Saw this list come out on the best ways to use your refund money, and thought Iโd use it as an opportunity to live vicariously through you guys since Iโm getting squat this year ;)
Though by no design of my own as I LOVE getting a nice chunk back every year and thinking about all the ways to power your goals! Even if itโs your own money weโre talking about! (And let me tell you โ after just maxing out our Roth IRAs yesterday, itโs a LOT more fun using your โfreeโ tax money than it is your โnormalโ money, hahaโฆ I felt the sting hard this time!)
So if youโre not one of those โI donโt give the government a free loanโ type people, which is fine if youโre actually APPLYING THAT MONEY towards your goals every paycheck!, hereโs an excellent list of ways you can use your newfound money for good. [Also here is an updated IRS tax refund schedule, so you can check when you might anticipate your refund!]
Per MyBankTracker.com, with comments from yours truly:
The 10 Best Ways to Use a Tax Refund
- Build an Emergency Fund โ Excellent route for anyone just starting out in their journey!
- Pay Down Your Debt โ An excellent route for anyone no matter *where* they are in their journey! Especially if weโre talking about debts with 10%+ interest rates!
- Fund Your IRA โ My go-to answer every year โ with or without a tax refund :) Even if this was all you ever did every year youโd have hundreds of thousands to your name by retirement!
- Invest โ Another great option, which Iโm assuming refers to non-retirement accounts since of course most of what you do in retirement accounts is invest ;) But maybe this could be a fun side pot to poke around and experiment with? Especially since again it feels like โfreeโ money and wouldnโt affect you as much if you were more risky with your everyday money?
- Pay for Home Improvements โ Or perhaps home improvement โwantsโ vs needs? ;) Especially those thatโll increase the value of your home over the years?? I remember once someone telling me you should do all of them while youโre *living in the house* vs before you go to sell it so you can actually ENJOY all the upgrades you do! Something we failed big time when we sold our first house, and now every time it pops back on the market and we see all those beautiful hardwood floors and kitchen cabinets I get sad that we never got to appreciate them :(
- Replace an Old, Inefficient Appliance โ Sure, why not?! And pick up one thatโs energy star compliant to help save the earth โ and your electric bills โ at the same time!
- Invest in Yourself โ I always find this one the hardest to do regardless of how you come into cash, but I agree we need to be better about taking care of ourselves, both in terms of our minds/brains/bodies, but also just in our general well-being too. And a tax refund can be the perfect opportunity to treat yourself here that you might otherwise never do.
- Save for an Upcoming Expense โ My Bank Tracker lists stuff like irregular expenses or real estate taxes (yaaaawwwn), but maybe you can stash some for more exciting expenses that are on the horizon if there is such a thing ;) (Road trip? International vacay!?)
- Make a Charitable Donation โ And then get a tax write-off too! Hah! (Get it? A tax write-off on your tax return??!) But yes โ an excellent idea as this world needs as much help as it can get these daysโฆ And might I recommend a few places Iโm proud to support:
- SundaraFund.org โ An organization that recycles old hotel soap into new soap for those who donโt have access to any around the world, or even know what soap IS?!
- Breadcoin.org โ A new currency of tokens you can hand out to those in need, redeemable for food at local merchants here in the DC area.
- TheGoodCemeterian.org โ A two-person preservation team that restores old tombstones and then shares the stories of the people they honor to help their memories live on.
- The J. Money Fund โ a charity Iโll one day finally create again!!! ;) Itโs been almost 10 years since our first one: Love Drop! (Anyone still around from those days?)
- Treat YoโSelf โ Buy Something Fun โ The only place where Iโll keep this on the list since I know most of us actually have the *opposite problem* here of wanting to hoard all our money! Hahaโฆ So if you havenโt done something nice for yourself lately, go ahead and splurge a little and then get right back to the Goodness again to keep your sanity ;)
And btw โ this doesnโt have to be a โone thingโ only type deal either. Mix and match it up depending on your personal preference! For some thatโs going โall inโ on one main goal and killing it, while others like to spread out the love and hit upon a few different areas that excite themโฆ
What matters most is that youโre using this money MINDFULLY, which I find is a lot easier to do when you get big chunks of it vs smaller ones throughout the year that tend to get lost in the shuffle.
