Financial Literacy
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40 minute read
Here’s something crazy: you can graduate from high school, even get a college degree, and still have zero idea how money actually works. They don’t teach you about taxes, investing, credit scores, or how to avoid financial traps. You’re just expected to figure it out as you go.
That’s a problem. Money is one of the most powerful tools you’ll have for building your mission. Used well, it creates options and freedom. Managed poorly, it becomes a source of constant stress and limitation. You don’t need to be rich, but you do need to understand how money works.
This page covers the financial concepts every young man should understand: budgeting, debt, credit, investing, taxes, asset protection, and more. We’re not going deep into the weeds on any one topic, but by the end, you’ll have a solid foundation and know where to go to learn more.
The goal isn’t wealth for wealth’s sake. The goal is financial independence - where money works for you instead of you being a slave to a paycheck.
Let’s get you there.
The Right Financial Mindset
Before we dive into tactics, let’s talk about how to think about money. Your mindset will determine whether you build wealth or stay broke your entire life.
Money is a tool, not the goal. The point isn’t to accumulate the biggest pile of cash just to say you have it. Money is a tool that gives you options, freedom, and the ability to do meaningful things with your life. That’s it.
You’re a steward, not just a consumer. Think of yourself as managing resources that have been entrusted to you. This shifts your perspective from “how can I spend this?” to “how can I best use this?” It’s a subtle but powerful difference.
Financial independence beats wage slavery. Being dependent on a single employer for 100% of your income is risky and limiting. The goal is to build multiple income streams and investments so you have options. You’re not trying to escape work - you’re trying to gain the freedom to choose your work.
Generosity matters from day one. Even when you’re broke, practice giving. We’ll talk more about this later, but the habit of generosity prevents you from becoming a tight-fisted miser and keeps money in its proper place as a tool, not an idol.
Here’s a framework that works across all income levels: Live on 70% of what you earn. Invest 10%. Save 10%. Give away 10%. Whether you’re making minimum wage or six figures, this split keeps you balanced. You’re living below your means, building for the future, preparing for emergencies, and staying generous.
This isn’t about deprivation. It’s about building a life where you have options and freedom instead of being one paycheck away from disaster.
Multiple Streams of Income
Before we talk about managing money, let’s talk about making it. The traditional model is “get a good job and work there for 40 years.” That’s increasingly unrealistic and honestly, it was never a great strategy.
Why multiple income streams matter:
A single employer controls your entire financial life. They decide your salary, your hours, and whether you even have a job next month. That’s risky. Multiple income streams give you stability and options.
Here’s what this might look like:
- Day job - Still important, but it’s not everything. This is your foundation.
- Side hustles - Freelancing on Fiverr, driving for Uber on weekends, selling things online.
- Investment income - Dividends, interest, rental income (eventually).
- Small arbitrage - Buying underpriced items at Harbor Freight and selling on eBay, for example.
- Skill-based services - Tutoring, graphic design, writing, whatever you’re good at.
None of these need to be huge individually. The point is diversification. If you lose your day job, you still have income coming in. If one side hustle dries up, the others continue.
Start building this now. Even if your side hustle makes $200 a month, that’s $200 you didn’t have before. More importantly, it’s proof you can create value outside of traditional employment.
You don’t need to launch five businesses tomorrow. Start with one additional income stream. Master it. Then add another. Over time, you’ll build a portfolio of income sources that give you real security.
The goal is eventually having investment income exceed your expenses. That’s financial independence - when you work because you want to, not because you have to.
Budgeting: Know Where Your Money Goes
You can’t manage what you don’t measure. A budget isn’t about restriction - it’s about awareness and intentionality. It’s telling your money where to go instead of wondering where it went.
This sounds obvious, but most people don’t do it. Living within your means doesn’t just mean “don’t spend more than you earn.” It means you can comfortably handle your “nut” - your monthly obligations - which includes rent, food, utilities, AND investing, savings, and giving.
If you can’t cover all of these consistently, you have two options:
A) Cut your expenses - Move to a cheaper place, get a roommate, cook instead of eating out, cancel subscriptions you don’t use, drive a cheaper car. Be ruthless about distinguishing needs from wants.
