2025 Wealth Planner FAQs

As we hear questions or notifications about known issues with the 2025 Wealth Planner, we’ll share them here.

Don’t see your question answered below? Email support@morningbrew.com for a response within 2 business days (and hopefully, much faster!).

General Best Practices

💡These Planners were developed for Google Sheets & Excel, and work best on a computer.

  • What you’ll receive. You’ll receive both the Sheets and Excel version with your purchase, so if you start with using one and end up deciding to switch, you’ll have what you need!

  • Using the proper software. The Google Sheets version won’t work in Excel properly, and the Excel version won’t work in Google Sheets properly.

  • “Can I use other spreadsheet apps?” Functionality may also vary if you attempt to use in Apple Numbers or other spreadsheet apps.

  • “Can I use on iPad?” Google Sheets is functional on an iPad, but works better on a computer if you have access to one!

❌ Avoid adding, deleting, or merging cells, rows, or columns.

Because of how complicated (#fun!) the charts are, be careful not to add, delete, or merge rows or columns anywhere in the spreadsheet. Adding or removing rows can break the running totals that fuel the charts and trend lines. Until I can pay a developer to turn this into a snazzy iPhone app, we’ve gotta work within the tyrannical laws of the Sheets. Sorry for the inconvenience!

If you do want to remove rows that you don’t need, you can always “Hide” them—that won’t distort any of the chart data.

❌ Careful with renaming the monthly tabs.

All of the backend formulas that help power the charts, aggregate totals, and allow the data in each monthly tab to “build” on one another reference the various tab names. When you rename them, the formulas get confused and don’t know where to pull data from. (You might get an error message like, “Function INDIRECT parameter value…is not a valid cell/range value.”) For that reason, we recommend against renaming tabs.

If you’ve renamed a tab and run into an error, simply undo your change and/or revert it back to the original tab name—that should get the formula workin’ again!

📂 Adding tabs

You can add tabs without impacting anything—they just won’t integrate with the others. To be safe, consider making a backup copy of your existing file before you begin adding tabs.

💻 Changing category names

  • Google Sheets. If you’d like to change a subcategory name in a dropdown menu, simply click into the dropdown and select the pencil icon from the lower righthand corner and a side panel will open with options to change or add subcategories. If you’d like to write over a Category name, you can do so in the Dashboard tab. It’ll carry through the rest of the Planner.

  • Excel. If you’d like to change a category or subcategory name, or you discover that the item you need isn’t listed in a dropdown, simply write over it in the Dashboard tab. It’ll carry through the rest of the Planner.

⚠️ Running into #REF errors?

The best way to avoid generating #REF errors is to avoid deleting formulas in the colored cells.

Usually, this happens by accident when a user cuts and pastes data. Copy and pasting is fine; cutting and pasting risks deleting a reference formula.

If you see cells that should have data in them returning a #REF error, it means the formula the cell is referencing was accidentally deleted. In order to fix this, you’ll need to either:

  • 1. Identify the hidden sheet with the error by referencing the formula bar (it’ll probably say something like “Month Backend” or “Saving & Investing”) and “un-hide” the affected backend tab so you can drag an unaffected formula from a future month backward into the affected month to restore the necessary formula, or

  • 2. (In Google Sheets) Check out the Version History of your document, identify the version where something got deleted, and restore the version immediately previous to the one in which the error occurred.

🤠 Already retired and hoping to use the Planner in retirement?

Check out this special guide for making the most of your Planner as a retiree.

Users outside the United States

💸 How to change currency (we recommend using Excel if you’re a non-US user!).

The Wealth Planner is designed for US users, so if you’re adapting currency and taxes for a country outside the US, check out this guide.

👩🏼‍⚖️ Tax rates

In the Dashboard view, there’s a box in which you can enter your gross annual income, and your estimated federal and FICA liability will populate automatically.

🚨 Users outside of the US:

  • Enter your Expected Gross Annual Income in cell I4.

  • Zero out the formulas in the tan cells (I11 through I19).

  • Manually enter your total tax liability (the total amount of your income you pay in taxes in your country) in cell I13.

This will manually override the US tax calculations and produce Monthly Breakdowns that are accurate to your situation.

Known Issues & Bug Fixes | 2025 Wealth Planner

TEMPORARY MONTHLY EXPENSES — [Financial Independence Tab]

Impacted Users: Those who purchased before 11/18. Those who purchased after 11/18 will receive a product with this fix already made, though Excel users may need to take one additional step.

Bug: After launch, a bug was discovered that caused Temporary Expenses beginning in the same year as the Planner to “double-count” in the Annual Expenses column, and overstate your expenses for the duration of the period. Excel users who begin their Planner in 2024 may need to make one additional change.

The fix: The good news is, it’s relatively easy to fix! Our developer made a quick, 1-minute video to demonstrate, but here are the instructions:

  1. Un-hide the hidden “FI Backend” tab. 

  2. Go to cell R12.

  3. Replace the formula in that cell with =IF(R$3=$C$3,IF(R$4<$E12,R$5*-1,0),IF(and($E12<=R$4,$E12>=R$3),R$5,0))

  4. If you’re an Excel user and you’re beginning your Planner in 2024, you’ll also go to cell C3 and write “2024” over 2025.

Drag the cell’s new formula one to the right to cell S12, and with both R12 and S12 still highlighted, just drag down to update the entirety of the pink “R” and “S” columns, to row 51. And you’re done! We apologize for the trouble, and a big thanks to Rich Girl Ashley for discovering this error!

High-Level FAQs

FAQ: Dashboard Tab

FAQ: Net Worth Tab

FAQ: Financial Independence Tab

FAQ: Monthly Tabs

FAQ: Year in Review Tab