18 Money Saving Challenges To Save More In 2025

Eighteen fun and flexible money saving challenges to boost your savings, cut spending, and reach your financial goals faster.

By Medha deb
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18 Money Saving Challenges To Save More Money

Money saving challenges are a simple and motivating way to build better financial habits, grow your savings, and stay focused on your goals. Instead of trying to “save whatever is left,” a structured challenge gives you clear rules, a target amount, and a time frame, making it easier to follow through.

Research consistently shows that having a specific plan and pre-committing your actions improves the odds you will stick with financial decisions and long-term goals. Challenges do exactly this by turning saving into a clear, step-by-step process.

This guide walks through 18 different money saving challenges you can use to save for emergencies, debt payoff, travel, holidays, or any other goal you care about.

Why Money Saving Challenges Work

Before jumping into the specific ideas, it helps to understand why these challenges are so effective for many people:

  • Structure: You know exactly how much to save and when.
  • Focus: You have one clear goal instead of juggling many vague intentions.
  • Momentum: Watching your savings grow each week or month motivates you to keep going.
  • Behavior change: Small repeated actions help you build lasting habits like spending awareness and delayed gratification.
  • Flexibility: You can adapt amounts and timelines to your income and lifestyle.

Below are 18 challenges you can mix and match throughout the year.

1. The 6-Month Savings Challenge (26 Weeks)

The 6-month savings challenge is a structured, short-term plan that guides you through 26 weeks of consistent saving. Each week you save a pre-set amount that gradually increases, making it easier to adjust to higher savings over time.

A common version of this challenge starts with a small amount in the first week and slowly increases until you reach a total of around $1,378 by week 26.

WeekExample DepositRunning Total
1$3$3
2$7$10
13(mid-range)(growing steadily)
26(highest weekly amount)≈ $1,378

How to use it:

  • Download or create a 26-week tracker with the deposit amount for each week.
  • Automate weekly transfers into a dedicated savings account.
  • Highlight or check off each week as you complete it.

This is ideal if you want a substantial short-term goal, like a small emergency fund or a sinking fund for a large purchase.

2. 30 Days to Master Your Spending (No-Spend Challenge)

The 30-day spending challenge, often called a no-spend challenge, helps you reset your habits and stop impulse purchases. For one month, you commit to only spending on essentials and pre-planned priorities.

Using a temporary spending freeze can reveal how much money leaks out on non-essentials—like takeaway meals, subscriptions, or impulse online orders—freeing up cash you can save instead.

Typical rules include:

  • Allowable: rent or mortgage, utilities, groceries, transport, medications, basic necessities.
  • Not allowed: dining out, new clothes, décor, impulse online purchases, paid entertainment.
  • Plan exceptions in advance: for example, one pre-planned outing or a birthday gift.

How to implement it:

  • Pick your 30 days and clearly define your “allowed” and “not allowed” categories.
  • Track all spending in a notebook or app to stay accountable.
  • Every dollar you do not spend goes into savings at the end of the week.

3. Meal Planning Money Challenge

The meal planning challenge focuses on one of the biggest variable expenses in most budgets: food. By planning meals in advance, shopping with a list, and cooking at home, you can significantly reduce food spending and food waste.

Households that cook at home more frequently typically spend less on food than those that rely heavily on prepared or restaurant meals.

How to do it for 30 days:

  • Create a weekly meal plan for breakfast, lunch, dinner, and snacks.
  • Shop with a list based on your plan, avoiding extras.
  • Batch cook and freeze portions to reduce last-minute takeout.
  • Track what you would have spent on takeout or restaurants and transfer that amount into savings.

This challenge not only saves money but often leads to healthier eating, because you have more control over ingredients and portion sizes.

4. The $5 Savings Challenge (90 Days)

The $5 savings challenge is simple and fun. Over approximately 90 days, every time you receive a $5 bill, you put it aside instead of spending it.

Steps:

  • Pick a time frame (e.g., 90 days).
  • Get a jar, envelope, or box labeled for this challenge.
  • Every time a $5 bill comes into your hands, place it in the jar immediately.
  • Do not count the money until the end of the challenge for extra motivation.

Your total will depend on how often you handle cash, but many people are surprised at how fast this adds up.

5. Create a “Clever Girl Fund” Challenge

A Clever Girl Fund is essentially your personal safety net—money you set aside to cover emergencies and unplanned expenses. This includes events like job loss, car repairs, urgent home maintenance, or unexpected medical costs. Organizations like the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau emphasize the importance of having emergency savings to support financial resilience.

How to set up this challenge:

  • Open or designate a separate high-yield savings account for this fund.
  • Set an initial goal of $1,000 as a starter emergency buffer.
  • Choose a deposit plan, for example:
    • $333 per month for 3 months
    • $167 per month for 6 months
    • Any other amount that fits your budget
  • Automate monthly transfers and treat this like a non-negotiable bill.

