We’ve almost reached the halfway point of 2026.
For many people, the goals and plans made in January now feel quite distant. The first six months of the year have been filled with work, family commitments, changing priorities, and the normal demands of everyday life.
June is an opportunity to pause and take a fresh look at your finances. What would you like to achieve in the second half?
You have the power to make a lot of change in six months. Your income can increase, expenses can rise or be brought under control, goals and priorities can evolve, and new opportunities can emerge.
A mid-year review allows you to consider whether your money is supporting the direction you want your life to take.
LOOKING BEYOND YOUR BANK BALANCE
When reviewing their finances, many people simply focus on the numbers.
They look at account balances, debts, savings, investments, and superannuation. And while these figures are useful, they only tell us part of the story.
Financial wellbeing is also influenced by how confident you feel about your money, whether you have clarity around your priorities, and whether your financial decisions are aligned with the goals that are most relevant to you today.
It’s a virtuous cycle. You can enhance your money mindset to feel increasingly positive about making real improvements with your finances. And a household that has made progress reducing debt, increased its savings, or developed stronger financial habits will have improved the situation beyond the numbers alone – our whole outlook can be transformed.
REVISITING WHAT MATTERS MOST
The goals that seemed appropriate at the beginning of the year may not be the same goals that deserve your attention today.
As the months roll by, family circumstances can change, career opportunities appear, kids grow up and financial pressures will come and go too.
Because of this it makes sense to revisit the priorities that guide your financial decisions.
I’m not suggesting that you abandon long-term goals. But focus on ensuring that your time, energy, and financial resources continue to support the outcomes you genuinely want to achieve.
Money tends to be managed more effectively when there is a clear connection between financial decisions and personal priorities.
THE OPPORTUNITY AHEAD
With six months remaining in the year, there is still considerable time available to make real progress.
Most financial outcomes are built through consistent actions repeated over time. Small improvements in spending habits, saving behaviour, debt reduction, or financial organisation will accumulate into significant results.
The second half of the year provides an opportunity to build on what has gone well.
