Resolutions fail when they rely on constant motivation, so removing the complexity can help turn your plans into actual progress. (Source: Ben Nash/Getty)
January hits and the money hangover can be real. Bills coming in, credit card balances creeping up, and the things you swore would change this year can already be wobbling. You’re working hard, but your money doesn’t reflect it.
Willpower isn’t the problem here, complexity is. Resolutions fail when they rely on constant motivation. A simple system that moves money to the right places without you is what turns good intentions into actual progress.
Here’s how you can systemise your money success, and make 2026 the year your New Year’s resolutions actually stick.
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There are a lot of things that can improve your money, but there’s always one thing that will move the dial the most. Whether it’s being debt-free by a certain date, hitting a property deposit target, or a monthly investment amount. Pick the one thing that will create the most momentum for you and make it your headline focus for 2026. Everything else should support this.
Then turn that target into a weekly action. If the goal is to invest $10,000 by December, that’s $191.30 each week. Automate that transfer the same day you get paid, so the progress happens before life gets in the way.
Write a single page that shows income, fixed costs, the weekly amount for your goal, and what’s left for life. Avoid the complex categories and 100-row spreadsheets so you can get started more easily. The question here is simple – can your real life fit the plan without extreme sacrifice or discipline?
Any savings or investing targets will only stick if your banking supports it. Set one account for bills, another for your everyday spending, and one for savings that’s out of sight. This way, your pay will go in, bills get paid automatically, pocket money is refreshed every week, and your savings will build without you having to do anything.
This isn’t about being perfect, it’s about removing manual effort. When your system moves money without you, the default outcome is progress.
If you carry debt like credit cards or personal loans, you won’t feel truly comfortable with money until it’s gone. List out any balances and interest rates, pay minimums on all, then attack the smallest debt or highest rate first. When the first debt is gone, roll that repayment into the next, and repeat until clear.
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If you’re clearing debt, you’ll make more progress if you only spend on debit until your debt disappears. If a genuine emergency hits, you can pause the extra payments, handle the issue, and restart within a week. Momentum here matters more than speed.
Your cash savings are going backwards after taxes and inflation, so if you want to actually get ahead you need to be investing. Consider setting up a regular weekly investment into a diversified index fund or micro-investing account so you’re making consistent progress. Start small if you need to, then aim to step it up quarterly. The habit is worth infinitely more than a huge starting amount.
Boring is profitable when it comes to investing – diversified, low cost, and aligned to your timeline. If you want to spice things up later, do it after you’ve built a solid foundation.
If buying property is on the table in 2026, don’t start with suburbs. Instead, start with borrowing power, deposit size, holding costs, and stress test for slightly higher rates. Your price band should come from your capacity, not what you like or feel.
Once your entry number is set, set up your savings transfers weekly and lock it into your banking. If you’re eligible for first-home buyer schemes, use them to your full advantage. More buyers are entering the market and prices have momentum, so the speed of your execution will matter.
Plan now to save tax and keep more of what you earn. If you’re considering an investment property, learn how negative gearing and interest prepayments can help at tax time. If you’re investing for the long term on a higher income, consider whether tax saving structures like investment bonds or extra super contributions make sense for you.
None of this needs to be super complicated or complex. You’ll win with a good understanding of the rules, actually using them to help you, and doing the right moves in the right order.
New year’s resolutions most often die in silence. Set a short monthly check-in with yourself, your partner, or a professional to celebrate wins, learn from any mis-steps, and keep things moving forward. You will hit a wobble at some point, so if something has slipped, fix it quickly to get back on track.
Then each quarter, look to raise the bar. See what you can dial up, savings amounts, investment contributions, or salary sacrifice to super. Even if it’s only by a small amount, you’ll feel the momentum building, and before you know it your progress will reflect it.
New year’s money resolutions that actually stick are simple, planned, and supported by a savings and spending system that does the hard work for you. Pick one key focus so you make faster progress, and you’ll also save time along the way.
Keep your promises small but relentless. You don’t need every month to be perfect to change your year – you need one system that works even when life happens.
Ben Nash is a finance expert commentator, podcaster, financial adviser and founder of Pivot Wealth. Ben’s new book, Virgin Millionaire; the step-by-step guide to your first million and beyond is out now on Amazon | Audiobook.
If you want some help with your money and investing, Ben has created a free seven-day challenge you can use to get more out of your money you can join here.
Disclaimer: The information contained in this article is general in nature and does not take into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Therefore, you should consider whether the information is appropriate to your circumstances before acting on it, and where appropriate, seek professional advice from a finance professional.
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