Once you reach $1,000, you can continue building toward three to six months of essential expenses, which many financial experts recommend.

6. Find Extra Money Challenge

The find extra money challenge is about uncovering cash that is already available in your life but not being used wisely. Instead of trying to earn more, you focus on freeing up money by cutting waste.

Ideas for finding extra money:

  • Review your last 1–3 months of bank and card statements to spot unused subscriptions.
  • Call providers (internet, phone, insurance) to negotiate better rates.
  • Simplify services you are overpaying for or no longer need.
  • Sell unused items like clothes, electronics, or furniture.

Every dollar you free up should be redirected into savings, not new spending. Think of this as reallocating money from “waste” to “wealth.”

7. Spare Change & Round-Up Challenge

The spare change challenge uses small amounts of money that you barely notice in daily life. You either save physical coins or use digital round-up tools that move small amounts from checking to savings.

Two easy ways to do this:

  • Physical coins: Empty your wallet, pockets, or bags into a jar at the end of each day. Once a month, deposit the total into your savings account.
  • Digital round-ups: Some banks and apps round up your purchases to the nearest dollar and save the difference. For example, a $4.30 purchase becomes $5, and $0.70 is moved to savings.

Over time, these tiny amounts add up with almost no effort.

8. The Cash Envelope Challenge

The envelope challenge builds on the classic cash envelope budgeting method. You use physical envelopes or digital equivalents to limit spending and intentionally save.

Two common approaches:

  • Expense control: Create envelopes for categories like groceries, entertainment, or personal spending. Once the envelope is empty, you stop spending in that category.
  • Savings envelopes: Use a set of numbered envelopes (e.g., 100 or 200) with pre-written amounts inside. Each day or week, pick an envelope, pay that amount in cash, and add it to savings.

Envelope-based challenges work especially well if you tend to overspend with cards and want a visual, tangible system.

9. The Penny Savings Challenge

The penny savings challenge is a daily, low-pressure way to build hundreds of dollars in a year. You start with one cent and add one more cent each day.

Basic structure:

  • Day 1: Save $0.01
  • Day 2: Save $0.02
  • Day 100: Save $1.00
  • Day 365: Save $3.65

By the end of the year, you will have saved about $667.95 if you complete all 365 days.

10. The Coffee Break Challenge

The coffee break challenge centers around one popular habit: buying drinks on the go. Instead of purchasing coffee, tea, or other café drinks, you make them at home and save the difference.

How to run this challenge for 30–90 days:

  • Calculate your usual coffee-shop spending per week.
  • Set up a jar or dedicated savings transfer labeled “coffee savings.”
  • Every time you skip a purchased drink and make it at home, move the equivalent cost into savings.

Even a few dollars a day can turn into hundreds of dollars over the course of a year.

11. Entertainment & Eating Out Challenge

The eating out and entertainment challenge helps you reclaim money spent on restaurants, takeout, streaming, and other leisure activities by setting strict limits or a temporary pause.

Ideas:

  • Set a small weekly cap for eating out and stick to it.
  • Replace one restaurant meal per week with a home-cooked “copycat” dish.
  • Swap paid entertainment for free activities like parks, libraries, and community events.

Log what you would have spent and redirect it into your savings challenge account.

12. Subscription & Bill Cutback Challenge

The subscription challenge focuses on recurring payments that drain your budget quietly each month. Many households pay for multiple streaming platforms, apps, memberships, and services they barely use.

Steps:

  • List all subscriptions and recurring bills.
  • Cancel anything you do not use regularly.
  • Downgrade premium plans to basic where possible.
  • Every canceled or reduced bill amount gets transferred into savings monthly.

This challenge can create ongoing savings, not just a one-time boost.

13. A 12-Month / 52-Week Savings Challenge

The 12-month savings challenge is a popular year-long plan. Also known as the 52-week savings challenge, it typically involves saving an amount that increases by $1 each week.

Standard version:

  • Week 1: Save $1
  • Week 2: Save $2
  • Week 3: Save $3
  • …continue adding $1 each week…
  • Week 52: Save $52

By the end of the year, you will have saved $1,378 in total. You can reverse the order if you prefer to start with higher amounts when motivation is highest.

14. 3-Month (90-Day) Savings Challenge

The 3-month savings challenge is a great way to rapidly build savings for a short-term goal, like a vacation, special event, or a quick debt payment.

How it works:

  • Define a 90-day goal (for example, $1,000, $3,000, or $5,000).
  • Divide your goal by 12 weeks to find your weekly target.
  • Automate weekly transfers and add any extra income (bonuses, refunds, side hustle income) to speed progress.

Because the time frame is short, the weekly savings amount will be higher, but the visible progress can be very motivating.

15. The “Cancel and Save” Challenge

The cancel and save challenge involves cutting optional expenses and immediately capturing the savings. It is similar to the subscription challenge but can also include habits like frequent takeout, premium services, or unused memberships.