B) Make more money - Get a raise, switch jobs, start a side hustle, work extra hours. Sometimes cutting expenses isn’t enough - you need to increase income.
Often, you need both. The goal is reaching a point where your income exceeds all your obligations (including investing and giving) with room to breathe. If you’re constantly stressed about money, you’re not living within your means yet.
Why Budget?
Most people have no idea where their money goes. They earn, they spend, and somehow there’s never anything left. A budget fixes that. It makes you conscious of every dollar and ensures you’re prioritizing what matters.
The You Need a Budget (YNAB) Method
You Need a Budget is both a tool and a philosophy. The core principles:
- Give every dollar a job - Before the month starts, decide where every dollar will go. Not just “I’ll spend on whatever,” but specific categories and amounts.
- Embrace your true expenses - Car insurance due every six months? That’s really a monthly expense you need to save for. Christmas gifts? Budget for them all year.
- Roll with the punches - You won’t get it perfect. When you overspend in one category, adjust others. The budget is flexible.
- Age your money - Eventually, you want to be spending money you earned weeks or months ago, not living paycheck to paycheck.
YNAB costs money (about $15/month after a free trial), but it’s worth it for many people. If that’s not in your budget yet, use Mint (free), EveryDollar (free version available), or a simple spreadsheet.
The Zero-Based Budget
This means you assign every dollar a purpose until you hit zero. If you earn $3,000 this month, you allocate all $3,000 to categories: rent, food, savings, investing, giving, etc. None of it is unassigned.
This forces you to be intentional. Every dollar has a job.
Track for 30 Days
Before you create your first budget, track what you actually spend for 30 days. Use an app or just save every receipt. You’ll be shocked. That daily coffee adds up. Those “small” purchases matter.
Once you see reality, you can build a budget that accounts for how you actually live while identifying areas to cut back.
A lot of people hate budgeting because they think it means deprivation. It doesn’t. It means you decide consciously where money goes. If you want to spend $200/month on hobbies, great - just budget for it and don’t overspend in other areas.
Emergency Fund: Your Safety Net
Before you do anything else financially - before you invest, before you pay extra on debt, before anything - build an emergency fund.
Start With $1,000
Your first goal is $1,000 in a savings account. That’s enough to cover most small emergencies: car repair, urgent medical visit, broken appliance. Without this, every small crisis becomes a major financial setback.
Get this $1,000 as fast as possible. Work extra hours, sell stuff you don’t need, skip eating out for a month - whatever it takes. This is your foundation.
Then Build to 3-6 Months
Once you have $1,000, your next goal is 3-6 months of living expenses. If you can live on $2,000/month, you want $6,000-$12,000 saved.
This is what protects you from major disruptions: job loss, serious medical issues, or having to relocate suddenly. It’s the difference between weathering a storm and drowning.
Where to Keep It
Don’t invest your emergency fund. Keep it liquid and safe:
- High-yield savings account - Marcus by Goldman Sachs, Ally Bank, or Discover Savings offer 4-5% interest with no minimums.
- Not in checking - Keep it separate so you’re not tempted to spend it.
- Accessible but not too accessible - It should take a day or two to transfer, which prevents impulse spending but allows quick access in real emergencies.
When to Use It
Real emergencies only. Job loss, medical emergency, car dies and you need it for work - that’s what this is for.
Not emergencies: concert tickets, new gaming console, or “I really want this.” Those aren’t emergencies.
Understanding Debt
Debt is a tool. Like any tool, it can be used well or it can hurt you. Most young people hurt themselves with debt because they don’t understand how it works.
How Interest Works
When you borrow money, you pay interest - a percentage of what you owe. Here’s the key: interest compounds.
If you have a $1,000 credit card balance at 20% APR and only pay the minimum, you’ll pay hundreds in interest and take years to pay it off. Meanwhile, that $1,000 worth of stuff you bought is probably long gone or worthless.
Compound interest working against you is brutal. It’s why people stay in debt for years.
Good Debt vs Bad Debt
Some financial advisors say all debt is bad. Others distinguish between “good” and “bad” debt. Here’s the distinction:
- “Good” debt - Borrows money for something that appreciates or generates income. Examples: student loans for a valuable degree, a mortgage on a house that increases in value, a business loan that funds growth.
