Your Money Guide on the Side

The 80% Problem: Why Wealthy People Don't Save for a Rainy Day

30 min · 1. kesä 2026
jakson The 80% Problem: Why Wealthy People Don't Save for a Rainy Day kansikuva

Kuvaus

Pre-order Tyler's book, Real Wealth, at ⁠⁠tyler.gardner.com/book⁠⁠ [https://tylergardner.com/book] and be eligible for all monthly incentives between now and December 1st! And as always, a MASSIVE thank you to this week's sponsors: * ⁠Facet⁠ [facet.com/tyler]: → ⁠⁠facet.com/tyler⁠ [facet.com/tyler] for an exclusive $550 kickstart offer! * LMNT⁠ [drinklmnt.com/tyler%E2%81%A0%E2%81%A0]: → drinklmnt.com/tyler [drinklmnt.com/tyler] Become an INSIDER, just order the INSIDER Bundle–four boxes for the price of three, best value they offer–and get early access to limited time flavors and cool surprise gifts along the way. * ⁠⁠Gelt⁠⁠: [https://joingelt.com/tyler]→ ⁠⁠joingelt.com/tyler [https://joingelt.com/tyler]⁠ because Q2 is where strategic businesses (like mine!) make game-changing tax moves. If you're a business or a high-net worth individual, I'd encourage you to check this one out today. ⁠ * Keeper [http://keepersecurity.com/tyler]: → keepersecurity.com/tyler [http://keepersecurity.com/tyler] for 60% off personal and family plans for our podcast listeners only! Use this link, so they know we sent you. And now, on to the show notes!! We’ve been taught that saving money is responsible: * Save for a rainy day. * Delay gratification. * Spend less. Save more. But what if the way most people save is actually making them slightly poorer? In this episode, Tyler challenges one of personal finance’s most sacred ideas: that keeping large amounts of money sitting in savings is the safest thing you can do. Because safety and stagnation are not the same thing. In this episode, Tyler covers: * Why inflation quietly destroys the value of traditional savings * The hidden cost of opportunity cost — and what cash could have become if invested * Why banks profit from your savings more than you do * The problem with oversized emergency funds sitting idle * Why fear — not math — drives many financial decisions * Smarter alternatives for liquidity, from Treasury bills to Roth IRAs * Why retirees often die with most of their wealth untouched * The difference between saving as a tool vs. saving as an identity Tyler also makes a more personal argument: That many of us inherit financial beliefs built around scarcity, caution, and delayed gratification — even when we no longer need them. The core idea: Money is meant to support your life, not become the thing preventing you from living it. Invest broadly. Keep reasonable liquidity. Spend intentionally on the things that actually matter. And maybe, every once in a while… Eat the shrimp instead of the mashed potatoes. If the show’s been helpful, leaving a quick review on Apple or Spotify genuinely helps. Hope this gives you something to think about this week.

Kommentit

0

Ole ensimmäinen kommentoija

Rekisteröidy nyt ja liity Your Money Guide on the Side-yhteisöön!

Aloita maksutta

14 vrk ilmainen kokeilu

Kokeilun jälkeen 7,99 € / kuukausi. · Peru milloin tahansa.

  • Podimon podcastit
  • 20 kuunteluaikaa / kuukausi
  • Lataa offline-käyttöön

Kaikki jaksot

71 jaksot

jakson Why I Will Never Retire. And Why the Premise Itself Might Be Wrong. kansikuva

Why I Will Never Retire. And Why the Premise Itself Might Be Wrong.

