Money Fit How-to Guides

How-to Guides for Money Questions

Find clear, step-by-step guides for common personal finance decisions. Start with the topic closest to your question, then move through the related guides when you are ready for more detail.

Reviewed by Money Fit Team Last reviewed: May 2026

Where to start

If you are trying to solve a specific money problem, choose the guide category that matches the decision in front of you. Use the credit, debt, budgeting, saving, banking, loan, housing, insurance, fraud, investing, tax, life event, and money mindset sections as starting points. Each category leads to a focused set of how-to guides written to help you understand the issue, compare options, and take the next responsible step.

These guides are educational. They can help you get organized and make more careful choices, but they are not a substitute for legal, tax, investment, credit repair, or individualized financial advice.

Browse Money Fit how-to guide categories

Each category below leads to a cluster of related guides. Pick the area that matches your current need, then move to the next topic as your situation becomes clearer.

Couple reviewing credit card payments together
Credit and debt

Credit Card How-to Guides

Learn how to choose a card, use credit carefully, read statements, avoid fraud, close accounts, and deal with credit card debt.

Explore credit card guides
Person reading and understanding a credit report
Credit and debt

Credit Report How-to Guides

Understand credit reports, request free reports, read report sections, dispute possible errors, and learn what may affect credit scores.

Explore credit report guides
Notebook and calculator for a debt repayment plan
Credit and debt

Debt Repayment How-to Guides

Build a repayment plan, compare debt payoff methods, understand consolidation options, and know when nonprofit help may be useful.

Explore debt repayment guides
Person reviewing household expenses at a table
Budgeting basics

Budgeting and Spending How-to Guides

Create a budget, track spending, cut expenses, stick with a plan, and set practical financial goals that fit real life.

Explore budgeting guides
Household savings guide with financial planning materials
Budgeting basics

Saving Money How-to Guides

Build emergency savings, save on a tight budget, set goals, automate deposits, and choose where to keep savings.

Explore saving guides
Person reviewing banking options on a laptop
Everyday money

Banking How-to Guides

Open and use bank accounts, understand online and mobile banking, avoid common fees, and switch banks more carefully.

Explore banking guides
Person comparing loan offers and repayment terms
Borrowing decisions

Loans and Borrowing How-to Guides

Compare loan offers, understand terms and APR, pay down loans faster, and avoid payday or high-interest borrowing traps.

Explore loan guides
Person preparing mortgage application documents
Housing decisions

Housing How-to Guides

Prepare for renting or buying, save for a down payment, apply for a mortgage, read a lease, and handle housing conversations.

Explore housing guides
Person shopping for auto insurance online
Protection

Insurance How-to Guides

Compare insurance options, understand policy terms, shop for auto coverage, choose health insurance, and prepare for claims.

Explore insurance guides
Person responding to identity theft and account concerns
Protection

Fraud and Identity Protection How-to Guides

Spot common scams, protect personal information, respond to identity theft, and take practical steps after suspicious account activity.

Explore fraud protection guides
Person reviewing investment basics and retirement planning
Future planning

Investing and Retirement How-to Guides

Learn investing basics, understand retirement accounts, start with small amounts, and watch for investment scams.

Explore investing guides
Person reading a paycheck and tax withholding details
Everyday money

Taxes How-to Guides

Understand paychecks and withholding, prepare to file taxes, avoid common mistakes, and know when to ask a qualified tax professional.

Explore tax guides
Family preparing financially for a baby
Life planning

Life Events How-to Guides

Prepare for job loss, a baby, relationship money talks, college or career decisions, and other changes that affect a household budget.

Explore life event guides
Person changing spending habits with a budget plan
Money habits

Money Mindset How-to Guides

Change spending habits, set and keep financial goals, talk with family about money, and build steadier financial routines.

Explore money mindset guides
A practical note from Money Fit

Good financial education should help you slow the decision down

Money Fit often sees people come to a money decision after the pressure has already built. A late bill, a credit card balance, a lease question, a loan offer, a tax issue, or a family change can make the next step feel urgent. That pressure is real, but rushed decisions can be expensive.

These guides are built to help readers pause, understand the moving parts, and choose a responsible next step. In some cases, the next step is simply better information. In other cases, it may be time to talk with a nonprofit credit counselor, housing counselor, tax professional, attorney, or financial professional, depending on the question.

Helpful next steps beyond the guide library

A how-to guide can help you understand the issue. Some situations also need a closer review of your budget, debts, housing question, or financial education needs.

For debt and budget pressure

If unsecured debt payments are hard to manage, review nonprofit credit counseling and debt management plans. A debt management plan may help some consumers organize eligible unsecured debts, but it is not a loan, not debt settlement, and not a guaranteed fit for every household.

For housing questions

If your question involves renting, buying, mortgage readiness, or housing stability, review Money Fit’s housing counseling resources. Available options depend on your situation, lender, landlord, program rules, and local resources.

For learning and classroom use

Teachers, community groups, and families may also want to explore Money Fit’s financial education resources for broader lessons, worksheets, and consumer-friendly explanations.

For organization background

If you want to know who provides these resources, visit About Money Fit. Money Fit is a service of Debt Reduction Services, Inc., a nonprofit credit counseling organization.

Need help turning information into a plan?

Start with the guide, then ask for help if the numbers still do not work

Guides are useful when you need clarity. If your budget, debt, or housing situation needs a closer review, Money Fit can help you look at the details and understand possible next steps without pressure.

Credit counseling starts with a review of income, expenses, debts, and goals. A debt management plan may be discussed when appropriate, but it is not the only possible path.

Frequently asked questions

Who are these how-to guides for?

These guides are for consumers, families, educators, counselors, and community groups looking for plainspoken help with common money questions. They are written for general education, not individualized financial advice.

Which guide category should I start with?

Start with the category closest to the decision you need to make now. If the issue involves payments or balances, start with credit cards, credit reports, debt repayment, or budgeting. If it involves a bigger life decision, start with loans, housing, insurance, taxes, or life events.

Can teachers, counselors, or community groups share these guides?

Yes. These guides may be shared with students, clients, coworkers, families, and community members. Linking to the guide category helps readers find the most current version.

Are these guides legal, tax, investment, or credit repair advice?

No. These guides are for general financial education. For legal questions, speak with a qualified attorney. For tax advice, speak with a qualified tax professional. For investment decisions, consider speaking with a qualified financial professional.

Where can I get personalized help?

If you need help reviewing your budget, unsecured debt, or possible debt repayment options, start with Money Fit’s nonprofit credit counseling resources. If you need help with a housing question, review Money Fit’s housing counseling resources.

About Money Fit

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