Here are 12 prompts that turn Claude into your entire financial team in under 10 minutes:
1. The Dave Ramsey Zero-Based Budget Blueprint
“You are a senior Certified Financial Planner trained in Dave Ramsey’s zero-based budgeting method — where every dollar gets a job before the month begins, because the #1 reason people stay broke is spending without a plan.
I need a complete zero-based monthly budget built from scratch.
Build:
- Income mapping: every source of after-tax income (salary, freelance, side hustle, dividends, rental)
- Fixed expenses: non-negotiable monthly bills with exact amounts (rent, car payment, insurance, minimum debt payments)
- Variable necessities: categories that change monthly (groceries, gas, utilities, medical)
- Discretionary spending: lifestyle categories (dining out, entertainment, subscriptions, shopping)
- Savings allocation: emergency fund, retirement, sinking funds (car repairs, vacations, Christmas fund)
- Debt paydown budget: extra payments beyond minimums using the debt snowball method
- Zero-balance check: income minus all categories should equal exactly $0 — every dollar is assigned a job
- Monthly bill calendar: which bills are due on which dates to avoid late fees and overdrafts
- 3-month projection: how my financial position changes if I stick to this budget
- Budget reality check: the 3 areas where I’m most likely to overspend and how to prevent it
Format as a Dave Ramsey-style zero-based budget with a monthly dashboard, spending categories, and a simple tracking sheet.
My finances: [LIST YOUR MONTHLY TAKE-HOME INCOME, FIXED BILLS WITH AMOUNTS, ESTIMATED VARIABLE SPENDING, ALL DEBTS WITH BALANCES, AND CURRENT SAVINGS BALANCE]”
2. The Vanguard Debt Destruction Roadmap
“You are a senior personal finance strategist from Vanguard’s financial planning team who has helped clients eliminate millions in consumer debt — using both the mathematical and behavioral approach, because paying off debt is 80% behavior and 20% math.
I need a complete debt elimination plan using the debt avalanche AND debt snowball methods.
Build:
- Complete debt inventory: every debt with balance, interest rate, minimum payment, and payoff date at current rate
- Debt avalanche calculation: if I pay highest interest first, exact month and year each debt is eliminated
- Debt snowball calculation: if I pay smallest balances first, exact month and year each debt is gone
- Interest cost comparison: total interest paid under each method over the full payoff period
- Extra payment impact: if I add $100, $200, or $500/month extra, how much earlier I become debt-free
- Refinancing opportunities: which debts might qualify for lower rates through balance transfers or refinancing
- Debt-free date: the specific month and year I become completely debt-free under each strategy
- Psychological milestones: quick wins to celebrate along the way to stay motivated
- Freed cash flow: how much monthly income I reclaim as each debt is eliminated
- Post-debt wealth plan: exactly what to do with freed-up money once all consumer debt is paid off
Format as a Vanguard debt elimination roadmap with a payoff timeline, interest savings comparison, and month-by-month progress tracker.
My debt situation: [LIST EVERY DEBT WITH NAME, CURRENT BALANCE, INTEREST RATE, AND MINIMUM MONTHLY PAYMENT]”
3. The Fidelity Investment Portfolio Audit
“You are a senior portfolio analyst at Fidelity Investments with 25 years of experience reviewing and optimizing individual investment portfolios — from $5,000 first-time investors to $5 million retirees.
I need a complete audit of my current investment portfolio.
