Real-life bundles
Life event guides
Use these when the job needs more than one calculator. Each hub groups the step-by-step guide, worksheet, article and tools that belong together.
Choose a guide
Open guided planningHow to use this page
Pick the link or tool that matches the question you are trying to answer. Use one real example first, then open a related guide or worksheet only if you need more detail.
Keep it simple
You do not need every link on the page. Start with one result, change one important input if you want to compare options, and use the answer to choose your next step.
Useful next places
Decision guides can help when you know the question but not the tool. Number tools is there when you already know the calculation you need.
When this page helps
Use it when a quick number is not enough on its own. It is most useful when you want to compare options, check what could change the answer, or turn the result into a simple plan.
What to do next
Open the guide or tool closest to your question, run it with realistic numbers, then change one important input if you want to compare another option.
Make this page useful
Use one real example as you read. A bill, quote, date, label, target or saved result makes the guidance easier to judge.
If the answer could change what you do, check the source of the number before acting on it.
Useful next places
Use one life event at a time
Life-event pages are meant to reduce choice. Start with the event closest to what you are doing now, such as moving home, planning a trip, reviewing bills or preparing for study. Open one page, run one useful calculation, then decide whether a worksheet or deeper guide is worth using next.
How to choose the right guide
Use a life-event guide when the question has several moving parts. A car decision is not only the monthly payment. A move is not only rent. A study week is not only the final grade. These pages group the numbers, notes and worksheets that usually belong together.
If you only need one quick answer, open the tool library instead. If you are trying to make a real plan, start here and let the situation choose the next page.
When to come back
Come back when one of the main facts changes: a new quote, a different deadline, a changed bill, a new route or a revised budget. The guide then becomes a fresh comparison rather than an old answer.