We teach you how to read your own money, stop leaks and build a plan that fits your life and gives you financial freedom.
Your goals. No jargon!
My story is your story. We're busy women, mums, wives, professionals carrying the mental load of family finances without the tools or confidence.

We talk about your money right now, whats working and what's stressing you?

Cash Flow Clarity, Debt Payoff, Protection and building your first emergency fund.

Clarity on the different products out there, myths holding you back and how to start with as little as £50

Strategic tax education to maximize your money and minimize your tax burden.

l am a qualified financial planner. l don't sell products but l equip you with financial education to help you see clearly where your money is going.
I created Plentipath because financial education for women shouldn't be jargon filled spreadsheets. I help everyday women like us feeling financially stuck to regain clarity, control, and confidence through practical, no-nonsense education.
No sales pitches for financial services products. No get-rich-quick schemes. Just real strategies grounded in professional financial planning principles, delivered by someone who's lived the stress.
My Qualifications & Experience
Diploma in Regulated Financial Planning (DipPFS) – Chartered Insurance Institute accredited
15+ years corporate experience in Recruitment, Account management, Financial services
Founded and scaled short-term lets business
Mother, wife, sister and friend – real life tested
Important Disclaimer
This is financial education, NOT regulated financial advice.
Everything here is general information for learning purposes only. I am not authorized or regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). For a personal recommendation consult a qualified FCA-regulated adviser.
Your results depend on your action. Past performance isn't indicative of future results.
Ready to Reset Your Money Story?
If you're tired of the silent financial stress, start with the Money Reset programme to get you started.
Or join the programme that works for you!
"This is general education based on public information. I do not recommend specific investments or providers. For personal advice, consult an FCA-regulated adviser.
No commissions. No hidden fees. Just clear pricing for exceptional financial literacy.
Women with credit cards/loans
/One-time
Women with credit cards/loans
30min video
Excel payoff calculator
PDF workbook
zero-based budget for women
/One-time
Women overwhelmed by bills.
90min live Zoom + template.
Teaches zero-based budget for women, with family/food tweaks.
Women living paycheck to paycheck ready to change but don't know where to start
/One-time
Know exactly where every pound goes
Have a working budget that fits real life
Have a clear debt strategy (if applicable)
Understand your financial protection gaps
Have started an emergency fund system
Have a 12-month financial roadmap
Feel confident talking about money
Have accountability and support from other women
Women wanting to start but don't know how?
/One-time
ISAs vs cash savings (education)
Risk levels (low/medium/high)
Starting small (£50/month)
Common myths
Self-assessment quiz
35+ women worried about retirement.
/One-time
Explaining pensions for women (gaps, state pension, workplace), plus self-audit checklist.
45min video
Pension audit PDF
30min live Q&A (monthly)
Get clear, financial education to help you grow, protect, and plan your wealth at every stage of life.
Explore our faqs or reach out to understand how our financial education works.
First step is to simply understand where your money is going. We recommend starting with a financial MOT. This involves tracking your spending for one month to see exactly how much is coming in versus how much is going out. Once you have clarity on your cash flow, you can move on to like building emergency funds.
Investing does carry risk, but not investing carries the risk of inflation eating away at your savings. History shows that over the long term, the market trends upward. You do not need thousands of dollars to start; thanks to fractional shares and modern apps, you can often start investing with as little as £5 to £50. The key is compound interest the earlier you start, the more your money grows upon itself. We teach you how to choose diversified index funds or ETFs, which spread your risk across hundreds of companies rather than betting on a single stock.
Your credit score is essentially a "trust grade" lenders give you. A high score can save you tens of thousands of dollars over your lifetime by qualifying you for lower interest rates on mortgages, car loans, and credit cards. It can even affect your ability to rent an apartment.
To improve it:
Pay on time, every time (payment history is the biggest factor).
Keep your credit utilization low (try to use less than 30% of your available credit limit).
Don’t close old credit cards, as a longer credit history helps your score.
It is a great starting point for most people. However, if you live in a high-cost-of-living area, your "Needs" might exceed 50%. The goal is to use this as a guideline and adjust the percentages to fit your reality. l personally use the 70/10/10/10 to including gifting
There are two primary strategies we recommend, and the "best" one depends on your psychology:
The Debt Snowball: You list your debts from smallest balance to largest (ignoring interest rates). You pay minimums on everything but attack the smallest debt with extra money. When it’s paid off, you roll that payment into the next smallest. This builds psychological momentum quickly.
The Debt Avalanche: You list debts from highest interest rate to lowest. You attack the debt with the highest rate first. This method saves you the most money in interest over time but takes longer to see the first debt disappear.
A fully funded emergency fund should generally cover 3 to 6 months of essential living expenses. This money acts as a financial buffer against unexpected events like job loss, medical emergencies, or car repairs, preventing you from going into debt when life happens. However, don't try to save this all at once. Start with a "starter emergency fund" goal of £1,000 or one month of expenses, then focus on high-interest debt, and finally return to build the full 3–6 month fund.
This is general education. I do not recommend specific investments or products. For personal advice, consult an FCA-regulated adviser
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