Not all bills are equal. Knowing which ones to pay first when money is short can prevent small problems from becoming serious ones.
The Hierarchy of Financial Obligations
When your income does not cover everything you owe in a given month, you face a prioritization problem. Most people handle this by paying whatever feels most urgent — the bill that arrived most recently, the creditor that called, or the account with the smallest balance. None of these are reliable strategies.
A better approach is to understand the actual hierarchy of financial obligations: which ones have the most serious consequences for non-payment, and which can wait. That hierarchy guides better decisions under pressure.
First Priority: Housing
Your housing payment — rent or mortgage — should always be at the top of the list. Losing your housing is one of the most destabilizing things that can happen financially and personally. The consequences of non-payment escalate quickly: late fees, eviction proceedings, damage to your rental history that affects future housing options.
If you genuinely cannot cover your full housing payment in a given month, communicate with your landlord or mortgage servicer immediately. Both have options for hardship situations that are far better than simply not paying and waiting to see what happens.
Second Priority: Utilities and Food
Electricity, heat, water, and food for your household are second-tier priorities. A utility shutoff, while reversible, creates additional costs and complications that make the overall situation harder. Food is a basic need that cannot be deferred.
Utilities are often more flexible than housing — many providers have hardship arrangements and deferred payment options. Contact them before you fall behind, not after. And explore whether any local programs can assist with utility costs during the difficult period.
Third Priority: Transportation to Work
If you depend on a vehicle to get to work, maintaining it ranks high in the priority stack. This means car insurance (legally required and protective), and fuel or transit costs. It may also mean addressing maintenance issues that could strand you before they escalate.
For households without vehicles, this category covers public transit or rideshare costs that make income-generating activity possible. Without transportation, earning income becomes significantly harder — which is why it stays near the top of the priority list.
What to Deprioritize Temporarily
When the above categories are covered, remaining obligations can be handled in order of consequence. This generally means credit cards and personal accounts below secured loans, subscriptions and optional services at the bottom, and anything with low or no immediate enforcement action at the end of the list.
Communicate with creditors for any accounts you will not be able to pay in full. Many have hardship programs that can pause or reduce payments temporarily. Being proactive with this communication is almost always better than going silent.
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