Kimberly Palmer: Financial tips for new college grads
Deciding how to spend your first paycheck after graduating from college can be overwhelming, given the many competing demands on it

For new college graduates, receiving that first post-degree paycheck can be almost as exciting as getting the diploma itself. But it also presents a challenge: Given the many demands on a young personās budget, how should those funds be managed?
We asked five money experts to share their best personal finance strategies to help this yearās college grads successfully launch their financial lives. Hereās what they said.
FIND YOUR BUDGETING STYLE
To figure out how to allocate your money toward needs, wants and everything else, Erin Lowry, author of the āBroke Millennial Workbook,ā says that instead of following the latest budgeting trend on TikTok, itās helpful to just sit down with a pen and paper. āWrite down what your big expenses are,ā she says.
After accounting for large items like rent, car payments and food, you can then see what nonessentials also fit. āYou might want to go out to dinner with friends, build up new work attire or adopt a dog,ā Lowry says. Writing out the budget helps you figure out what you can afford and when, she adds.
āWe conceive of budgets as restrictive things that keep us from having fun, but you should be thinking of it as a way of controlling how your money is spent. If you donāt know, youāve sacrificed all control,ā Lowry says.
FACTOR IN TAXES
Melissa Jean-Baptiste, a financial educator and the author of the book āSo⦠This Is Why Iām Broke,ā says itās easy to forget to account for taxes, so you might have less take-home pay than you anticipated. Retirement contributions and other deductions can further lower that amount.
Jean-Baptiste suggests setting aside some time to really understand your first paycheck and all those deductions. āTake yourself on a money date so you understand how much youāre bringing home and how much you have left to save and invest,ā she says.
SAVE SMARTLY
Even if theyāre paying off debt, Alex Rezzo, a certified financial planner and the founder of Andante Financial in the Los Angeles area, urges new grads to start saving for retirement right away. āThere will always be a more immediate excuse to delay saving for retirement,ā he says, but he urges people to find a way to save at least 1% of each paycheck and to increase that amount over time.
He also suggests parking your direct-deposited paycheck funds in an online bank that offers a competitive high-yield account and is backed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. That way, the money likely will earn more than it would sitting in a traditional bankās checking or savings account.
PROTECT YOUR CREDIT
As you build your independent financial life, making at least the minimum payments on your student loan and credit card accounts can help protect your credit. Missing a payment, Lowry says, could damage your credit score. She suggests focusing on paying down any high-interest debt first to reduce the total amount going to interest.
Lowry also suggests freezing or locking your credit, which makes it much harder for identity thieves to apply for new credit in your name. Just remember that if you freeze your credit, youāll also have to thaw it if you want to apply for credit yourself, she says, adding, āyou might want to wait until youāre through a period of time when youāre applying for new accounts.ā
MAKE MISTAKES AND LEARN FROM THEM
Kennedy Reynolds, chief education officer at Acorns, a financial services company, says mistakes are part of the learning process, whether itās overspending or accruing credit card debt, but the key is to learn from the experience. āIf you have debt to pay down, take that paycheck and split it upā toward those bills until they are paid off, she says.
āTry to picture yourself later and know that the choices youāre making now will have a long-term impact,ā she adds.
LOOK BEYOND YOUR PAYCHECK
Linda Whiteman, a personal finance teacher at Outschool, an online learning platform for kids, teaches her students to think entrepreneurially. After all, she tells them, most millionaires are business owners.
āYou donāt have to work for someone,ā she says. She asks her students to consider what they can teach others, whether offering piano lessons online or creating digital art. Pursuing additional income streams outside of a paycheck can help grow wealth, she adds.
Jean-Baptiste found success doing exactly that: She used her experience as a teacher to create and sell lesson plans online. āI was bringing in $10,000 a year that I could put toward debt,ā she says. Her lesson plans eventually turned into the financial literacy business that she operates today.
Earning additional income outside of a paycheck, she says, ācan be a game-changerā ā financial wisdom that applies at any age.
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This column was provided to The Associated Press by the personal finance website NerdWallet. Kimberly Palmer is a personal finance expert at NerdWallet and the author of āSmart Mom, Rich Mom.ā Email: kpalmer@nerdwallet.com. Twitter: @KimberlyPalmer.
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