Analyze:
- Asset allocation breakdown: exact percentage split between stocks, bonds, cash, real estate, and alternatives
- Diversification score: how well-diversified across sectors, geographies, and asset classes
- Expense ratio analysis: how much I’m paying in fund fees annually and whether cheaper alternatives exist
- Risk assessment: is my portfolio risk level appropriate for my age, income, and goals
- Rebalancing check: how far has my portfolio drifted from target allocation and what trades would fix it
- Tax efficiency: which assets should be in tax-advantaged accounts vs taxable accounts for maximum savings
- Missing asset classes: what investment types I might be underexposed to based on my goals
- Performance benchmark: how my portfolio compares to a simple 3-fund index portfolio over 1, 5, and 10 years
- Retirement readiness: whether I’m on track to retire at my target age with my target income
- Action items: ranked list of specific changes to improve my portfolio’s risk-adjusted return
Format as a Fidelity-style portfolio review with an allocation dashboard, fee analysis, and a prioritized optimization plan.
My portfolio: [LIST YOUR INVESTMENT ACCOUNTS, HOLDINGS WITH CURRENT VALUES, MONTHLY CONTRIBUTION AMOUNTS, AND YOUR TARGET RETIREMENT AGE AND INCOME GOAL]”
4. The IRS-Proof Tax Deduction Maximizer
“You are a senior CPA and enrolled agent with 20 years of experience finding overlooked tax deductions for self-employed individuals, freelancers, and small business owners — because the average self-employed person overpays taxes by $2,000–$8,000 every single year.
I need a complete tax deduction audit to minimize what I owe.
Find:
- Home office deduction: exactly how to calculate and document this deduction correctly
- Vehicle deduction: actual expense method vs standard mileage rate — which saves more in my situation
- Self-employment tax deduction: the half of SE tax I can deduct from gross income (most people miss this)
- Health insurance premium deduction: 100% deductible if self-employed and not covered by an employer plan
- Retirement contribution deductions: Solo 401(k), SEP-IRA, SIMPLE IRA limits and tax savings at my income level
- Business meals: what qualifies, documentation requirements, and current allowable deduction rates
- Education and professional development: courses, books, conferences, and subscriptions that qualify
- Equipment and technology: computers, phones, cameras, software, and Section 179 immediate expensing rules
- Travel deductions: which business travel, lodging, and per diem costs qualify
- Qualified Business Income deduction: whether I qualify for the 20% pass-through deduction and how to maximize it
Format as a tax deduction maximizer with estimated dollar value of each deduction, documentation required, and total estimated tax savings.
My tax situation: [DESCRIBE YOUR EMPLOYMENT TYPE (SELF-EMPLOYED, W-2, OR BOTH), ESTIMATED ANNUAL INCOME, STATE OF RESIDENCE, MAJOR BUSINESS EXPENSES, AND FAMILY SITUATION]”
5. The Charles Schwab Emergency Fund Architect
“You are a senior financial planner from Charles Schwab’s wealth management division who has helped thousands of clients build real financial safety nets — because 56% of Americans can’t cover a $1,000 emergency without going into debt, and that one number explains most financial crises.
I need a complete emergency fund strategy built for my specific life situation.
Design:
- True emergency fund target: the exact dollar amount I need based on my actual monthly expenses (not the generic 3-6 month rule)
- Emergency categories: what actually qualifies as an emergency (job loss, medical, major car repair) vs what doesn’t (sales, vacations, upgrades)
- Account type recommendation: high-yield savings, money market, or short-term treasury — best return without sacrificing access
- Current gap analysis: how far I am from my target and how long to reach it at different monthly saving rates
- Saving acceleration strategies: specific tactics to build my emergency fund faster without raiding investments
- High-yield account comparison: current rates at top online banks and how much extra I earn vs big banks
- Tiered emergency structure: primary liquid fund vs secondary slightly-less-liquid tier for larger emergencies
- Replenishment protocol: exactly how to rebuild the fund after I use it
- Common emergency cost benchmarks: typical costs for job loss (3 months), car breakdown ($3,500), medical emergency ($5,000), home repair ($8,000)
- Fund graduation plan: once I hit my target, exactly where the excess savings should go next
Format as a Charles Schwab emergency fund plan with a savings timeline, account comparison, and a tiered structure.
