OPINION

Small money leaks become big problems

Give every saved peso a job. If you don’t assign it, you’ll spend it.

Chinkee Tan

Many people think financial problems only come from big expenses.

But in real life, it is often the small daily spending that slowly weakens a household budget. A snack here, a delivery fee there, an online checkout, a subscription renewal, or an appliance left running may seem harmless by themselves. But over time, these small habits can quietly drain you financially.

That is why small money leaks should never be ignored, especially when prices are rising and utility costs continue to put pressure on Filipino families.

I remember talking to someone who said, “Hindi naman ako magastos” (I don’t spend much).

And in a way, that was true. He was not buying luxury items or living an extravagant lifestyle. But when we looked at his daily spending, we found regular coffee runs, convenience store purchases, food deliveries, mobile top-ups, and online sale items he did not really need.

None of them looked serious on their own. But together, they were taking up a big part of his monthly budget. That reminded me of something important: financial stress does not always begin with one big mistake. Sometimes it begins with many small habits that were never corrected.

You’re earning more, but your money still disappears? You don’t have an income problem. You have money leaks.

1. Track the expenses you ignore. Your budget is not broken because of the rent. It’s broken because of the “small” stuff you don’t track. Coffee. Grab fees. Late-night cravings. Random checkout.

Track everything for seven days. No guessing. No excuses. You’ll be able to see where your money is really going.

2. Stop underestimating daily spending. P150 today feels harmless. P150 every day becomes P4,500 a month. That’s groceries. That’s savings. That’s investment money. Small spending is dangerous when it becomes automatic.

3. Fix the habits inside your house. You don’t notice it, but your bills do. Lights left on. Aircon running too long. Chargers are plugged in all day. These are silent expenses. If your income is going up but your bills are also going up, you’re not winning.

4. Audit your subscriptions and convenience habits. You’re paying for things you don’t fully use.

Streaming apps. Auto-renewals. Delivery fees because “tinamad ka lang” (you got lazy). Convenience is expensive when it becomes a habit. Cut what you don’t need. No drama.

5. Set clear limits, not vague promises. “Babawasan ko na lang” (I will just lessen it) doesn’t work. Be specific. P1,000 per week for wants. P500 for coffee. P0 for Impulse Shopee. Clarity creates discipline.

6. Give every saved peso a job. If you don’t assign it, you’ll spend it. Move it immediately: to an emergency fund, bills, or investments. Savings only work when they are intentional.