Table of Contents

Discretionary Income: Definition, How to Calculate & Example

Discretionary income is the money left over after paying taxes and essential living expenses — rent, utilities, groceries, insurance, and transportation. It’s the portion of your paycheck that’s genuinely yours to deploy: savings, investing, debt payoff above the minimum, travel, dining out, and anything else optional. Two households earning the same gross salary can have wildly different discretionary income, which is why the number matters more than headline earnings for most financial decisions.

Key takeaways

  • Discretionary income = gross income − taxes − essential living expenses.
  • It differs from disposable income, which only subtracts taxes and includes essential expenses.
  • The term has a specific legal meaning in U.S. student loan repayment: income above 150% of the federal poverty line.
  • Growing discretionary income is either an income-side problem (earn more) or a cost-side problem (reduce essentials — usually housing or transportation).
  • Most budgeting frameworks target roughly 30% of after-tax income as discretionary; the 50/30/20 rule is built around this number.

What is discretionary income?

Discretionary income is the amount of your paycheck that remains after two subtractions: taxes, and the essential expenses required to maintain your basic standard of living. It’s the pool of money that can be spent, saved, invested, or used for goals without compromising the roof over your head, food on the table, or basic transportation.

The distinction matters because headline income alone doesn’t tell you financial health. A household earning $120,000 in San Francisco with $4,500 in rent has roughly the same discretionary income as a household earning $70,000 in Omaha with $1,500 in rent — and often less.

How to calculate discretionary income

The formula is:

Discretionary income = gross income − taxes − essential living expenses

Essential living expenses typically include:

  • Rent or mortgage (including property taxes and HOA)
  • Utilities (electric, gas, water, basic internet, basic phone)
  • Groceries (not dining out)
  • Health insurance premiums
  • Transportation to work (car payment, insurance, gas, or public transit pass)
  • Minimum debt payments (credit card minimums, student loan standard payments)
  • Childcare if required for work

Exclude subscription streaming, gym memberships, dining out, clothing beyond basics, vacations, and any savings contributions — those either come out of or belong in the discretionary bucket.

Example calculation

A household earns $90,000 gross per year and lives in a mid-cost city:

  • Federal and state income taxes: $18,000
  • Payroll (FICA) taxes: $6,900
  • After-tax income: $65,100
  • Rent: $21,600 ($1,800/month)
  • Utilities and basic internet: $2,400
  • Groceries: $7,200
  • Health insurance premium: $3,600
  • Transportation: $6,000
  • Minimum debt payments: $3,600
  • Essential expenses: $44,400
  • Discretionary income: $20,700/year or ~$1,725/month

That $1,725 is what’s available for savings, retirement, dining out, travel, and anything else. Where it goes defines net worth growth over the next decade.

Discretionary income in student loan repayment

In the context of U.S. federal student loan income-driven repayment plans, “discretionary income” has a specific legal definition: the amount of adjusted gross income above 150% of the federal poverty guideline for your family size and state. IDR monthly payments are calculated as a percentage of this figure — typically 10–20% depending on the plan. The IRS/Department of Education definition differs from the personal-finance definition above; both terms share the word but mean different things in context.

How to grow discretionary income

Two levers: raise income or reduce essential expenses. The fastest gains usually come from housing and transportation, which together typically consume 35–50% of a middle-income household’s budget. A household paying $1,800/month in rent that moves to $1,400/month adds $4,800 to annual discretionary income immediately. A paid-off car (no monthly payment) frees another $400–$600/month. Income raises help but are slower and less controllable.

On the discretionary side, using any of the major budgeting frameworks — zero-based budgeting, the 50/30/20 rule, or envelope budgeting — is the easiest way to convert discretionary income into savings rather than unplanned spending.

Frequently asked questions

What’s the difference between discretionary income and disposable income?

Disposable income is gross income minus taxes — it includes essential expenses. Discretionary income goes one step further and subtracts those essentials too, leaving only the money you can truly choose how to spend. Disposable income is what you receive; discretionary income is what you decide about.

How do I calculate my discretionary income?

Start with gross income, subtract federal, state, and payroll taxes to get after-tax income, then subtract essential living expenses: rent or mortgage, utilities, groceries, health insurance, transportation, and minimum debt payments. What’s left is your discretionary income. Most budgeting apps categorize spending automatically and produce this number for you.

What counts as discretionary income for student loans?

For U.S. federal income-driven repayment plans, discretionary income is adjusted gross income minus 150% of the federal poverty guideline for your family size and state. IDR payments are then calculated as a percentage — typically 10–20% — of that number. This legal definition differs from the personal-finance definition.

How much discretionary income should I have?

Most financial frameworks suggest roughly 30% of after-tax income as discretionary — the “wants” bucket in the 50/30/20 rule. Higher is generally better for savings, investing, and financial flexibility. If your discretionary income is below 15–20% of after-tax income, essential expenses are likely too high for your current earnings — usually housing.

What’s the fastest way to grow discretionary income?

Reduce essential expenses rather than waiting for income raises. Housing and transportation together consume 35–50% of most budgets, and cuts there feed directly into discretionary income. Downsizing a rental, refinancing a mortgage, paying off a car, or switching to public transit can add hundreds to thousands of dollars per month.

Related terms

Learn more

About Our Editorial Process

At Due, we are dedicated to providing simple money and retirement advice that can make a big impact in your life. Our team closely follows market shifts and deeply understands how to build REAL wealth. All of our articles undergo thorough editing and review by financial experts, ensuring you get reliable and credible money advice.

We partner with leading publications, such as Nasdaq, The Globe and Mail, Entrepreneur, and more, to provide insights on retirement, current markets, and more.

We also host a financial glossary of over 7000 money/investing terms to help you learn more about how to take control of your finances.

View our editorial process

About Our Journalists

Our journalists are not just trusted, certified financial advisers. They are experienced and leading influencers in the financial realm, trusted by millions to provide advice about money. We handpick the best of the best, so you get advice from real experts. Our goal is to educate and inform, NOT to be a ‘stock-picker’ or ‘market-caller.’ 

Why listen to what we have to say?

While Due does not know how to predict the market in the short-term, our team of experts DOES know how you can make smart financial decisions to plan for retirement in the long-term.

View our expert review board

About Due

Due makes it easier to retire on your terms. We give you a realistic view on exactly where you’re at financially so when you retire you know how much money you’ll get each month. Get started today.

Due Fact-Checking Standards and Processes

To ensure we’re putting out the highest content standards, we sought out the help of certified financial experts and accredited individuals to verify our advice. We also rely on them for the most up to date information and data to make sure our in-depth research has the facts right, for today… Not yesterday. Our financial expert review board allows our readers to not only trust the information they are reading but to act on it as well. Most of our authors are CFP (Certified Financial Planners) or CRPC (Chartered Retirement Planning Counselor) certified and all have college degrees. Learn more about annuities, retirement advice and take the correct steps towards financial freedom and knowing exactly where you stand today. Learn everything about our top-notch financial expert reviews below… Learn More