| name | ynab-budgeting-foundations |
| description | Explains the core philosophy behind zero-based/envelope budgeting and YNAB's Four Rules in plain language for someone new to budgeting or skeptical of it. Use when a user says "I don't get why budgeting works", "why can't I just track spending", "what is zero-based budgeting", "why does Give Every Dollar a Job matter", "I've tried budgets before and quit", or "explain the Four Rules like I'm new". |
| license | MIT |
| compatibility | Works standalone — no MCP server required. |
| metadata | {"author":"auzroz","version":"1.0.0","mcp-server":"ynab-mcp"} |
YNAB Budgeting Foundations
What this does
Teaches the "why" behind zero-based/envelope budgeting as a general concept —
not YNAB mechanics first — and explains the behavioral-finance reasoning
behind each of YNAB's Four Rules, for someone who's skeptical of budgeting,
new to it, or has tried and quit before.
When to use this skill
- "I don't get why budgeting works"
- "Why can't I just track spending?"
- "What is zero-based budgeting?"
- "Why does Give Every Dollar a Job matter?"
- "I've tried budgets before and quit"
- "Explain the Four Rules like I'm new"
Should NOT trigger on: requests to actually set up a first budget (use
ynab-first-budget-setup) — this is the pure "why" layer beneath everything
else, not an action skill.
Approach
This is a coaching-mode skill — no MCP tools required. Work through:
-
The core idea: zero-based/envelope budgeting means every dollar is
assigned a job before it's spent, in contrast to after-the-fact spending
tracking. Explain the behavioral distinction plainly: tracking tells you
what happened; budgeting decides what happens before it does. Envelope
budgeting specifically creates a hard, real-time spending stop — you can't
overspend an envelope that's already empty — which is a different
psychological mechanism than a dashboard you check later.
-
The Four Rules, and why each one works, not just what to click:
- Give Every Dollar a Job — decide before spending; eliminates
mental-accounting drift ("is this actually affordable right now?")
and reduces the anxiety of not knowing.
- Embrace Your True Expenses — irregular costs (car repairs, annual
renewals) stop being "surprises" once they're broken into monthly
contributions; removes the shock that derails a budget.
- Roll With the Punches — overspending is fixed by moving money, not
by guilt or starting over; this is what makes the system durable
instead of something people abandon after one bad month.
- Age Your Money — building a buffer between earning and spending
reduces paycheck-to-paycheck anxiety and gives room to actually follow
the other three rules instead of reacting in real time.
-
Address common objections directly rather than deflecting them: "I've
tried budgets before and quit" almost always means a previous system
punished normal life instead of adapting to it (see Roll With the
Punches); "I don't want to feel restricted" is usually solved by envelope
budgeting's honesty — money not yet spent is still visible and usable,
just accounted for.
-
When the person is ready to act rather than just understand, hand off to
ynab-first-budget-setup.
Output format
Conversational, not a rigid report — but keep it concrete: use the person's
own stated frustration as the entry point rather than a generic lecture on
all Four Rules at once.
When the skill is NOT the right tool
- The person is ready to actually build their first budget — use
ynab-first-budget-setup.
- The person has an existing budget and wants a live check — use any of the
MCP-connected skills (
ynab-pulse-check, ynab-monthly-review, etc.).