Enter your income and expenses to see whether your budget balances — and how your finances change living as a single household.
After taxes. Include salary, freelance, or any regular ongoing income.
Monthly amount you receive. Leave at 0 if not applicable or not yet determined.
Monthly amount you receive. Leave at 0 if not applicable.
Rental income, investments, government benefits, etc.
Your single-household payment. If refinancing after a buyout, use the estimated new payment.
Monthly cost. Divide annual premium by 12 if you pay yearly.
Often one of the biggest post-divorce surprises — especially if you were on a spouse's plan. Check your employer, COBRA, or marketplace options. Leave at 0 if unknown.
Copays, prescriptions, therapy. Estimate a monthly average. Leave at 0 if unknown.
Paid care so you can work — your share of the monthly total. Leave at 0 if not applicable.
Just the child's portion added to your plan — not your full premium. Check your pay stub or HR.
Tuition, supplies, sports, music — your share of the monthly cost.
Even a small monthly contribution matters post-divorce.
Monthly minimum payments on debt in your name after divorce.
Fill in your married household numbers to see a before/after comparison in the results. Leave blank to skip.
Total monthly spending as a married household — housing, food, insurance, transportation, debt, and everything else.