So if youโre one to be getting a nice refund back this year, embrace it! Thereโs nothing wrong with it no matter what people sayโฆ Itโs mostly us $$$ nerds that raise a big stink about it, hahaโฆ.
Now make me jealous and tell me everything youโre gonna do with your money!! And bonus points for sharing *how muchโ youโre getting back to really rub it in! ;)
Get blog posts automatically emailed to you!
Thatโs a great list!
I spent mine on a combination of a few of those on that list. Bought a new couch and dinner table (Wifey made me). Then paid off a little debt while putting the rest in the savings. A little boring but at least I get to sit more comfortably now.
And your wife is happy :)
Iโm using mine as a start for a trip to the UK. Itโs something Iโve wanted to do for so long and itโs gonna be that much greater when the entire trip is paid for outright. Woohoo! No debt for this lady!
Totally!!! Youโre gonna have such a fun adventure on your hands soon โ Iโm excited for you!
1. Pay life isurance premiums for the year
2. Renew family museum memberships
3. Pay for sonโs sports fees (currently swim lessons) for the year. Pay 1 off or towards 1 credit card. Pad savings or a bill that gives us a. Teaching month
This has been the tax refund layout for the past 4years
Love that museum idea!!
Hah, trick question/statement. If you set your taxes up correctly you will either break even or get very little back. I hear people all the time getting thousands back. Screw that, โI want my money and I want it now!โ
If memory serves, I havenโt gotten back more than 200 bucks in the last 10-12 years. I screwed up and had to pay in about 500 one year.
So whatโd I do with this years paltry sum? Got a tank of gas to take me and the missus to dinner.
I have a feeling a lot of people would agree with you here, but I very much enjoy getting my โfree chunkโ every year ;) (except for this one of course, womp wompโฆ)
Havenโt filed my taxes yet โ actually delaying it. Last year was the tax year from hell. Hoping to break even. If I get anything back will use to pay down debt. Hoping this year Iโve figured out how much to have taken out of my annuity to break even.
Ugh โ that does not sound fun, Iโm sorry.
Finally bought a bookcase to house books stored in boxes 4 years since moving. The rest went towards huge medical bills for hubbyโs double knee replacement surgery in Feb. Poof all gone! I know. I know. Boring stuff!
The bookcase isnโt boring!! Even if you donโt ever read them, books make a house SO COZY!!
The credit union that I work for is offering a CD special for tax refund money. The CD is up to $3,000 for 12 months at 3.34% so at the end of the 12 months they will have earned $100. It is called the โDonโt Blow Itโ Special.
YES!!!!!! Credit Union of The Year right there!!! Hahaahaโฆ..
I got back a total refund of $15. it sounds lame but i was excited because last year I owed $1200. I have a side hustle that makes it hard to plan exact numbers!
Haha that IS good news!!! Much better to get a surprise in the *positive* area than the negative one! Celebrate with a nice fancy coffee from Starbucks ;)
I always feel a little guilty about getting a big refund because, as Whiskey pointed out, itโs basically just letting the government hold my money for a year, but I put my refund into my kidโs college fund each year. Iโm pretty confident that I wouldnโt max out my annual contributions without that chunk so knowing that assuages the guilt.
Donโt feel guilty!!! Youโre using that money wisely instead of frittering it away as most people do! And if you donโt trust yourself to do it throughout the year, then donโt! Your system is working just fine :)
This year we made a monthly budgeting buffer and the rest went into savings.
Just what a $$ nerd likes to hear!
We are doing nothing! My goal every year is to NOT have a refund (or payment). A refund is an interest free loan you are giving to the government.
Statistics show that the majority of people (maybe those NOT reading your blog), blow their refund money on materialistic things and thus it goes right out the door and not towards FI.
I am probably going against the grain on this one.
Mr. r2e:
I couldnโt agree more. Why on earth would ANYONE want to give an interest-free loan to Uncle Sam when most are PAYING interest for: mortgages, student loans, car loans, or credit cards? Even if you donโt OWE any money to any bank, you could be earning interest or investing this money!
My 2cents.