- “Bad” debt - Borrows money for things that depreciate or don’t generate income. Examples: credit card debt for clothes and meals, car loans for expensive vehicles, payday loans for anything.
Even “good” debt isn’t automatically good. A $200,000 loan for a degree in underwater basket weaving isn’t good debt. But a reasonable loan for engineering school probably is.
The real answer: minimize all debt, but if you must borrow, borrow for things that create value.
Payday loans, title loans, and other predatory lending operations will destroy your financial life. They charge 300-400% APR (sometimes higher) and are specifically designed to trap you in a debt cycle you can’t escape. People lose their cars, their homes, and spend years paying back loans that started at just a few hundred dollars. If you’re desperate for money, try literally anything else first: borrow from family, work extra hours, sell possessions, ask your church or community for help, negotiate payment plans with creditors - ANY of these options is better than predatory lending. These companies prey on people in crisis. Don’t become their victim.
If You Have Debt: Repayment Strategies
Two main approaches:
- Debt Avalanche - Pay minimums on everything, then attack the debt with the highest interest rate first. This saves the most money mathematically.
- Debt Snowball - Pay minimums on everything, then attack the smallest balance first. When it’s paid off, roll that payment into the next smallest. This builds momentum and psychological wins.
Which is better? Depends on you. If you need motivation and quick wins, snowball works. If you’re disciplined and want pure math optimization, avalanche is better.
The key is picking one and sticking with it until you’re debt-free.
Credit Cards: Power Tool or Trap?
Credit cards are simultaneously one of the most useful financial tools and one of the easiest ways to destroy your finances. It all depends on how you use them.
How Credit Cards Work
When you use a credit card, you’re borrowing money from the bank. If you pay it back in full by the due date, you pay zero interest. If you don’t, the interest starts compounding - usually at 18-25% APR.
That interest rate is brutal. If you carry a balance, you’re paying huge amounts for the privilege of spending money you didn’t have.
Let’s say you buy something for $1,000 on May 1st using a credit card with 20% APR. Your statement closes on May 20th, and payment is due June 15th. The minimum payment due is $25.
Scenario 1 - Pay in Full (The Right Way):
- May 1: Purchase $1,000
- June 15: You pay the full $1,000
- Interest charged: $0
- This is how credit cards should work.
Scenario 2 - Pay Only the Minimum (The Trap):
- May 1: Purchase $1,000
- June 15: You pay only the $25 minimum
- Here’s where it gets ugly: credit card interest compounds daily. When you don’t pay in full, you lose your grace period and interest starts accruing immediately from the purchase date.
With a 20% APR, the daily interest rate is 0.0548% (20% ÷ 365 days). Here’s what happens day by day after you make only the minimum payment:
| Day | Date | Balance | Daily Interest | New Balance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 45 | June 15 | $1,000.00 | — | $1,024.90 (accrued since May 1) |
| 45 | June 15 | $1,024.90 | — | $999.90 (after $25 payment) |
| 46 | June 16 | $999.90 | $0.55 | $1,000.45 |
| 47 | June 17 | $1,000.45 | $0.55 | $1,001.00 |
| 48 | June 18 | $1,001.00 | $0.55 | $1,001.55 |
| 49 | June 19 | $1,001.55 | $0.55 | $1,002.10 |
| 50 | June 20 | $1,002.10 | $0.55 | $1,002.65 |
Notice what happened? You paid $25, but after just 5 days you’re back over $1,000. The interest is adding $16-17 per month. If you keep paying only $25/month, it will take you over 5 years to pay off that $1,000 purchase, and you’ll pay roughly $500 in interest. That $1,000 item actually cost you $1,500.
This is why carrying a credit card balance is financial poison. The math is designed to keep you in debt.
Using Cards Responsibly
Here’s the rule: treat your credit card like a debit card. Only spend money you already have. Pay the balance in full every single month.
If you follow that rule, credit cards are great:
- Build credit history - Responsible use improves your credit score.
- Rewards and cashback - Many cards offer 1.5-5% back on purchases.
- Purchase protection - Better fraud protection than debit cards.
- Convenience - No need to carry cash.
