Jasmine Birtles
Your money-making expert. Financial journalist, TV and radio personality.

Spending on gifts should feel generous, not stressful. Yet surveys show Americans plan to spend $925 on average over the holidays, according to NerdWallet. If that sounds like more than you can comfortably afford, you are not alone.
The key is not cutting out gift-giving. It is setting a clear gift budget that works in real life, not just on paper.
If you do not set a limit, shops will happily set one for you. A percentage-of-income rule keeps things grounded and stops impulse spending from creeping in.
A straightforward approach is to cap annual gift spending at 1 to 2 percent of your take-home pay. On a £30,000 after-tax income, that is £300 to £600 a year across birthdays, weddings, and Christmas.
If that feels tight, good. A budget should protect you first. According to Gallup, 38 percent of Americans planned to spend $1,000 or more on holiday gifts in 2024. When big numbers become “normal,” it is easy to drift beyond what is sensible for your own finances.
A sinking fund is simply saving a small amount each month for a known future cost. Gifts are predictable. Panic-buying is optional.
Add up expected annual occasions, divide by 12, and move that amount into a separate savings pot each month. If you expect to spend £480 over the year, that is £40 per month.
This avoids reaching for credit when three birthdays land in the same fortnight. It also stops what Kiplinger calls “spaving” – spending more just to hit free shipping or deal thresholds – which can quietly inflate your total bill.
Not every relationship requires the same spend. Setting tiers removes the guesswork and the guilt.
Here is a simple structure many households use:
Research reported by Newsweek found Americans spend around $470 on gifts on average. That figure may include multiple people, but without tiers it is easy for one person to absorb most of your budget.
Tiers keep generosity fair and prevent emotional overspending on a single occasion.
The sticker price is not the final price. Inflation worries affect 78 percent of consumers when buying gifts, according to KPMG. Shipping delays and stock shortages also push people into rushed, expensive decisions.
Buying early avoids express delivery fees and desperation purchases. It also reduces the temptation to add extras just to qualify for free shipping.
In some cases, ordering a professionally delivered bouquet can cost less than a DIY option once travel, materials, and time are counted. When setting realistic price bands for birthdays, reviewing typical birthday flower gifts online shows clear pricing, same-day delivery availability, and customisation choices in one place. Purchasing birthday flower gifts is easier than ever because transparent pricing and delivery options help you stick to the number you planned, not the one emotion suggests.
Convenience can support your budget when it prevents a last-minute overspend.
Gift-giving is emotional. Budgets are logical. The trick is deciding your rules before the event.
Try these guardrails:
Once the rule exists, you are not negotiating with yourself in a shop queue.
A gift budget that actually works is one you can follow in February as well as December. It protects your essentials first, spreads costs across the year, and sets clear limits per relationship.
Generosity is about thought, not price tags. A planned gift budget gives you freedom to give without regret.
If you are reviewing your finances this year, use these frameworks to reset your approach and make your gift budget sustainable. And if you have a system that works particularly well, share it in the comments so other readers can benefit too.
Disclaimer: MoneyMagpie is not a licensed financial advisor and therefore information found here including opinions, commentary, suggestions or strategies are for informational, entertainment or educational purposes only. This should not be considered as financial advice. Anyone thinking of investing should conduct their own due diligence.