The big caveat here is *if* they use all that extra money every paycheck towards their financial goals โ which we all know has a slim-to-none chance of happening ;) But at least by โgiving the govโt a loanโ they see a nice chunk at the end and it just may shock them enough to *stop and think* first before frittering it away! Obviously if youโre good with money then itโs best to maximize it with every paycheckโฆ
I agree. I plan so that I pay in way too much and get a nice refund. Itโs helpful to me to be able to look at $2000+ dollars and make intentional decisions about it rather than an extra <$100 in each paycheck that would probably get eaten (literally) without noticing.
I used mine to help pay down our countryโs debt. Waitโฆ..thatโs not a refund? And my โcontributionโ wonโt pay down the debt? WHAT?! All these years of trying to help out our country get out of debt and itโs not working, I canโt believe it! Ok, just kidding, but noโฆ.no refund here either. But I did get a pretty sweet $10K+ bonus at work. After I contributed my part toward paying down our countryโs debt, I maxed out my own IRA and dumped whatever was left into my taxable investment. Hels yeah โ this girl knows how to party.
Hahaโฆ you win my Favorite Person of The Day award โ congrats ;)
I usually get just a small chunk back each year, which I think is perfect โ donโt want to give the govt a loan but also I really donโt want to owe either! This year I got about $1700 back and Iโm using it for a trip to Alaska with my family! I could have saved/budgeted responsibly for the trip but this seems more funโฆalmost like free money! (I know, I know, it was my money to begin with, but still!)
Hey โ you know Iโm with you on that!!
And good point about *not owing* too โ forgot to include that in my analysis as that alone is enough to want to loan the govโt money :)
No refund for meโฆ I mean I suppose that means I maximized my take home but it feels like a loss stillโฆ Overall I owed $200.
Haha yup โ always feels better to get a positive surprise than a negative one :)
I donโt want to get a big refund and I donโt want to owe a lot, so we try to make it about even, but last year my husband contributed a MAJOR amount to his 401K, so I think we may be getting a refund. Not sure yet. It looks like I also didnโt have too much taken out of my check, so it will be a mystery. lol
I hope your mystery ends in the positive territory than the negative one :)
Nothing exciting here. Anything thatโs not going toward savings is going to pay off some traveling that we like to do as a family.
My number of deductions on my form at work doesnโt include my kids. This has always meant we get a refund, and it also meant that we didnโt get zapped by the changes in the tax codes as many did.
Ahh yessโฆ. those tax changes did a number on a lot of people I heard :(
I put $1000 into my Roth IRA, bumped up my emergency fund by $500 and split the rest between home, auto, and vacation savings. Didnโt spend a penny of it. Kind of boring I guess.
At least buy yourself a coffee or something! ;)
Hey J, great article! I just went through this dilemma the other day. I got a $6,000 return. I really wanted a motorcycle I found on Craigslist for $2,900. My girlfriend was no help as she was all like โYou deserve it!! You should do it etcโฆโ In the end, I fought it off and did the responsible thing and put it toward one of my rental property mortgages. Not as โsexyโ as a bike, but oh well LOL!!
I should mention in case anyone says anythingโฆthe reason for the large return is not that I pay too much in each year from my job, but rather I write off rental real estate losses :-)
Heyo!!!
Although I was hoping you were going to say you got that bike and did a 50/50 scenario ;) Iโm secretly desiring one out of the blue myself and was going to use your answer to help solidify mine more, hahaโฆ So your girlfriend messed up my dreams too!
Haha!! Well, I did promise myself that once I hit this next financial goal I would โspurgeโ on something. You could always set a small goal that you can accomplish in like a week and then get that bike lol!!! Love the siteโฆkeep up the great work ;-)
I am here for your enjoyment!
Iโm slightly terrified that weโre going to owe 5 figures this year with all the changes in tax code and how many deductions weโre losing. Pray for us!
I will!!! That will be horrible if thatโs the case! :(
What tax refund? Weโll owe around $5,000 this year.
Bah!
Ouch! How did that happen? Something with blog income?
Surprised with a $2200 refund this year (we actually had enough itemized deductions to take more than the standard deduction) and I have a 1099/lots of interest-earning accounts that make it hard to predict. We are using it to pay our Emergency fund back for a minivan we bought a few months ago ahead of when were planning to replace our 2006 van which needed major repairs.
One fun thing is that I used last yearโs $1200 refund to start a โ15th anniversaryโ trip fund and weโre taking that trip next month! Nothing like using 2017โs money to pay for a trip in 2019!
