Edit: Response to initial question... No!! This year especially has been facing a load of new situations and trying to figure out how to react to preserve sanity! Lots and lots of research/googling is usually my answer, but only because that usually gets me enough conflicting information to get frustrated and make a call. We've cancelled a wedding, rescheduled a wedding, ended up getting married with just families there months before our rescheduled date because.. it felt like the right thing?? There's no guide, we just kinda talk through options and go with what seems like the most right thing to do based on our experiences so far.
Finances are no different?? There are more structured opinions/"guides" to follow than for all the rest, though.
I doubt I'll have a whole lot to add here, other than much of what i have learned/begun practicing follow with mtn's post above. Very fortunately, I grew up with parents who were each financially savvy, and practiced (and talked about) their habits/reasoning with us from our teens on. Also fortunate, my wife and I have great jobs that allow us the opportunity to plan for how we'll spend/save our money. Our salaries at work were cut substantially (will come back post-COVID), so we have been seeing how low we can get and keep our monthly expenses now so that we can maximize savings when our income does come back up.
We don't have cable, and cross-shopped internet providers heavily to find the cheapest/best. This year I am going to cross-shop our home/auto insurance and see if we can bundle to knock off costs there - I have also read how sometimes getting a 2nd quote will lead your current provider to drop rates for customer retention (if switching sounds like a hassle).
We are back to planning meals - at least for a week, sometimes 2. By only buying the groceries we need for planned meals (and a few snacks, chips/salsa), our grocery bill drops tremendously. I think most here are pretty true to form cheap with cars/payments, we're no exception. I am driving my 20yr old Expedition.
With our monthly excess, we have decided to save ~3 months worth of living expenses as an Emergency Fund that stays untouched. I recently read about Money Mutual Accounts, which we will likely look into for our 3 month savings - it should allow for a higher interest rate without introducing the risk of having money in an investment account that follow the market.
We have our Employer 401k's match maxed out, and don't contribute beyond that. I have recently begun contributing to HSA as well (through work). Both of these are money we never see/get to choose how to use, which is good. After that, credit cards come first. The Interest rate can make even small balances hard to get out from under if/when they carry through. You will also see your credit score increase pretty significantly when you clear the balance (happened to me, anyway). We pay student loans next, and are hoping to contribute more and more to that as it's the next highest interest rate.
We are happily investing in VTI as well (Vanguard ETF that follows the market, learned about it from someone here), which has already been a great source of growth in the ~3 months we've been contributing to it.
We're in a 1920 house, so it is also in constant need of updates - we try to plan by priority (can we live with it like it is) and how much value it adds to the house (vs. actual doll-hairs spent). Like everything else, every $ spent on the house could have been invested/saved which would let it grow further.
The name of the game with Finance, as with any big car project, is Goal Setting and Research. We probably spend 2-3 hours a week actively managing finances/looking at our best options, reading articles and online opinions, and discussing what we want our future to look like financially (New car next year? What about a trip in 2 years? When do we think we'll outgrow the house we're in? Can we afford a new AC system if ours goes out, and if so do we want that to come from emergency fund or can we pull from investments?). Starting with some money always helps you find/make more money, but it does take planning, thoughtfulness, and a common goal/set of goals as a household.
One comment of mtn's that I have to bring up, because it guided my wife's college plan and helped create the life situation we're in now:
How to pay for college
- Save during middle/high school
- Parental help, if possible
- Jobs in college
- Loans (addition mine - you don't have to take the full amount they give you, and can take literal years off your repayments if you don't)
- Is college the best path for you?
- Is this major worth it? (addition mine - Getting a degree in a field that pays well is a godsend when thinking about the future. There is often no need for a college degree, and skipping it can give your kid the opportunity to spend enough years developing a competency in a field to out-earn low-paying college degrees as a 22yr old. The earlier they earn money (and aren't spending it on loans) and put it to work in investment/retirement accounts the more that money will grow by the time they want to retire.)