Examples:

  • Cancel a gym membership you do not use and switch to home workouts.
  • Pause premium streaming services for three months.
  • Drop add-ons from phone and internet plans.

Track the monthly savings from each cancellation and transfer that amount directly to your savings account as if you were still paying it, but to yourself.

16. Monthly Savings Challenge

The monthly savings challenge is very flexible and can be tailored to your income schedule. Instead of weekly or daily deposits, you set one monthly savings goal and build your plan around that.

How to structure it:

  • Choose a monthly savings goal (e.g., $100, $250, $500+).
  • Break that into smaller, manageable pieces if needed (e.g., $25 per week).
  • Automate transfers on payday.
  • Use a visual tracker (calendar or chart) and mark each month as you hit your goal.

Because many people are paid monthly, this challenge fits naturally into their budgeting cycle.

17. New Season Challenge (3 Months at a Time)

A new season challenge lines up your savings efforts with the four seasons of the year. Each season lasts roughly three months, giving you a defined start and finish line.

Ideas for seasonal goals:

  • Spring: Save for a summer vacation.
  • Summer: Save for back-to-school expenses.
  • Fall: Save for holiday gifts and travel.
  • Winter: Build an emergency fund or debt payoff fund for the new year.

You can pair this with the 3-month savings challenge by choosing a specific seasonal target and weekly or monthly savings amount.

18. Annual Big Goal Savings Challenge

The final idea is to turn your entire year into a single, focused big goal challenge. Instead of juggling many small goals, you pick one main savings target for the next 12 months.

Steps to set it up:

  • Pick a clear, measurable goal (e.g., “Save $10,000 in 12 months”).
  • Divide your total by 12 to find your monthly target and by 52 for the weekly target.
  • Combine several of the smaller challenges above (like no-spend months, subscription cuts, and envelope methods) to hit your numbers.
  • Review progress quarterly and adjust as needed.

This approach works especially well when you are aiming at major goals like a down payment, moving fund, or large emergency buffer.

How to Choose the Right Money Saving Challenge

Not every challenge will be a perfect fit for your lifestyle or income, so it is important to pick the ones that work best for you.

Consider:

  • Your income pattern (weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly).
  • How much flexibility you have in your current budget.
  • Your personality—do you like small daily actions or larger monthly steps?
  • Your time frame: short-term (30–90 days) versus long-term (6–12 months).

You can also combine challenges, such as doing a 52-week challenge alongside a subscription cutback challenge, to accelerate your progress.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Q: How can I save $5,000 in 3 months?

A: To save $5,000 in 3 months, you need to save approximately $1,666 per month, which is about $416 per week. You can use a 3-month challenge structure: calculate the required weekly savings, automate those transfers, and combine multiple strategies like cutting discretionary spending, using no-spend days, and adding side hustle income. Adjust the timeline if $416 per week is too aggressive for your current income.

Q: Are money saving challenges realistic if my income is low?

A: Yes, but the amounts and timelines should be tailored to your situation. Focus on low-pressure options like the penny challenge, round-ups, or small monthly goals. Even modest, consistent saving helps build the habit and improves financial resilience over time.

Q: Should I have an emergency fund before doing other challenges?

A: Building an emergency fund is often recommended as a first priority because it protects you from unexpected expenses and reduces reliance on debt. You can use the Clever Girl Fund challenge or a 6-month/12-month challenge to build this safety net, then move on to other savings goals.

Q: Where should I keep the money from my savings challenges?

A: For most challenges, a separate high-yield savings account works well, because it keeps your challenge money distinct from everyday spending and may earn interest. Avoid investing challenge money you will need soon (within a few years), since market ups and downs could affect your balance.

Q: What if I miss a week or break the rules of my challenge?

A: Missing a week does not mean you have failed the challenge. You can either catch up the following week, extend your timeline, or adjust your target amount. The goal is progress, not perfection; the most important thing is to keep going and learn from any setbacks.

References

  1. How To Do The 52 Week Savings Challenge — Clever Girl Finance. 2023-01-05. https://www.clevergirlfinance.com/the-52-week-savings-challenge/
  2. Harnessing the Power of Habit for Financial Well-Being — Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. 2020-07-16. https://www.consumerfinance.gov/about-us/blog/harnessing-power-habit-financial-well-being/
  3. Food Spending and the Role of Food Prepared Away From Home — U.S. Department of Agriculture, Economic Research Service. 2022-12-01. https://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/food-expenditure-series/
  4. Start Small, Save Up: Emergency fund planning — Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. 2019-09-26. https://www.consumerfinance.gov/consumer-tools/start-small-save-up/
  5. Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households in 2023 — Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. 2024-05-22. https://www.federalreserve.gov/publications/2024-economic-well-being-of-us-households-in-2023-saving.htm
Medha Deb is an editor with a master's degree in Applied Linguistics from the University of Hyderabad. She believes that her qualification has helped her develop a deep understanding of language and its application in various contexts.

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