Most of us file our bank statements away when we receive them, without even opening them. But, ignoring your bank statements could be costing you money and have you living under false perceptions of your financial position.
Instant notifications from your bank as you transact have become an efficient tool in monitoring daily spending, however, in order to remain on top of your finances you need to take a step back each month for a holistic view of how you have transacted.
It is important to not only to assess your cheque account statements but to also pay attention to your credit card and savings account statements in order to make comparisons between your spending, across your accounts, and your saving.
Eunice Sibiya Head of FNB Consumer Education suggests that statements can prove valuable in the following ways:
Spending habits
- There is no better way to determine your spending patterns than to analyse your bank statements. Create categories such as food and beverages, entertainment and so on. Then, based on a two or three month overview, calculate your average spend for each category.
- A productive exercise is also to determine how many times a year you had large medical expenses or unforeseen circumstances in order to make a well informed decision about how much you need in your emergency savings.
- Analysing your spending habits will very quickly highlight in which areas you are living above your means and where you can cut down to put more funds towards saving or paying off debt. It is also the ideal foundation for drawing up a realistic budget that you can easily integrate into your life.
Making sure you don’t incur unnecessary costs
- The analysis of a bank statement is an easy way to determine whether you are accruing unnecessary costs or whether you could potentially save on banking fees if you changed your banking behaviour.
- Make sure you are up to date with your bank’s pricing as there are generally areas where one can cut back on costs. These include having your statements e-mailed to you instead of having printed copies delivered and using digital channels instead of drawing or depositing money inside a branch.
- There are some months where the money spent on a branch withdrawal or deposit could have been the difference between being able to buy that something extra for the dinner table or not. Analyse your bank costs and do research about alternative ways of transacting – cellphone and app banking are often easy ways to cut back on banking fees.
Tracking debit orders
- It is very easy to forget for which subscriptions we have signed up or which of our accounts are paid via debit order. Make sure that the correct debit orders and amounts are being debited every month.
- If the amount that is debited is small you are unlikely to receive an instant message from your bank notifying you of the transaction and before you know it you could have paid hundreds of Rands for a service that you don’t use anymore or that you have forgotten that you signed up for. You can only recognise and rectify this in a timely fashion if you check your statements often.
Important notices
- Bank statements can be a rich source of bite-sized information.
- None of us have the energy to read reams of communication but by just opening up your bank statements every month you could be gathering helpful tips and pieces of information such as interest rate changes, pricing changes, the latest card scams to be aware of and the precautions you can take to avoid them,” suggests Sibiya.
- Some banks also supply customers with pie charts or graphs that give them an indication of their percentage spend in a category which will also serve as an aid when budgeting or tracking spending month-on-month.
“Remember that your bank will assume that all transactions on the statement are in order if they don’t hear from you within a certain period of time. Do your part and spend some time scrutinising your bank statements when you receive them – the benefits far outweigh the few minutes it will take to do so,” concludes Sibiya.