Sorry for the delayed response, just managing to catch up on this thread. I've been looking at how to do envelope-style budgeting for my personal finances using GnuCash for about 6-7 months. Like you, this began with this article from 2008 "[Better Budgeting with GnuCash"](http://allmybrain.com/2008/12/15/better-budgeting-with-gnucash/).
After toying around with that approach, I decided there were two drawbacks to it: 1. It was tedious. Manually creating a split for every expense to draw down budget accounts ("envelopes") that were allocated previously, was super boring and error prone. In addition, because of the detailed nature of doing this work, one would be discouraged from allocating all of your income to different "envelopes". 2. It was fragile. By treating "Budgeted Cash" as an asset made allocated money difficult to reconcile to money that was drawn out of your budget accounts. A useful insight in that article is to consider a budget account as a liability. However, it categorizes budgeted cash as an Asset, when it is more useful to consider it also as a liability. Doing so allows you to reconcile allocated money to monies spent out of the "envelopes". For the past month, I've been able to apply an approach to my existing reconciliation process that I believe will prove to be a very useful and easy to manage approach to envelope budgeting for personal finance. To simplify allocating income and expenses to envelopes I use two tools: * [QifQif](https://github.com/Kraymer/qifqif) which makes it easy to quickly insert categories into a QIF file; * [qif-split](https://github.com/ebridges/qif-split), a tool that I wrote, which adds splits to QIF files according to some rules defined in a file. After downloading transactions for my credit card & bank accounts in QIF format, I first process the file with QifQif to match up every transaction to one of my accounts from GnuCash. QifQif supports using wild cards and regexes for matching payees to accounts, and then adds the account as a category to the QIF transaction. After categorization of the transactions, the files can be processed by `qif-split`, and split according to predefined rules. I have been using `QifQif` for about a year, and have found it to be very reliable and easy to work with. In the past month, I began using `qif-split` to allocate income and expenses to budget accounts. The `qif-split` configuration rules splitting the incoming transactions are twofold 1. Allocating income as credits to various envelopes, or 2. Allocating expenses as debits to those same envelopes. These allocations are balanced with corresponding debits or credits to a "Budgeted Cash" account. Because of these balanced entries, the toplevel "Budgets" account will always self-reconcile (i.e. its balance will always be 0). When the balance of a given budget subaccount ("envelopes") is negative, then you've overspent that category. By using `qif-split` to automatically generate split transactions, and by altering my chart of accounts to roll up budgeted cash alongside the budgeted expenses it makes envelope-style budgeting very straightforward in GnuCash. -- Sent from: http://gnucash.1415818.n4.nabble.com/GnuCash-User-f1415819.html _______________________________________________ gnucash-user mailing list gnucash-user@gnucash.org To update your subscription preferences or to unsubscribe: https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-user If you are using Nabble or Gmane, please see https://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/Mailing_Lists for more information. ----- Please remember to CC this list on all your replies. You can do this by using Reply-To-List or Reply-All.