Haha there you go!! Enjoy that vacay!! :)
With low income and 3 kids, Uncle Sam is very good to us and was even better to us this year with the new tax law! $2810 paid the last of the roof debt (ugh, house maintenance!!), $3500 to try to jumpstart emergency savings account, and $50 each to my wife and I!
An excellent diverting of the money โ well done :)
$4500 toward emergency fund, $5000 toward highest interest student loan.
How in the world did we get so much back?! I have a feeling itโs being a one-income, six person family, earning $37k last year (still, the very best year weโve ever had, and we still paid down $13k of debt and bought a new car for cash as well).
This year, with a significant raise, weโre projected to more than double our income, propelling up two tax brackets (whoa!).
So now we have the interesting issue of whether to max out our 401k or funnel all that money into saving for a house. A good problem to have, for sure!
So much fascination in this comment!!! Huge refunds, huge income projections, huge finance moves โ just all around huge! Hahaโฆ Sound exciting :)
I withhold at a ridiculous rate. I have one dependent, but withhold as if I donโt. I file head-of-household, but withhold as โsingleโ. I have some 1099 income, so I take out an extra $50 from every W-2 paycheck. With all this, I got back about $5000. I am:
โ making double-payments on most of my debt this month
โ getting to a โmoney ageโ of 30+ days buy budgeting now for ALL of my April bills now (my finances are a wreck post-divorce)
โ buying myself a small Smart TV (I havenโt owned a TV in 3+ years)
โ bumping up my Emergency Fund by about $500
โ taking my son to visit a dear friend this summer
A plethora of goodness there โ J$ approves :)
Moved back in November to a house in the burbs, which means we now have a yard and lots more space (great for kids and the dog, plus we have better public schools)โฆ..so our refund is being used for a riding lawn mower and some furniture.
Weโve been pretty smart generally about investing/paying down debt (but not perhaps as hardcore as the FIRE folks and readers here โ still have plenty of debts to address in the future), so Iโm okay spending this one given where we are in our lives right now (two kids in daycare, new house, etc.). So long as we start ramping up the savings/debt pay down in the future (which we will!), weโll be fine.
And soon your kids will be out of daycare and into school too!! Saving you (probably) thousands a month to help speed up those debt payments! :) Weโre at about $1,000โish/mo now with 3 kids compared to over $2,400/mo just two years ago with only 2 kids! It gets better!
First is a new couch. Old one is falling apart and starting to get pokey in the wrong spots (not sure what the right spots would be). Then put some into the kids 529s (which will get me money back next year too!).
The remaining will go into the vacation fund for our trip to Italy next February. I promised my wife we would take an overseas vacation every anniversary. Since we got married on leap day, it gives me 4 years to save for each trip.
Hahahaโฆ Iโm sure she just loves how clever you are ;)
We pulled some funds from our emergency fund in December to pay off the personal loan I took out at the beginning of last year to consolidate credit card debt. Even at the lower interest rate, it was still almost 11% and we decided it would be better to just knock it out. Thanks to our moderate tax refund, we almost have the emergency fund back to where it was.
This will allow us to start making extra student loan payments this month.
Excellent plan. 11% is no joke!!
We aim never to get tax refunds, but sometimes it happens. We donโt ever spend it as though it isnโt really earned income but some kind of free bonus. Therefore, we do with it what we do with the all of our income โ gladly have it and put it in the bank. Leave it there apart from the cost of living, savings and retirement.
You respect your money well :)
We got a HUGE tax return this year (due to the two of us changing jobs midway through the year) so we put a huge chunk of it towards student loans and then we still each out $500 to spend on whatever we wanted. Right now, I still have $150 burning a hole in my pocket (I bought a kindle and some random stuff), trying to decide what to spend it onโฆโฆ.
Thatโs fun!!
I was thinking about spending my refund on booze and cocaine. Then I plan to waste whatโs left over.
Yeah yeah, hahaโฆ
Trick Question!
Money โBossesโ donโt make interest-free loans to the guvโmnt. :)
Iโll be coughing up a little over a grand in a couple of weeks.
No thanks!
Iโm putting my refund (about $900) toward my moving fund. Iโve been staying with family but have a new job (pays 95% more!) and need to move a few cities over. With the refund I should be able to up my fund to enough to cover the deposit and general moving costs.
