This isn’t about chasing last-minute decisions or aiming for a perfect financial plan. Think of it as a quick stress test: a simple way to see how resilient your finances are, whether your savings and investments are working together, and where small tweaks could make a meaningful difference.
You can do this in under an hour, with a coffee and a notepad. Start where you are, focus on what matters most to you, and pick just one thing to improve. That’s often enough to put you in a stronger position for the financial year ahead.
Question: If life threw a curveball next month — a bill, a delay, a wobble at work — could you pay for the basics without derailing everything else?
Action: Add up your essential monthly outgoings: housing, bills, food, transport, debt minimums and anything you’d have to cover. Then check how much you’ve got in easy-access cash.
Why it matters: Investing works best when you can leave it alone. A cash buffer is what stops you selling investments at the wrong time because something unexpected happened. You’re not trying to build a fortress overnight; you’re just giving yourself breathing room.
The bottom line: You’ve got at least one month of essentials in cash, three ideally, and you know what that number is.
Question: Is the money you’re building for the future actually keeping pace with how life costs are changing?
Action: Look at your savings and ask what each pot is for. A useful split is:
Why it matters: Inflation means the spending power of cash can fall over time. While cash plays an important role for short-term needs, holding too much of it for longer-term goals can make it harder for your money to keep pace with rising prices.
Investing exists to tackle that problem, not by avoiding short-term ups and downs, but by aiming for long-term growth.
The bottom line: Your cash has a clear job, and you’ve a plan for money you can dedicate to meeting your long-term goals.
Question: Are your investments sitting in the most tax-efficient home available to you?
Action: Check whether your long-term investing is happening inside tax-efficient wrappers such as ISAs or pensions.
Why it matters: Two people can earn the same investment returns and end up with different outcomes depending on tax. Using the right wrapper means more of your growth stays yours. It’s one of the simplest “quiet wins” you can make in your financial life.
The bottom line: You’ve made sure your long-term money is growing in a tax-free or tax-advantaged wrapper.
Question: Do your investments match when you’ll need the money?
Action: Name your horizon for each long-term goal:
Why it matters: The longer you stay invested, the more chance your returns have to smooth out the bumps. Market volatility is uncomfortable, but over time it’s also what creates opportunity.
Rather than thinking of risk as a villain, decide on the level of risk you are comfortable with and aim for growth over time.
The bottom line: You’re investing with your horizon in mind, and you’re not judging long-term goals on short-term performance.
Question: Is your investing approach one you can actually stick with month after month?
Action: Be honest about your style.
If researching companies and picking shares is something you enjoy (and you’re comfortable with the ups and downs) it may have a place in your portfolio.
If you’d prefer a simpler, steadier approach (especially for regular monthly investing) funds can take much of the guesswork out of the process.
Why it matters: Picking individual shares can be exciting, but they can also create stress.
Funds spread risk across many holdings and can help you keep investing regularly without needing to “be right” about every company. The best approach is the one you can sustain.
The bottom line: Your investing style feels manageable, repeatable, and aligned to your goals.
If you had to explain your money plan in 60 seconds, could you?
Write three bullets:
Clarity beats complexity. A simple plan you can repeat is the thing that makes finances future-ready, even when life doesn’t go to plan.