But the moment you carry a balance, those rewards are wiped out by interest. A 2% cashback card costs you 20% in interest. The math doesn’t work.
Credit scoring models like to see you using 10-30% of your available credit. Using 0% doesn’t give them data to work with, and using over 30% signals you might be living beyond your means. So from a credit score perspective, “carrying” some balance (meaning showing usage on your statement) can be beneficial.
Here’s the key distinction: you can show utilization without paying interest. Use your card throughout the month (say, 10-30% of your limit), let the statement close showing that balance, and then pay it off in full before the due date. This way, the credit bureaus see you’re using credit responsibly, but you never pay a cent in interest.
Your goal should always be 0% interest paid, even if you temporarily “carry” a balance between statement close and payment due date. Never carry a balance past the due date just to improve your score - the interest you’ll pay far outweighs any credit score benefit.
Common Credit Card Traps
- Minimum payments - Paying only the minimum means you’ll be in debt for years.
- “Buy now, pay later” mentality - Just because you have available credit doesn’t mean you should use it.
- Lifestyle inflation - Getting a new card with a $5,000 limit doesn’t mean you can suddenly afford more.
- Store credit cards - They often have worse terms and higher interest rates. Usually not worth it.
If you’re carrying balances and can’t stop spending on credit, cut up the cards. Seriously. Use cash or debit only until you develop discipline. Better to not have credit cards than to destroy your finances with them.
Your Credit Score: Why It Matters
Your credit score is a three-digit number (300-850) that represents how reliable you are with borrowed money. It’s calculated by companies like FICO based on your credit history.
What Affects Your Score
- Payment history (35%) - Do you pay bills on time? This is the biggest factor.
- Credit utilization (30%) - How much of your available credit are you using? Keep it under 30%, ideally under 10%.
- Length of credit history (15%) - How long have you had credit accounts?
- Credit mix (10%) - Do you have different types of credit (cards, loans, etc.)?
- New credit (10%) - How many new accounts have you opened recently?
Why Your Score Matters
Your credit score determines:
- Mortgage rates - A good score saves you tens of thousands on a home loan.
- Car loan rates - Better scores mean lower interest.
- Credit card approvals - The best cards with best rewards require good credit.
- Rental applications - Landlords check credit.
- Sometimes employment - Some jobs check credit as part of background checks.
A score above 740 is considered very good. Above 800 is excellent. Below 650, you’ll have trouble getting good rates on anything.
How to Check Your Score
- Free annual reports - AnnualCreditReport.com gives you free reports from all three bureaus (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion) once per year.
- Credit Karma - CreditKarma.com offers free monitoring and scores (VantageScore, not FICO, but close enough).
- Credit card companies - Many cards now offer free FICO score tracking.
Check your reports regularly. Look for errors, accounts you don’t recognize, or fraudulent activity.
Disputing Errors
If you find something wrong on your credit report, you can dispute it:
- Contact the credit bureau in writing (Equifax, Experian, or TransUnion)
- Explain the error and provide documentation
- The bureau has 30 days to investigate
- If they can’t verify the item, they must remove it
Many legitimate negative items will stay for 7 years (bankruptcies stay 10), but errors can and should be challenged.
Building Credit the Right Way
- Pay everything on time - Set up autopay if needed.
- Keep credit utilization low - Don’t max out cards.
- Don’t close old accounts - Length of history helps.
- Avoid unnecessary credit checks - Each hard inquiry drops your score slightly.
- Be patient - Good credit takes time to build.
Investing: Make Your Money Work
Here’s where things get interesting. Up to this point, we’ve been managing money you earn from work. Now we’re talking about making your money generate more money. This is how you stop trading time for dollars and start building real wealth.
The Power of Compound Interest
You’ve seen compound interest work against you with debt. Now let’s make it work for you.
If you invest $5,000 per year starting at age 20, earning an average of 8% annually, by age 65 you’ll have over $1.9 million. If you wait until 30 to start, same $5,000/year, you’ll only have about $850,000.
That difference - $1 million - is just from starting 10 years earlier. Time in the market is your biggest advantage as a young person.