Pre-order Tyler's book, Real Wealth, at ⁠⁠⁠tyler.gardner.com/book⁠⁠⁠ [https://tylergardner.com/book] and be eligible for all monthly incentives between now and December 1st! And as always, a MASSIVE thank you to this week's sponsors: * ⁠⁠ [https://facet.com/tyler]Square [square.com/go/tyler]⁠⁠⁠: → ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ [https://facet.com/tyler]⁠square.com/go/tyler [square.com/go/tyler]⁠ Get up to $200 off Square hardware and run your business smarter today. * ⁠ [https://drinklmnt.com/tyler%E2%81%A0%E2%81%A0]Wispr Flow: [wisprflow.ai/tyler%E2%81%A0] → wisprflow.ai/tyler [http://wisprflow.ai/tyler] for one free month of Wispr Flow Pro free! * Momentous [livemomentous.com]⁠: → ⁠⁠livemomentous.com [livemomentous.com]⁠ Use code Tyler for up to 35% off your first order!⁠ * ⁠ [http://keepersecurity.com/tyler]Anthropic [claude.ai/tyler%20]⁠: → ⁠⁠claude.ai/tyler [claude.ai/tyler%20] ⁠to experience AI for minds that don't stop at good enough. And on to the show notes!! We’ve been sold a very specific version of success: Work for forty years. Retire at sixty-five. Finally enjoy your life. But what if retirement, at least as we think about it, is the wrong goal entirely? In this episode, Tyler makes the case that the wealthiest people don’t retire — they redesign work. Because the real goal isn’t escaping your life. It’s building one you don’t constantly want to escape from. In this episode, Tyler covers: * Why retirement is a relatively modern invention — and why the system was built for a different world * What people like Warren Buffett, John D. Rockefeller, and Jeff Bezos have in common * Why autonomy, purpose, and meaningful work matter more than most financial plans acknowledge * The hidden traps of lifestyle inflation and “golden handcuffs” * Why so many people stay in jobs they dislike (even when they know it) * The difference between trading time for money and building assets that buy time back * Why purpose matters just as much as portfolio size Tyler also shares a more personal reflection on leaving a stable career to build something of his own — and why uncertainty, while uncomfortable, can be worth it. The core idea: Real wealth isn’t retiring from your life. It’s building one you don’t need to retire from. Because the goal was never the finish line. It was finding a game worth playing for a very long time. If the show’s been helpful, leaving a quick review on Apple or Spotify genuinely helps. Hope this gives you something to think about this week.

8. kesä 202631 min
jakson The 80% Problem: Why Wealthy People Don't Save for a Rainy Day kansikuva

The 80% Problem: Why Wealthy People Don't Save for a Rainy Day

Pre-order Tyler's book, Real Wealth, at ⁠⁠tyler.gardner.com/book⁠⁠ [https://tylergardner.com/book] and be eligible for all monthly incentives between now and December 1st! And as always, a MASSIVE thank you to this week's sponsors: * ⁠Facet⁠ [facet.com/tyler]: → ⁠⁠facet.com/tyler⁠ [facet.com/tyler] for an exclusive $550 kickstart offer! * LMNT⁠ [drinklmnt.com/tyler%E2%81%A0%E2%81%A0]: → drinklmnt.com/tyler [drinklmnt.com/tyler] Become an INSIDER, just order the INSIDER Bundle–four boxes for the price of three, best value they offer–and get early access to limited time flavors and cool surprise gifts along the way. * ⁠⁠Gelt⁠⁠: [https://joingelt.com/tyler]→ ⁠⁠joingelt.com/tyler [https://joingelt.com/tyler]⁠ because Q2 is where strategic businesses (like mine!) make game-changing tax moves. If you're a business or a high-net worth individual, I'd encourage you to check this one out today. ⁠ * Keeper [http://keepersecurity.com/tyler]: → keepersecurity.com/tyler [http://keepersecurity.com/tyler] for 60% off personal and family plans for our podcast listeners only! Use this link, so they know we sent you. And now, on to the show notes!! We’ve been taught that saving money is responsible: * Save for a rainy day. * Delay gratification. * Spend less. Save more. But what if the way most people save is actually making them slightly poorer? In this episode, Tyler challenges one of personal finance’s most sacred ideas: that keeping large amounts of money sitting in savings is the safest thing you can do. Because safety and stagnation are not the same thing. In this episode, Tyler covers: * Why inflation quietly destroys the value of traditional savings * The hidden cost of opportunity cost — and what cash could have become if invested * Why banks profit from your savings more than you do * The problem with oversized emergency funds sitting idle * Why fear — not math — drives many financial decisions * Smarter alternatives for liquidity, from Treasury bills to Roth IRAs * Why retirees often die with most of their wealth untouched * The difference between saving as a tool vs. saving as an identity Tyler also makes a more personal argument: That many of us inherit financial beliefs built around scarcity, caution, and delayed gratification — even when we no longer need them. The core idea: Money is meant to support your life, not become the thing preventing you from living it. Invest broadly. Keep reasonable liquidity. Spend intentionally on the things that actually matter. And maybe, every once in a while… Eat the shrimp instead of the mashed potatoes. If the show’s been helpful, leaving a quick review on Apple or Spotify genuinely helps. Hope this gives you something to think about this week.

