How to Start a Homestead on a Budget (Even if You’re Busy)
Last updated on November 21st, 2025 at 04:33 pm
If you’ve been dreaming about how to start a homestead on a budget, but you’re staring at your bills thinking, “Well… maybe someday,” — friend, I’ve been there.
When we started out, I had a little one hanging on my skirt, a budget that squeaked, and a to-do list that could have scared a Navy SEAL. The pull to grow our own food, make more from scratch, and live closer to the land wouldn’t leave me alone—especially as we faced health struggles and infertility. I thought we had to wait until we had acres, a barn full of animals, and thousands in the bank.
Turns out, you can start a homestead on a budget right now, even if your life looks far from picture-perfect.
You don’t need perfect. You need willingness, creativity, and a little bit of faith.
Here’s how I’d begin again today—one step, one season, and one blessing at a time.

Start Small: Choose One Thing to Begin With
When you’re busy (and we all are), trying to tackle every homestead skill at once is the quickest path to burnout. Trust me—I tried it. We took on too much too fast, and I remember thinking, “How am I supposed to learn all of this?”
But once I simplified and chose just one skill at a time, everything became lighter and far more enjoyable.
Start with one small project you can feel excited about:
- Plant a tiny kitchen garden with lettuce, beans, and zucchini
- Start with 3–4 laying hens for fresh eggs
- Learn to bake bread, make jam, or ferment veggies
- Start your own sourdough start, or wild yeast start
Small beginnings are powerful beginnings.
Frugal Homesteading Tip: Use What You Already Have
Frugal homesteading isn’t about buying the cutest gear or building Pinterest-perfect spaces. It’s about being resourceful—something our Scandinavian ancestors understood deeply. Use what’s already in your hands before spending a single dollar.
Some of our favorite budget-friendly hacks:
- A sunny window becomes the perfect seed-starting spot
- Old buckets? Drill holes and grow herbs or potatoes
- Cardboard boxes make an amazing free weed barrier
- Leftover scrap wood = raised beds, goat stands, shelves
This is one of the best ways to start a homestead on a budget—creativity over consumption.
Trade, Swap & Borrow: The Old Ways Still Work
Bartering is one of the oldest homestead traditions—and honestly, one of the sweetest. I’m not naturally great at it (haha!), but thankfully God blessed me with a husband who is. Many of our animals came from trades, friendships, and good old-fashioned neighborly kindness.
Some easy barter ideas:
- Ask friends or church members if they have extra canning jars, pots, or tools
- Trade homemade bread or jam for garden starts
- Offer babysitting in exchange for help building a coop or raised bed
- Share excess eggs, herbs, or sourdough starter
Homesteading for beginners doesn’t mean doing everything alone. It means building a little community around your dream.beginners doesn’t mean doing everything yourself — it means finding ways to share, swap, and grow together.

Grow Slowly & Avoid Debt
A peaceful homestead is a debt-free one. Give yourself time. Add what you can, when you can, and let your homestead grow with the seasons—not with credit cards.
Add small, affordable investments over time:
- Save up for a pressure canner
- Build one raised bed each season
- Add a few more chickens next spring
- Expand your garden by one row, not twenty
Slow, steady growth is the heartbeat of sustainable homesteading—especially when you’re starting with little money.

Lean on Your People
We were never meant to do this alone. Lean on your Relief Society sisters, neighbors, friends, or online homestead communities. Share what you’re learning and ask questions. Most people love helping, trading, or just celebrating your progress.
You’ll be surprised at how generous people can be when you simply reach out.

Final Thoughts
Friend, you don’t need acres of land, a big bank account, or endless free time to start a homestead on a budget. You just need the courage to begin—and faith that the Lord will bless the work of your hands.
So tell me…
What’s your “one thing” going to be this season?
Grab the free “First-Year Homestead Skills Checklist” here so you know exactly where to start.
Have anything to add to our post?

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