Let’s compare two people: Alex starts investing at age 20, and Jordan starts at age 30. Both invest $5,000 per year and earn 8% average annual returns. Here’s what happens:
Alex: Starts at Age 20
| Age | Years Investing | Total Contributed | Investment Value | Growth (Interest) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20 | 1 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $0 |
| 25 | 6 | $30,000 | $36,680 | $6,680 |
| 30 | 11 | $55,000 | $86,936 | $31,936 |
| 35 | 16 | $80,000 | $158,911 | $78,911 |
| 40 | 21 | $105,000 | $260,564 | $155,564 |
| 45 | 26 | $130,000 | $401,622 | $271,622 |
| 50 | 31 | $155,000 | $596,253 | $441,253 |
| 55 | 36 | $180,000 | $861,584 | $681,584 |
| 60 | 41 | $205,000 | $1,218,959 | $1,013,959 |
| 65 | 46 | $230,000 | $1,697,889 | $1,467,889 |
Jordan: Starts at Age 30
| Age | Years Investing | Total Contributed | Investment Value | Growth (Interest) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30 | 1 | $5,000 | $5,000 | $0 |
| 35 | 6 | $30,000 | $36,680 | $6,680 |
| 40 | 11 | $55,000 | $86,936 | $31,936 |
| 45 | 16 | $80,000 | $158,911 | $78,911 |
| 50 | 21 | $105,000 | $260,564 | $155,564 |
| 55 | 26 | $130,000 | $401,622 | $271,622 |
| 60 | 31 | $155,000 | $596,253 | $441,253 |
| 65 | 36 | $180,000 | $861,584 | $681,584 |
The Comparison:
- Alex contributed $230,000 over 46 years → Worth $1,697,889
- Jordan contributed $180,000 over 36 years → Worth $861,584
Alex contributed only $50,000 more but ended up with $836,000 MORE at retirement. That extra decade at the beginning made almost all the difference because the money had more time to compound.
Notice how in the later years, the growth (interest earned) dwarfs the contributions. By age 65, Alex’s annual growth is adding more to the account than the $5,000 yearly contribution. That’s compound interest at work - you’re earning returns on your returns.
The lesson: Start now. Even if you can only invest $50/month, that money will compound for decades. You can always increase contributions later, but you can never buy back time.
Retirement Accounts: The Basics
- 401(k) - An employer-sponsored retirement account. You contribute pre-tax dollars (reducing your taxable income now), and it grows tax-deferred until retirement. Many employers match contributions up to a certain percentage - that’s free money, always take it.
- Traditional IRA - An individual retirement account you open yourself. Like a 401(k), contributions are pre-tax and growth is tax-deferred. Limit is $7,000/year (as of 2026).
- Roth IRA - Similar to Traditional IRA, but you contribute after-tax dollars. The advantage: all growth and withdrawals in retirement are tax-free. If you’re young and in a low tax bracket, this is often the better choice.
If your employer matches 401(k) contributions, contribute at least enough to get the full match. If they match 5%, contribute 5%. That’s an immediate 100% return on your money. You won’t find that anywhere else.
How Investing in the Stock Market Actually Works
Before we talk about what to invest in, let’s cover the mechanics of how this actually works. If you’ve never done this before, it can seem mysterious.
- Opening a brokerage account - This is like opening a bank account, but for investments. You’ll use companies like Fidelity, Vanguard, Schwab, or E*TRADE. The account is free to open and there are no minimums at most brokerages.
- Funding your account - Once open, you transfer money from your bank to your brokerage account. This can be done via bank transfer (ACH), wire transfer, or even by mailing a check. The money sits in your brokerage account until you decide to invest it.
- Buying shares - When you’re ready to invest, you place an order to buy shares of a stock or fund. A “share” is just a small piece of ownership. If you buy one share of Apple stock, you own a tiny fraction of Apple. If you buy shares of an S&P 500 index fund, you own tiny fractions of 500 companies.
- How shares are stored - Your shares exist as digital records at the brokerage firm. You don’t get physical certificates - the brokerage tracks that you own X shares of Y investment. You can see this in your account dashboard.
- Unrealized gains and losses - Once you own shares, they’ll go up and down in value every day the market is open. If you bought a share for $100 and it’s now worth $110, you have a $10 “unrealized gain” (also called a “paper gain”). It’s not real money yet - it’s just the current value. If it drops to $90, you have a $10 “unrealized loss.” These are “unrealized” because you still own the shares.