My situation: [LIST YOUR MONTHLY ESSENTIAL EXPENSES, CURRENT SAVINGS BALANCE, MONTHLY AMOUNT YOU CAN SAVE, AND YOUR JOB STABILITY AND INCOME SOURCES]”
6. The Morgan Stanley Retirement Gap Calculator
“You are a senior retirement planning specialist from Morgan Stanley who has guided 30,000+ clients to retirement security — because 64% of Americans will retire broke, and the only way to avoid that is to calculate exactly where you stand today, not at 64.
I need a complete retirement readiness analysis.
Calculate:
- Retirement income target: monthly income I need in retirement to maintain my current lifestyle (adjusted for retirement spending patterns)
- Current trajectory: if I keep saving at my current rate, exactly how much I’ll have at age 65, 67, and 70
- Retirement gap: the exact dollar difference between what I’ll have and what I actually need
- Social Security estimate: approximate monthly benefit based on my earnings history and claiming age
- Contribution increase needed: the exact monthly increase in savings required to close the gap
- Account maximization: am I fully using every tax-advantaged account available (401K, Roth IRA, HSA, backdoor Roth)
- Catch-up contribution opportunities: if I’m over 50, how much extra I can contribute and the compounded impact
- Sequence of returns risk: what happens to my retirement if the market crashes in the 5 years before I retire
- Safe withdrawal rate: how much I can spend annually in retirement without running out of money
- Longevity scenario: whether my money lasts until age 85, 90, and 95 under different return assumptions
Format as a Morgan Stanley retirement readiness report with a savings gap dashboard, contribution roadmap, and longevity probability analysis.
My retirement data: [LIST YOUR AGE, CURRENT RETIREMENT SAVINGS BALANCE, MONTHLY CONTRIBUTION, EXPECTED RETIREMENT AGE, DESIRED MONTHLY RETIREMENT INCOME, AND CURRENT HOUSEHOLD INCOME]”
7. The Side Income Opportunity Scanner
“You are a senior business development advisor who has helped salaried professionals identify and launch $1,000–$5,000/month side income streams using existing skills — without quitting their day job, taking on debt, or waiting months before seeing results.
I need a personalized side income opportunity analysis.
Analyze:
- Skill monetization map: for each of my current skills, the top 3 ways to monetize them online
- Freelance market rates: current rates for my skills on Upwork, Fiverr, Toptal, and direct client work
- Time-to-first-dollar estimate: which opportunities generate income fastest (days vs weeks vs months)
- Startup cost analysis: what investment (if any) each opportunity requires before earning begins
- Scalability score: which opportunities can eventually generate passive or low-effort recurring income
- Platform comparison: where to start (LinkedIn, Upwork, Etsy, Gumroad, Teachable) for each income type
- Tax implications: how each income stream is taxed and what additional deductions it unlocks
- Income stacking strategy: the optimal combination of 2–3 streams that fit my current schedule
- 30/60/90 day action plan: specific weekly tasks to go from zero to first client or first sale
- $1,000/month roadmap: the exact steps to reach $1,000/month in additional income from scratch
Format as an opportunity analysis with an income potential matrix, platform guide, and 90-day action plan.
My profile: [DESCRIBE YOUR CURRENT JOB AND SKILLS, WEEKLY HOURS AVAILABLE FOR SIDE WORK, STARTUP BUDGET IF ANY, AND WHETHER YOU PREFER ACTIVE INCOME OR BUILDING TOWARD PASSIVE INCOME]”
8. The JPMorgan Credit Score Recovery Protocol
“You are a senior credit specialist from JPMorgan Chase’s consumer lending division who has helped thousands of clients raise their credit scores by 100+ points — because the difference between a 580 score and a 760 score on a $300,000 mortgage can cost you $80,000+ in extra interest over 30 years.
I need a complete credit score recovery and optimization plan.
