Ipon Goals: A No-Shame Budget for Gen Z Starting From Zero

Payday comes, and by the time you’ve covered rent, load, transpo, and a little something for the soul, the money’s gone. If that sounds familiar, you’re in the majority: a 2025 ADP report found that 78% of Filipino workers live paycheck to paycheck—one of the highest rates in the world. Deloitte adds that 48% of Gen Zs don’t feel financially secure, and cost of living is their number-one worry. So let’s be clear: being broke in your twenties isn’t a character flaw. With entry-level pay, rising rent, and the cultural pull to treat the barkada or send a little home, the math is genuinely hard. It’s a starting line, not a verdict.
Budgeting isn’t punishment or deprivation—it’s just a plan that tells your money where to go before it disappears. Here’s how to start, even from zero.
Split your sahod with the 50/30/20 rule
The simplest framework comes from a 2005 book by US senator Elizabeth Warren and her daughter: the 50/30/20 rule. Aim to spend 50% of your take-home pay on needs (rent, food, bills, transpo), 30% on wants (milk tea, concerts, that trip), and 20% on savings or paying down debt. The exact numbers flex—Manila rent might push your “needs” higher—so treat it as a guide, not a cage. The point isn’t perfection; it’s giving every peso a job. On a ₱20,000 salary, that’s roughly ₱10,000 for needs, ₱6,000 for wants, and ₱4,000 toward savings or debt—adjust the slices to fit your real life, but keep the savings slice sacred.
Pay yourself first—then automate it
Most people save whatever’s left at the end of the month. The problem? Nothing’s ever left. Flip it: treat savings like a bill you pay yourself first, the moment your salary lands. Then make it automatic. Behavioral economists Richard Thaler and Shlomo Benartzi proved the power of this with their “Save More Tomorrow” program—when saving was set to happen automatically, participants’ savings rates climbed from 3.5% to 13.6%. Set up an auto-transfer to a separate savings account on payday, and you’ll save without relying on willpower.
Know where your piso actually goes
You can’t fix what you can’t see. For one month, track every expense—an app, a notes file, or a small notebook. Most people are stunned by how much vanishes on small, forgotten things: the daily kape, the impulse Shopee checkout. Awareness alone tends to curb overspending—once you see the totals, the leaks are obvious and easy to plug. This isn’t about guilt or never enjoying yourself; it’s about clarity, so the fun you do spend on feels chosen instead of accidental.
Build a buffer before you invest
Before chasing crypto or stocks, build a small emergency fund—even ₱5,000 to start, growing toward a month or two of expenses. It’s the cushion that keeps one surprise—a hospital bill, a lost phone—from wiping you out. (None of this is financial advice; for big decisions, talk to a licensed professional who knows your situation.)
Take Marco, a 24-year-old call-center agent in Davao. He didn’t earn more—he just automated ₱500 every payday into a separate account he pretended didn’t exist. A year later, he had over ₱13,000 and, for the first time, a sense of breathing room.
Here’s the truth no one tells you: you don’t need a big income to start—you need a small, repeatable habit and a little patience with yourself. Every peso saved is a quiet vote for the future you’re building, one payday at a time. Don’t measure your worth by your bank balance, kaibigan. You are not behind. You’re beginning—and beginning is the bravest part.
References
ADP, “People at Work 2025” (cited via People Matters SEA): 78% of Filipino workers live paycheck to paycheck. https://sea.peoplemattersglobal.com/article/compensation-benefits/broke-despite-the-boom-the-philippine-paycheck-paradox-businesses-ignore-at-their-peril-46258
Deloitte, “2025 Gen Z and Millennial Survey,” Deloitte Insights, 2025. https://www.deloitte.com/us/en/insights/topics/talent/2025-gen-z-millennial-survey.html
Warren, E. & Warren Tyagi, A., “All Your Worth: The Ultimate Lifetime Money Plan,” 2005 (origin of the 50/30/20 rule). https://www.transamerica.com/knowledge-place/503020-rule-simple-effective-budgeting-tool
Thaler, R. & Benartzi, S., “Save More Tomorrow: Using Behavioral Economics to Increase Employee Saving,” Journal of Political Economy, 2004. https://www.anderson.ucla.edu/documents/areas/fac/accounting/smartjpe226.pdf

















