free template · no email required

Free Bill Calendar Template — Never Eat Another Late Fee

List every recurring bill once — name, amount, day of the month it's due. The sheet computes each bill's next due date from today, counts down the days, and highlights anything due within a week. Your monthly total sits at the bottom, mildly alarming but honest.

Works in Google Sheets & Excel · no signup, no watermark, actually free

What's in it

Computes next due dates

Enter "rent, $1,500, due the 1st" once. The template always shows the next real due date and how many days away it is.

Due-soon warnings

Anything due within 7 days lights up. The point of a bill calendar is that nothing ever surprises you again.

Autopay column

Mark what pays itself so your attention goes only where it's needed.

How to use it

  1. Download the file — the button above grabs the .xlsx.
  2. Google Sheets: drive.google.com → New → File upload → open it → File → Save as Google Sheets. Excel: just open it.
  3. List each bill with its amount and due day (use 28 for end-of-month bills).
  4. Mark autopay bills Yes or No from the dropdown.
  5. Check it on payday — anything highlighted gets handled from the check that just landed.
  6. The one rule: shaded cells are yours to type in. Everything else computes itself.

Questions

How is this different from phone reminders?

Reminders fire one at a time and vanish. A bill calendar shows the whole month's shape at once — which is what you need to assign bills to paychecks and stop mid-month surprises.

Quarterly or annual bills?

Add them with their next due day and a note. (Our paid system pairs the calendar with sinking funds so annual bills stop hurting.)

Is it really free?

Yes — no email, no catch. If it saves you one late fee it's already outperformed most finance apps.

Bills are half the picture.

The Payday System connects this calendar to your actual paychecks — every bill assigned to the check that pays it, plus a live safe-to-spend number.

See The Payday System

Related guides: The bill calendar method · Budgeting by paycheck · Sinking funds explained