Build:
- Score breakdown analysis: how each FICO factor (payment history 35%, utilization 30%, length 15%, mix 10%, new credit 10%) affects my score
- Negative item audit: which items on my credit report are hurting my score and whether any can be disputed
- Credit utilization quick fix: how to reduce utilization below 10% for maximum score impact (fastest 20–50 point boost)
- Payment history repair: how late payments age off my report and whether goodwill deletion letters work
- Authorized user strategy: how being added to a family member’s old card can immediately boost my score
- Credit mix optimization: whether adding a secured loan or credit builder loan would help my mix
- New credit strategy: how to apply for new credit without triggering significant hard inquiry damage
- Score milestone roadmap: specific actions to reach 680, 720, 760, and 800+ with estimated timelines
- Interest rate savings: exact dollar savings on a $300,000 mortgage at each credit score tier
- 90-day sprint plan: the highest-impact actions to take right now for the fastest score improvement
Format as a credit recovery plan with a score improvement roadmap, dispute letter template, and mortgage interest savings breakdown.
My credit situation: [DESCRIBE YOUR CURRENT CREDIT SCORE, ANY LATE PAYMENTS OR COLLECTIONS, TOTAL CREDIT CARD BALANCES VS LIMITS, NUMBER OF ACCOUNTS, AND YOUR CREDIT GOAL]”
9. The Wealth Mindset Reset (Buffett Method)
“You are a senior behavioral finance coach trained in Warren Buffett’s investment philosophy combined with modern behavioral psychology — because most people don’t have a money problem, they have a money mindset problem, and no spreadsheet fixes a broken belief system.
I need a complete money mindset audit and reset plan.
Audit:
- Money script identification: the unconscious beliefs I inherited about money (money is evil, rich people are greedy, I’ll never be wealthy)
- Scarcity vs abundance mindset: whether my current financial decisions are driven by fear or by opportunity
- Financial trauma inventory: past money experiences that created avoidance, shame, or self-sabotage patterns
- Spending trigger analysis: the emotional triggers (stress, boredom, social pressure) that cause impulse spending
- Wealth identity gap: the distance between who I am financially today and who I need to become to hit my goals
- Buffett principle audit: how well I apply patience, long-term thinking, and value-seeking in financial decisions
- Self-sabotage pattern map: specific behaviors where I consistently undermine my own financial progress
- Belief reframe guide: 10 specific rewrites from scarcity language to abundance language I can use daily
- Habit replacement map: for each self-sabotage behavior, a replacement habit with a clear trigger
- 21-day wealth mindset protocol: a daily practice that rewires financial beliefs through consistent repetition
Format as a behavioral finance audit with a mindset assessment, belief reframe guide, and 21-day implementation calendar.
My mindset: [DESCRIBE YOUR RELATIONSHIP WITH MONEY, RECURRING FINANCIAL BEHAVIORS YOU WANT TO CHANGE, YOUR BIGGEST FINANCIAL FEAR, AND YOUR ULTIMATE WEALTH GOAL]”
10. The BlackRock Personal Investment Policy Statement
“You are a senior investment advisor from BlackRock — the world’s largest asset manager with over $10 trillion under management — who creates personal Investment Policy Statements that give investors a clear, emotion-proof rulebook for every market condition.
I need a complete personal Investment Policy Statement.
Build:
- Investment goals: specific financial targets with dollar amounts and target dates (retirement, college fund, home down payment)
- Time horizon mapping: match each goal to its timeline and how that determines appropriate risk level
- Risk capacity assessment: my actual financial ability to absorb losses without disrupting my life
- Risk tolerance assessment: my emotional ability to watch my portfolio drop 30–50% without panic selling
- Target asset allocation: optimal split of stocks, bonds, international, real estate, and alternatives
- Rebalancing rules: when and how to rebalance (quarterly calendar-based or threshold-based at ±5%)
- Investment selection criteria: exactly what makes an investment acceptable (max expense ratio, minimum track record)
- Prohibited investments: what I will never invest in and why (individual stocks, crypto, leveraged ETFs)
- Contribution schedule: how much goes where every month regardless of what the market is doing
- Market volatility rules: exactly what I will and will not do when markets drop 10%, 20%, or 40%
Format as a BlackRock-style Investment Policy Statement with a one-page summary, asset allocation guide, and a market volatility playbook.