95% more โ wow! Good for you!!
Thanks! Iโm still dumbfounded. I wasnโt getting paid very much before so now Iโm at whatโs probably a regular income to most folks, but Iโm thrilled! Plus now I can put real money away for retirement!
Yeah you can!! Make a plan for it all so you donโt slip into lifestyle inflation!! :)
Itโs amazing for me to hear about such big tax refundsโฆ
Itโs not tax season here (thatโs April-May), but if I estimated correctly I should be getting back about โฌ100.
Iโll just cast it in the e-fund, itโs too thin to my taste.
This year is the first I havenโt given the government an interest-free loan! We didnโt get a refund because I accidentally put my deductions too high. Sadly, that also means we owe the Feds a (low) 5-figure bill. On the plus side, itโs low enough and there were enough tax-bill changes that I wonโt get penalties when I pay it in April.
Well thatโs something!
Every penny went right to savings. $2,0000
My type of lady.
Will prob put about 2,000 towards student loans, 1,000 towards new windows and the rest to savings. We have baby number two coming on June I want to up the savings and Iโve been working really hard to pay down student loans. Since last August Iโve been making weekly deductions from my checking to savings tonstart simulating a second daycare fee. I started with 60 a week and now we are up to 185-all this โextraโ money has gone to pay down he student loan! We should have it paid down to zero in approx 15 months so Iโm very excited!!!
Very exciting indeed!!! Gonna free up SO MUCH money once thatโs done!! Just in time for the baby to eat it back up! Hahaโฆ (but my Lord are those cuties worth it..)
We were just so happy to GET a refund; last year we owed thousands of dollars and had adjusted our withholding massively to account for that.
We are using our refund as a temporary emergency fundโour rental property is being sold, so we will use it to cover the mortgage during the time we donโt have tenants but before the sale. I just hope itโs enough and that the house sells before it runs out.
I hope so too!!! Will be thinking good thoughts for yโall!
Iโm really a guy, who loves to save โ but to be honest, number 10 is also a pretty good one :)
Good to do every now and then and remember what money is for ;)
I owe 3,000 so nothing to plan here
Dangโฆ was it by design or a surprise?
It was a surprise
I am getting closer to my plan of nothing owed nothing returned. Last year was several thousand received (darn those moves and new accountant โ he found mistakes on previous returns and I got more back) and this year I am getting about 400? I am very happy with that.
Yโall do you and enjoy getting closer to FIRE!
You too, friend!!
And always better to get a nice surprise than a nasty one! ;)
Refund = vacation fund! Probably goes against FIRE mindset but want to have some fun on my way to FI. Was expecting a quiet low key year but now planning a cruise, trip to Vegas (luckily Iโm not a big gambler) and a 12 day European trip. Wishing refund was bigger to cover more of these costs, but oh well. On the other hand, I always put my bonus into savings so guess Iโm not being too bad with my money.
NICE!!! So much adventure for you on the horizon โ I am jealous! :)
Mostly rebuilding the old emergency fund! We had a plumbing issue the week after Christmas โ the ~60-year-old pipe under our tub basically rusted shut, and since our home is in a slab we had to have the tub ripped out and part of the floor torn apart to run a new pipe. Since we had to do that we decided to bit the bullet and replace the old, chipped tub with something new, and fortunately we could just patch the floor since we tracked down matching tiles. But that took a big bite out of our emergency fund, so we need to replenish it.
But we did budget out a bit for fun โ weโre taking a mini vacation this summer and bringing our kids for a long weekend at Sesame Place, since friends of ours who recently moved across the country will be out this way and going to Sesame Place has been a tradition with them since we all started having kids. ;-)
Heyyyy thatโs cool!!! I didnโt even know you can take kids to that???
And smart about replacing the tub too so you at least get *something* good out of it, hahaโฆ The only silver lining to big repairs like that :)
Not getting one!! Started managing my witholding throughout the year, so that I donโt give the Government an interest free loan for the year. I would rather pay a little bit at the end of the year. The good news is with the Tax Law changes (at least for my family) itโs easier since it no longer makes sense to Itemize.
Love the site BTW, keep up the great content!!!!!
Thanks for jumping in! Glad youโre enjoying it! :)