The $ 5,000 Money Challenge helps you save consistently through simple weekly, monthly, and daily goals that make reaching $5,000 feel realistic and achievable.
Join the $5000 Money Challenge and transform your savings journey!
- Set Your Goal: Commit to saving $5,000 over 20 weeks.
- Break it down to about $250 a week, or smaller, depending on your cash flow.
- If you can’t save $250 a week, adjust accordingly. The result will be the same; it just takes a little longer.
- If you’d like, you can open a new savings account to keep the money separate and make it easier to track.
Map Out Your Strategy: Choose your savings approach:
Tips & Strategies For The $5000 Money Challenge
- Cut extra spending: Try no-spend challenges, meal prepping, or swapping entertainment for free activities.
- Start a side hustle: Consider taking on freelance work, hosting garage sales, or reselling items online. Put all profits into a savings account.
- Make saving social: Share progress online or in a group chat for added accountability.
- Any refunds, gift money, or bonus cash can help fast-track savings; deposit them directly into the challenge fund.
- Make saving visible: Visual trackers in your home, such as jars, charts, or digital tools, keep your motivation strong.
- Reward yourself: Every time you hit a weekly or monthly milestone, treat yourself to a small reward to reinforce good habits.
- Set reminders and celebrate each mini success.
- Share progress on social media or with a friend to hold yourself accountable.
- Focus on the why. What will the $5,000 do for you: emergency fund, travel, debt payoff, or the beginning of investing?
Tip: While participating in the challenge, you may need to adjust your spending habits to save more over the 20 weeks.
Here are some tips for success from participants who have completed the challenge.
Simple Breakdown of How to Reach $5,000
Saving $5,000 feels easier when you see the numbers broken down into small, realistic amounts. Here are the most common paths:
Weekly Breakdown
- $100/week for 50 weeks
- $125/week for 40 weeks
- $96/week for 52 weeks
Monthly Breakdown
- $417/month for 12 months
- $500/month for 10 months
- $625/month for 8 months
Daily Breakdown
- $14/day for 365 days
- $20/day for 250 days (great for people paid bi‑weekly)
Choose the version that fits your income
- Weekly if you’re paid weekly
- Monthly if you budget monthly
- Daily if you want micro‑savings that feel painless
Where to Put Your $5,000
Once you complete the challenge, you need a clear plan for the money. Here are a few suggestions.
1. Emergency Fund
Perfect for anyone who doesn’t have 3–6 months of expenses saved. A $5,000 cushion can cover:
- Car repairs
- Medical bills
- Job loss
- Unexpected expenses
2. High‑Interest Savings Account
Ideal for short‑term goals. Benefits:
- Easy access
- Higher interest than a regular bank account
- Safe place to store cash
3. Debt Payoff
If someone has high‑interest debt, putting the $5,000 toward it can save hundreds in interest.
4. Investing (TFSA or RRSP for Canadians)
For long‑term growth:
- ETFs
- Index funds
- Retirement contributions
Even a one‑time $5,000 investment can grow significantly over time.
What to Do If You Can’t Hit $5,000
1. Adjust the Timeline
If 12 months feels too tight:
- Stretch it to 18 months
- Stretch it to 24 months
The goal stays the same — the pressure drops.
2. Lower the Goal Temporarily
If $5,000 isn’t realistic right now:
- Try $3,000
- Try $2,000
- Try $1,000
Any progress is still progress.
3. Focus on Building the Habit
Even saving:
- $5/day
- $20/week
- $50/paycheque
4. Celebrate Partial Wins
If someone ends the year with $2,800 instead of $5,000, that’s still a huge win. The challenge is about progress.
Resources
Budgeting Tools
- Government of Canada Budget Planner
https://itools-ioutils.fcac-acfc.gc.ca/BP-PB/budget-planner
- Calculator.net Savings Calculator Mortgage Calculator – Canada.ca
- Credit Canada Debt Resources https://www.creditcanada.com/resources
Financial Literacy Resources
- FCAC (Financial Consumer Agency of Canada) Learning Hub
https://www.canada.ca/en/financial-consumer-agency/services/financial-toolkit.html
- CPA Canada Financial Literacy
https://www.cpacanada.ca/en/financial-literacy