SortMe Money
Picture the Sunday-night version of this. One partner has the banking app open on the couch, the other is squinting at a Hnry summary on their phone, and there's a Google Sheet on the laptop that stopped being accurate around the time the second kid arrived. Salary lands fortnightly. The side hustle money turns up whenever it turns up. A distribution from the business shows up twice a year, and nobody's ever quite sure which week. Four income streams, and not one place that adds them up. In this episode, SortMe Resident Money Writer Hugo Jonston explains why most "side hustle" advice in NZ is really tax advice wearing a budgeting hat — set aside 20–33% for IRD, register for GST at $60k, use a secondary code on the second PAYE job. Hnry, Solo and a good accountant have that side sorted. The bit they leave untouched is the household itself: what can you spend this week, given the money arrives in four rhythms that never line up? Hugo walks through the six-step method SortMe households use to crack it — about an hour to set up, and after that it mostly runs itself. In this episode: * The Sunday-night scene every multi-income household knows — banking app, Hnry summary, an out-of-date Google Sheet, and four income streams that never line up * Why most NZ "side hustle" advice is tax advice in disguise, and the household question (what can you actually spend this week?) that nobody answers * Step 1 — Get every income stream onto one screen via Akahu open banking, with salary, side hustle, dividends and business drawings sorted by where the money came from * Step 2 — Sort income by how it behaves not how big it is: dependable (salary, steady rental), wobbly (freelance, side hustle), lumpy (distributions, dividends, bonuses) — and the rule that you only plan the household on the dependable income, with the rest as savings or goal fuel * Step 3 — Make tax visible before it's owed: Hnry skims at the door, Solo shows a live figure, or the dull-and-reliable auto-transfer of 25–33% of every non-PAYE deposit to a separate-bank savings account * Step 4 — If one income stream runs through an entity (sole trader, LTC, trust, rental), the second leak no ordinary household view catches — business spending that came off a personal card — and how SortMe Pro's Entity Management workspace tags it on the spot so the deduction doesn't disappear by 31 March * Step 5 — Budget the household, not the stream: $90k corporate + $20k Shopify + $180k business stake + $8k dividends isn't four budgets fighting each other, it's one household with four taps running into the same tub, and a daily-recalculated Safe to Spend that nets everything against real commitments * Step 6 — The 15-minute monthly review (Safe to Spend, Cashflow Health Score, goals) and SortMe's subscription sweep finding an average $2,371.27/year in forgotten charges — with multi-account households tending to be the worst offenders * The three-tool stack that actually works — Hnry for tax at the door, the accountant for the year-end return, SortMe for the messy middle the other two leave alone Read the full article: sortme.com/post/how-to-budget-side-hustle-nz
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