Budget Template
A professional budget template with revenue projections, categorized expenses, variance tracking, and monthly/annual views — designed for small businesses, departments, and project budgeting.
BUDGET — [Period]
Department: [Name] | Prepared by: [Name]
Revenue
[Revenue Stream 1]: $[amount]/mo
[Revenue Stream 2]: $[amount]/mo
Total Revenue: $[total]/mo
Fixed Expenses
Rent/Office: $[amount] | Salaries: $[amount]
Software/Tools: $[amount] | Insurance: $[amount]
Variable Expenses
Marketing: $[amount] | Sales Commissions: $[amount]
Travel: $[amount] | Contractors: $[amount]
Variance Tracking
Summary
Net Income: $[revenue - expenses]
Contingency (10%): $[amount]
Available Budget: $[net - contingency]
How to Use This Template
List all revenue streams
Include every source of income: sales, services, subscriptions, recurring revenue. Use conservative estimates for projections.
Categorize your expenses
Separate fixed costs (rent, salaries) from variable costs (marketing, travel). This helps identify where you have flexibility.
Set a contingency buffer
Reserve 5-10% of your total budget for unexpected expenses. Businesses without contingency funds get caught off guard.
Track actuals monthly
Enter real spending each month and compare to budget. Review variances and adjust future months accordingly.
Customize in Dewx
Inside Dewx, tell Dew: "Create a monthly budget for [department/project] with [revenue] in revenue and [amount] in expenses." Dew builds the budget, tracks actuals automatically, and alerts you when spending exceeds thresholds. All from the OPS Hub.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What categories should a business budget include?
A comprehensive business budget should include: revenue streams (sales, services, subscriptions), fixed costs (rent, salaries, insurance, software), variable costs (marketing, commissions, travel), one-time expenses (equipment, setup costs), and a contingency fund (5-10% of total budget). Group expenses by department for better tracking.
How often should I review and update my budget?
Review your budget monthly against actuals to catch variances early. Do a deeper quarterly review to adjust projections based on trends. Annual budgets should be rebuilt each year with updated assumptions. The key is making budgeting a regular habit, not a once-a-year exercise.
What is the difference between a budget and a forecast?
A budget is a plan — it sets spending limits and revenue targets for a period. A forecast is a prediction — it estimates what will actually happen based on current trends. Budgets are set at the start of a period; forecasts are updated continuously. Use both: the budget as your target, the forecast as your reality check.
How does Dewx help with budgeting?
Inside Dewx, the OPS Hub tracks all revenue and expenses in real time. Tell Dew: "Create a monthly budget for Q3" and it generates a budget based on historical data, flags unusual spending, and provides variance analysis. You get alerts when spending exceeds thresholds and can drill into any category.
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Dew builds budgets from your data and tracks spending in real time — so you always know where you stand financially.
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