period, with a fixed rate, and usually doesn’t allow withdrawals without restrictions or penalties

You don’t need loads of accounts but knowing what each one is for can make a big difference to how organised things feel.

Tidy up the small stuff

This is the financial version of clearing out the kitchen drawer. A quick check can uncover a few easy wins.

Have a look through your regular payments and subscriptions. It’s common to find things you no longer use, or payments you’ve simply stopped noticing.

It’s worth reviewing:

  • How many subscriptions do you have, and if you still use them
  • Direct debits and standing orders
  • Any accounts with a variable interest rates
  • Fees you might be paying on things like credit cards

Nothing complicated here – just a general tidy-up.

Keep it ticking over

A full financial overhaul isn’t something most people want to do regularly.

A quick check every few months just to review balances, spending and savings can help keep everything on track without much effort.

Think of it like a light clean rather than a deep one.

TL;DR (too long; didn’t read)

If you do nothing else this spring, these small steps can go a long way:

  • Get a clear view of all your accounts
  • Keep a simple eye on what’s coming in and going out
  • Set up automatic savings where possible
  • Give each account a clear purpose
  • Check in every few months to stay on top of things

A bit of organisation now can make managing money feel a lot calmer the rest of the year.