1. kesä 202630 min
jakson The 5 Best (And Worst) Cars You Could Ever Buy (Financially Speaking, Of Course) kansikuva

The 5 Best (And Worst) Cars You Could Ever Buy (Financially Speaking, Of Course)

Pre-order Tyler's book, Real Wealth, at ⁠tyler.gardner.com/book⁠ [https://tylergardner.com/book] and be eligible for all monthly incentives between now and December 1st! And as always, a MASSIVE thank you to this week's sponsors: * ⁠⁠ [https://joingelt.com/tyler]Wispr Flow [https://wisprflow.ai/tyler]: → wisprflow.ai/tyler [https://wisprflow.ai/tyler] for one free month of Wispr Flow Pro free! (And to make your life immensely more efficient.) * ⁠ [https://livemomentous.com]⁠Copilot Money [https://www.copilot.money/tyler]⁠: → ⁠www.copilot.money/tyler⁠ [https://www.copilot.money/tyler] — use code TYLER2 for two free months and find out why my entire finance-friend group chat uses Copilot Money daily. * ⁠Bilt [https://joinbilt.com/tyler]⁠: → joinbilt.com/tyler [https://joinbilt.com/tyler] to see which credit card is right for you and to start getting rewarded for your biggest annual expense: your rent or mortgage!⁠ * ⁠Fabric⁠ [https://meetfabric.com/tyler]: → ⁠meetfabric.com/tyler⁠ [https://meetfabric.com/tyler] because if ANYONE depends on your income, getting term life needs to be moved to the top of your priority list today. And on to the show notes! The average American spends roughly $12,000 per year on their car. For many people, that’s more than they invest. In this episode, Tyler breaks down the real cost of car ownership — not just the sticker price, but the hidden financial drag of depreciation, financing, insurance, fuel, and maintenance. Because most people buy cars emotionally… and only look at the math afterward. In this episode, Tyler covers: * Why the monthly payment is the least important number in a car purchase * The true long-term cost of luxury cars, trucks, and financed EVs * Why used Toyotas and Hondas dominate on total cost of ownership * The financial trap of buying older German luxury cars out of warranty * Why a financed Tesla can be far more expensive than people realize * The surprising math behind the Toyota Prius and Corolla * Why “boring” cars quietly create wealth over time * The difference between a vehicle as a tool vs. a lifestyle purchase Tyler also explains why he believes people should stop optimizing every dollar purely for efficiency. Because personal finance isn’t about removing joy from your life. It’s about being intentional enough to know which things are genuinely worth spending on — and cutting ruthlessly everywhere else. The episode ends with Tyler revealing the one category where he knowingly ignores his own financial advice: A brand-new GMC Sierra Denali. Not because it’s the best financial decision. Because it’s the thing he genuinely loves. The core idea: Don’t spend blindly. But don’t optimize the humanity out of your life either. Know your “no’s.” Then spend unapologetically on your “yes.” If the show’s been helpful, leaving a quick review on Apple or Spotify genuinely helps. Hope this gives you something to think about this week.

25. touko 202639 min
jakson How to Divorce-Proof Your Finances (Whether You're Married, Divorced, or Somewhere In Between) kansikuva

How to Divorce-Proof Your Finances (Whether You're Married, Divorced, or Somewhere In Between)

