You’re in the right place.
Here’s where to begin.
We’ve organized everything so you don’t have to figure out what to read first. Follow the steps below — in order — and you’ll have a financial foundation most people spend years trying to build.
How this page works: Each section below covers one pillar of your family’s financial foundation — in the order we recommend tackling them. Start at Step 1 even if you think you’ve got it handled. You might be surprised. Each article takes about 5 minutes to read and comes with something you can actually do today.
Dual Income Strategy —
Get on the same page before anything else.
Two incomes sounds like a financial advantage. And it is — but only if you’re actually using them together. Most couples manage money in parallel instead of in sync. Fix this first and everything else gets easier.
Two Incomes, One Plan: The Dual-Income Money Framework Every Family Needs
Before you budget, invest, or save for college — you need a shared financial system. Here’s how to build one that actually works for both of you.
Read FirstJoint Account, Separate Accounts, or Both? The Honest Answer.
There’s no universally right answer — but there is a right answer for your situation. Here’s how to figure out which structure fits your family.
Read MoreThe Money Conversation You Keep Avoiding (And How to Finally Have It)
Financial disagreements are the #1 cause of relationship stress. Here’s a framework for having the talk — without it turning into a fight.
Read MoreWhat Happens to Your Finances If One of You Stops Working?
Parental leave, layoffs, or choosing to stay home — two-income families need a plan for when they temporarily become one. Here’s yours.
Read MoreBudgeting & Saving —
Where the money actually goes.
A budget isn’t a punishment. It’s a plan. And when you have two incomes, two opinions, and a kid who apparently needs new shoes every six weeks — having a real system is the difference between progress and chaos.
The Dual-Income Budget That Actually Works (No Spreadsheet Required)
Forget the 50/30/20 rule. Here’s a budgeting framework built specifically for two working parents — with daycare, irregular expenses, and sanity all accounted for.
Read FirstHow Much Should a Family Actually Have in Emergency Savings?
The “3-6 months” rule was designed for single people. Here’s what it actually looks like for a family of three or four — and how to get there.
Read MoreThe Invisible Expenses of Parenting (That Nobody Warns You About)
Birthday party gifts. School supplies. Extracurriculars. Here’s how to budget for the stuff that doesn’t show up on any financial planning template.
Read MoreAutomating Your Savings as a Two-Income Household
Set it and forget it — for real. Here’s how to build an automatic savings system that works even when life gets completely out of hand.
Read MoreCollege Planning —
The earlier you start, the less it hurts.
College costs are not getting smaller. But compound interest is a powerful thing — and it works better the earlier you start. Here’s everything you need to know about saving for college without sacrificing everything else.
529 Plans: The Complete Guide for Parents Who Are Just Getting Started
What they are, how they work, what they’re good for, and what the catch is. This is the only 529 explainer you’ll need to read.
Read FirstHow Much Do You Actually Need to Save for College?
Run the real numbers — not the scary ones, the actionable ones. Here’s how to set a target that’s ambitious but not paralyzing.
Read More529 vs. UTMA vs. Roth IRA: Which Account is Right for Your Kid?
Each one has a place. Here’s how to figure out which one — or which combination — makes sense for your family’s situation.
Read MoreWhat If My Kid Doesn’t Go to College? (The 529 Answer)
A legitimate concern. Here’s what happens to the money, what your options are, and why it’s probably not as risky as you think.
Read MoreInvesting for Kids —
Because the market doesn’t pause for potty training.
Once your budget is solid and college savings are in motion, it’s time to talk about building long-term wealth for your kids. Custodial accounts, index funds, and teaching your kids about money — all of it, in plain English.
How to Start Investing for Your Kids (Even If You’re Still Figuring Out Your Own)
You don’t need to have everything figured out before you start investing for your kids. Here’s how to do both at the same time — without losing your mind.
Read FirstIndex Funds for Beginners: The Only Investment Guide You Actually Need
If you’re new to investing, start here. Index funds are boring, reliable, and exactly what most families should be using. Here’s why.
Read MoreCustodial Accounts Explained: UTMA vs. UGMA for Your Kids
These are investment accounts in your child’s name — and they come with some important nuances. Here’s what you need to know before you open one.
Read MoreTeaching Kids About Money: An Age-by-Age Guide That Doesn’t Suck
From piggy banks to stock market basics — here’s how to raise a financially literate kid at every stage, without making money feel like a chore.
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