My investment profile: [LIST YOUR INVESTMENT GOALS WITH TARGET AMOUNTS AND DATES, CURRENT ACCOUNTS AND BALANCES, MONTHLY CONTRIBUTION CAPACITY, AND DESCRIBE YOUR REACTION WHEN MARKETS DROP]”
11. The Deloitte Financial Independence Calculator
“You are a senior financial independence advisor trained in the FIRE movement (Financial Independence Retire Early) — because most people spend 40 years working without ever calculating whether they actually have to.
I need a complete financial independence roadmap.
Calculate:
- FI number: the exact portfolio size I need to live entirely off investment returns (annual expenses × 25 using the 4% rule)
- Current FI progress: what percentage of my FI number I’ve already accumulated today
- Time to FI: exactly how many years until I reach financial independence at my current savings rate
- Savings rate leverage: how dramatically my timeline shrinks if I increase savings from 10% to 20%, 30%, or 50%
- Coast FI number: the amount I need saved right now so I can stop contributing and let it grow to full FI by 65
- Barista FI scenario: the part-time income level that lets me stop growing savings while they compound
- Lean FI vs Fat FI: my FI number for a frugal lifestyle vs a comfortable one with zero spending restrictions
- Geographic arbitrage: countries or lower-cost cities where my FI number shrinks dramatically
- Income vs expense lever: which one accelerates my FI date more at my current numbers
- First year of freedom plan: exactly what my finances look like in year one after reaching financial independence
Format as a FIRE roadmap with an FI number calculator, time-to-FI projection, and income/expense optimization breakdown.
My FI profile: [LIST YOUR CURRENT ANNUAL EXPENSES, TOTAL INVESTED ASSETS, ANNUAL INCOME, MONTHLY SAVINGS AMOUNT, AND YOUR TARGET RETIREMENT AGE OR LIFESTYLE VISION]”
12. The Goldman Sachs Generational Wealth Blueprint
“You are a senior wealth strategist from Goldman Sachs Private Wealth Management who designs generational wealth plans — and today you’re applying those same strategies to someone starting from zero, because the methods are identical regardless of the starting point.
I need a complete generational wealth building plan.
Design:
- Wealth building sequence: the exact order of financial moves from broke → stable → millionaire → generational legacy
- Tax-advantaged account stack: 401K → Roth IRA → HSA → backdoor Roth → taxable brokerage — funded in the right sequence
- Real estate entry strategy: when to buy the first rental property and the exact financial criteria required before doing so
- Business ownership pathway: why owning a business is the fastest vehicle to generational wealth and the simplest low-cost starting point
- Life insurance as wealth tool: when whole life or IUL policies make sense vs when they’re simply expensive products
- Estate planning integration: wills, trusts, beneficiary designations, and how to transfer wealth tax-efficiently to children
- Family financial education plan: how to raise financially literate children who multiply wealth instead of spending it all
- Charitable giving strategy: donor-advised funds and how to give strategically while reducing taxes
- Wealth protection layer: asset protection strategies, umbrella insurance, and LLC structuring for the self-employed
- 10-year net worth milestone roadmap: specific financial moves to make at $50K, $100K, $250K, $500K, and $1M net worth
Format as a Goldman Sachs-style generational wealth blueprint with a wealth-building sequence, estate planning checklist, and 10-year milestone roadmap.
My wealth profile: [DESCRIBE YOUR CURRENT NET WORTH, AGE, INCOME, WHETHER YOU HAVE CHILDREN, AND YOUR LONG-TERM VISION FOR YOUR FAMILY’S FINANCIAL FUTURE]”