Morgan Stanley
  • Wealth Management
  • Apr 25, 2023

5 Ways to Spring-Clean Your Finances

A lot can pile up over a year, or just a season. Here are five tips to help you tidy up, declutter and organize your finances this spring.

For many, spring means opening windows, sweeping the dust out and rotating wardrobes. While you’re freshening up your home, consider ways to also tidy up your finances. You may be surprised at what’s hiding in your accounts, inboxes, financial documents and tax returns.

Consider these five strategies to help you spring-clean your finances: 

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1. Clean Up Your Accounts

Do you find it challenging to keep track of your various financial accounts? Many people have checking or savings accounts at one bank, a brokerage account with another and an individual retirement account with yet another. Having a number of accounts at different institutions can make your financial house feel disorganized.

Consider consolidating your accounts to gain a clearer understanding of your financial streams and overall wealth. Or, if you prefer to maintain accounts with different banks, take advantage of digital tools that let you see all of your accounts in one place. Getting that full picture can bring a fresh perspective about what you need to prioritize, as you manage day-to-day cash needs and pursue your longer-term goals.

2. Declutter Your Debt

Do you ever feel like your debt is in disarray? If you have multiple loans and credit cards, with different interest rates and payment dates, it might be time to consider debt consolidation. Paying off your various debts via a single loan with a competitive interest rate not only helps you save money, it also leaves you with one simple payment date each month. This, in turn, may help reduce financial stress. Your Morgan Stanley Financial Advisor can tell you more about possible debt-consolidation strategies

3. Toss Out (Some) Paper

If you’re still getting paper statements from financial institutions, why not change your preferences to “paperless” notifications? This includes credit cards, loans, brokerage accounts—even bills. Going paperless reduces the amount of physical clutter in your home, and it’s also more ecofriendly. When you receive statements digitally, you can more easily track your finances because your statements are all in one place.

As for existing paper records, many institutions will allow you to upload important documents into a secure digital vault. Once you have a digital copy, you can generally shred the paper one. Records you should definitely keep (digitally if possible, but paper records if not) include the past seven years of tax documents and any documents related to still active loans. 

4. Organize Your Income and Expenses

When was the last time you took a long look at your monthly finances? Just as going through your whole closet can help you decide what to toss or keep, taking inventory of your income and expenses can help you cut wasteful spending and make smarter financial decisions.

With a clearer picture of your budget, you can more carefully track how much you are saving for near-term goals, such as buying a home, as well as long-term goals, such as retiring by a certain age. Consider using Morgan Stanley’s Spending + Budgeting Tool that allow you to set goals for each spending category and alert you when you have met your monthly goal or may be close to exceeding the amount.

5. Plan for Future Tax Seasons

Some ease the burden of annual spring cleaning by scheduling deep cleaning days throughout the year. Similarly, tax planning may require your attention at multiple points throughout the year, not just during tax-filing season. Whether before or after Tax Day, it’s never too late to incorporate tax-efficient strategies into your financial plan.

Consider a combination of the following strategies:

  • Tax-loss harvesting: Involves selling securities at a loss and using such capital losses to offset capital gains in taxable investment accounts and help lower your taxable income.
  • Tax-aware asset allocation: Different kinds of accounts are taxed differently. A tax-aware asset allocation strategy that accounts for those differences may help to increase after-tax returns.
  • Tax-favorable investments: Many investments, such as municipal bonds, tax-efficient mutual funds and 529 plans, may allow you to save for a variety of goals while also offering tax benefits.

With Morgan Stanley’s Total Tax 365 approach, your Financial Advisor has access to tax-smart techniques to help you meet your financial goals. Talk to your Financial Advisor and your qualified tax advisor about which tax strategies may work best for you. 

Regular meetings with your Morgan Stanley Financial Advisor can help ensure that your efforts today truly reflect the financial future you desire. Sometimes, getting there requires a bit of decluttering and reorganizing—with a little help going a long way. 

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