September is National Self-Care Awareness Month—a time to check in with your emotional, physical, and yes, financial well-being.
While self-care often brings to mind bubble baths, therapy sessions, or long walks outside (all great things!), one powerful act of self-care is often overlooked: taking care of your money. Your financial health directly affects your mental health. In fact, money stress is one of the leading causes of anxiety, burnout, and relationship tension in the U.S.
This month, let’s look at how financial self-care can help you feel more grounded, less anxious, and more in control.
Start with a plan: Your financial peace of mind
Creating a spending plan (not a restrictive budget!) is one of the simplest ways to take care of yourself financially. It helps you understand where your money is going, reduce impulsive spending, and free up dollars to put toward things that truly matter to you.
This isn’t about guilt – it’s about clarity. Knowing your numbers reduces uncertainty, which can reduce anxiety.
Build an emergency fund: Your just-in-case
One of the best ways to practice financial self-care is by building an emergency fund. Unexpected expenses happen—car repairs, medical bills, or a last-minute flight to see family.
Aim to save at least three to six months of essential expenses, but don’t be discouraged if that feels out of reach. Start small and save at a comfortable pace: even $500 can prevent a financial crisis from becoming an emotional one.
Master your debt: Your stress reliever
Debt can be an invisible weight on your mental load. If you’re juggling multiple payments or high-interest credit cards, it’s time to take control. Here’s how:
- List all your debts, interest rates, and minimum payments.
- Prioritize the highest-interest debt first while making minimum payments on the rest.
- Automate payments to reduce stress, avoid late fees, and simplify your routine.
Empower yourself with financial education
Financial self-care also means knowing your stuff. The more you understand how money works, the less scary it feels—and the more confident you’ll become in managing it.
Start small:
- Listen to a personal finance podcast during your commute.
- Browse FinFit’s Learn library for short, easy-to-digest guides.
- Bookmark your favorite resources to revisit when you need a refresher.
Set financial goals: Your personal roadmap
Self-care isn’t just about comfort—it’s about growth. Setting financial goals helps give you something to look forward to, whether it’s paying off a credit card, saving for a vacation, or finally creating that retirement plan.
Mind & money: A balanced approach to self-care
Financial self-care doesn’t require big money or dramatic change. It’s about being proactive, creating space to reflect, and making choices that protect your peace.
So this September, light the candle, go for the walk—but also open the banking app. Start the emergency fund. Make that payment. Set that goal.