Pre-order Tyler's book, Real Wealth, at tyler.gardner.com/book [tylergardner.com/book] and be eligible for all monthly incentives between now and December 1st! And as always, a MASSIVE thank you to this week's sponsors: * ⁠Gelt [joingelt.com/tyler]⁠: → ⁠joingelt.com/tyler [joingelt.com/tyler] because Q2 is where strategic businesses make game-changing tax moves. If you're a business or a high-net worth individual, you might want to check this one out today. * Momentous [livemomentous.com]⁠: → ⁠⁠livemomentous.com [livemomentous.com]⁠ Use code Tyler for 35% for up to 35% off your first order! * Facet⁠ [facet.com/tyler]: → ⁠⁠facet.com/tyler [facet.com/tyler]⁠ for an exclusive $550 kickstart offer! * LMNT [drinklmnt.com/tyler]⁠: → drinklmnt.com/tyler [drinklmnt.com/tyler]⁠ Become an INSIDER by ordering the INSIDER Bundle–four boxes for the price of three, best value they offer–and get early access to limited time flavors like my new favorite, lemonade iced tea! And now, on to the show notes! Most people who get financially devastated by divorce didn’t lose because they were reckless. They lost because they weren’t prepared to operate independently when life changed unexpectedly. In this episode, Tyler breaks down the financial side of divorce — not just for people currently going through one, but for anyone building a life with another person. Because financial awareness inside a marriage is not distrust. It’s maturity. In this episode, Tyler covers: * Why both partners should fully understand the household finances * The importance of shared access to accounts, passwords, and financial documents * Why every adult should have their own individual emergency account * The financial reality of “winning” the house in a divorce * What a QDRO is — and why misunderstanding it can cost tens of thousands * Why beneficiary designations matter more than most wills * How to build independent credit before you need it * Why recently divorced people are especially vulnerable to bad financial advice * The importance of a 6–12 month financial freeze before making major decisions Tyler also explains how some advisors specifically target recently divorced people — and how to tell the difference between real guidance and someone capitalizing on vulnerability. The core idea: Financial independence inside a relationship is not a backup plan. It’s part of being an adult. Because whether a marriage lasts five years or fifty, every person deserves the ability to confidently understand and manage their own financial life. If the show’s been helpful, leaving a quick review on Apple or Spotify genuinely helps. Hope this gives you something to think about this week.

18. touko 202642 min
jakson What I'd Do If $1,000,000 Landed in My Account Tomorrow: 3 Moves, 3 Mistakes, 3 Red Flags kansikuva

What I'd Do If $1,000,000 Landed in My Account Tomorrow: 3 Moves, 3 Mistakes, 3 Red Flags

Pre-order Tyler's book, Real Wealth, at ⁠tyler.gardner.com/book⁠ [https://tylergardner.com/book] and receive two chapters that didn't make the final cut in digital form in early June. And as always, a MASSIVE thank you to this week's sponsors: * Keeper [https://keepersecurity.com/tyler]: → keepersecurity.com/tyler [http://keepersecurity.com/tyler] for 60% off personal and family plans for our podcast listeners only! Use this link, so they know we sent you. * Anthropic [https://claude.ai/tyler]⁠: → ⁠⁠claude.ai/tyler [https://claude.ai/tyler]⁠to find out why they continue to be my number one strategic thought partner. * Thrive Market [https://thrivemarket.com/tyler]⁠: → ⁠⁠thrivemarket.com/tyler [https://thrivemarket.com/tyler] for⁠ $20 off your first three orders plus you’ll get a FREE $60 gift! * Copilot Money⁠ [https://www.copilot.money/tyler]: → ⁠www.copilot.money/tyler [https://www.copilot.money/tyler] — use code TYLER2 for two free months. And now on with the show notes! You wake up tomorrow morning and there’s $1 million sitting in your account. What’s the first thing you do? Most people think they know the answer. In reality, most people panic, freeze, or make expensive decisions out of emotion. In this episode, Tyler walks through exactly what he would do with a sudden lump sum of money — practically, immediately, and without turning it into a fantasy exercise. Because having money doesn’t automatically make people better with money. It just makes mistakes more expensive. In this episode, Tyler covers: * Why the first move is protecting the cash, not investing it immediately * The difference between parking money in a checking account vs. a money market fund * Why paying off high-interest debt is often the best guaranteed return available * The “bucket framework” for investing based on when you need the money, not your age * Why low-cost index funds still beat most “sophisticated” strategies * How investing in your primary residence can improve both lifestyle and tax efficiency * Why most people confuse complexity with competence in investing * The psychological traps that show up once you have money Tyler also explains why he wouldn’t immediately buy expensive depreciating assets — and why the goal is to get the principal working hard enough that the returns eventually pay for the lifestyle instead. The core idea: A million dollars isn’t the destination. It’s the infrastructure. The real question isn’t what you buy. It’s what kind of life the money gives you the freedom to build. If the show’s been helpful, leaving a quick review on Apple or Spotify genuinely helps. Hope this gives you something to think about this week.

11. touko 202645 min