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If 2026 is the year you get your money life sorted, you may be wondering where to begin. Our money correspondent Susan Edmunds has 5 areas to focus on.

Set a budget

It is often helpful to start thinking about what you want to achieve and breaking your goals down to things that can be done in the short term, and those that might take a bit longer.

Short-term goals might be things like a holiday in a couple of months, while longer-term might be saving a house deposit or for your retirement.

Make sure your goals are clear and achievable. They need to be measurable so you know when you've achieved them or are closer to them. Save $50 a week, for example, rather than "save more". Celebrate your wins along the way to keep you motivated.

It helps to know why you've chosen the goals, too.

Doing something just because you think you should is a lot less motivating than doing it because it's going to improve your life or make you happier.

Liz Koh, financial coach at Enrich Retirement, says setting goals first and then thinking about making them happen is a useful "top down" approach that is more likely to result in behavioural change.

That's important because, for lots of us, it's the behavioural change that needs to happen to help us stick to a budget.

Koh recommends focusing on small steps.

"One of the biggest mistakes people make is trying to get ahead too quickly. Money is an important part of life that serves a multitude of purposes. It is not something you can do without.

"For the same reason that you can't reach your goal weight on an overnight diet or suddenly become as fit as an Olympic athlete, you can't go from being broke to being seriously wealthy in a short space of time.

"The first lesson in changing your relationship with money is to set attainable goals that reflect the reality of your current financial situation. It is better to take small steps and be successful than to set unrealistic goals and fail. Achieving small steps may give you the confidence to gradually take bigger steps. If you have never been able to save, trying saving just a small amount each week and increase the amount over time."

Your budget can be a tool to help you get to the goals, because it'll give you a clear picture of what's going on.

This is where you will be able to work out whether you can free up money to put towards your goals.

Tom Hartmann, personal finance spokesperson at Sorted, says people either do a budget to make what they are already doing work, or to try to do something different.

Either way, it often helps to draw up a budget showing your current situation: How much is coming in, what's going on, what you're spending money on. Then you can see what can be adjusted.

You can usually get a good idea of what's been happening by looking at previous bank statements. Some banks have apps that track your spending to do this for you.

"We're creatures of routine, we keep going back

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