- Realized gains and losses - When you sell shares, the gain or loss becomes “realized” - meaning it’s actual money you gained or lost. If you bought at $100, the price went to $110, and you sold, you now have $10 in real profit. That’s a realized gain (and you’ll pay taxes on it).
It seems fun and exciting to “play the stock market” by buying shares of companies you think will do well. Tesla, Apple, Netflix - why not? Here’s why not: professional investors with teams of analysts, advanced algorithms, and decades of experience struggle to consistently beat the market. You, checking stock prices on your phone, will almost certainly lose money trying to pick winners.
Even if you get lucky once or twice, over time, most people who pick individual stocks underperform the overall market. The fees from frequent trading, the taxes from selling winners, and the inevitable bad picks eat away at returns. It’s like going to a casino - the house (the market) usually wins.
There’s a better way: index funds.
Index Funds and Diversification
Instead of trying to pick individual stocks, invest in index funds - funds that own a piece of the entire market.
For example, an S&P 500 index fund owns shares in the 500 largest U.S. companies. When the overall economy grows, your investment grows. It’s diversified (not dependent on any single company succeeding) and historically returns about 8-10% annually over long periods.
Why index funds work:
- Diversification - You own hundreds or thousands of companies, so one company failing doesn’t wreck you
- Low fees - Index funds typically charge 0.03-0.20% per year, compared to 1-2% for actively managed funds
- Simplicity - Buy and hold, let it grow for decades
- Historical performance - Over long periods, index funds beat most professional investors
Popular S&P 500 index fund options (choose one based on where you have your account):
Vanguard
- VFIAX (mutual fund) or VOO (ETF) - S&P 500
- VTSAX (mutual fund) or VTI (ETF) - Total U.S. Stock Market
- VTWAX (mutual fund) or VT (ETF) - Total World Stock Market
Fidelity
- FXAIX (mutual fund) or IVV (ETF) - S&P 500
- FSKAX (mutual fund) or ITOT (ETF) - Total U.S. Stock Market
Schwab
- SWPPX (mutual fund) or SCHB (ETF) - S&P 500
- SWTSX (mutual fund) or SCHB (ETF) - Total U.S. Stock Market
Note: Mutual funds and ETFs are slightly different, but for our purposes they work the same. ETFs trade like stocks throughout the day, mutual funds are bought/sold once per day at closing price. Both are fine.
Low fees, broad diversification, steady long-term growth. That’s the formula.
Starting Early Changes Everything
The biggest mistake young people make is waiting to invest. “I’ll start when I make more money” or “I’ll wait until I’m older.” Wrong.
Even if you can only invest $50/month right now, start. Build the habit. Let compound interest work its magic. You can always increase contributions later.
The goal: get to a point where your investment income (dividends, capital gains) exceeds your living expenses. That’s financial independence. You still might work, but you’ll do it because you want to, not because you need the money.
Resources for Learning More
- r/personalfinance wiki - Comprehensive free guide
- Bogleheads - Community focused on index investing
- Books: “The Simple Path to Wealth” by JL Collins, “A Random Walk Down Wall Street” by Burton Malkiel
Understanding Taxes
Nobody enjoys paying taxes, but you need to understand how they work. Ignorance here can cost you thousands.
How Income Tax Works
The U.S. uses a progressive tax system. You don’t pay the same rate on all your income - you pay increasing rates as you earn more.
For example (using simplified 2026 brackets for a single filer):
- First $11,000: 10%
- $11,001-$44,725: 12%
- $44,726-$95,375: 22%
- And so on…
If you make $50,000, you don’t pay 22% on all of it. You pay 10% on the first $11k, 12% on the next chunk, and 22% only on income above $44,725.
Understanding this prevents common mistakes like “I don’t want to earn more because I’ll be in a higher tax bracket.” That’s not how it works - you only pay the higher rate on income above the threshold.
W-2 vs 1099 Income
- W-2 - Traditional employee. Your employer withholds taxes from each paycheck and sends them to the IRS. You file a tax return to true-up at the end of the year.
- 1099 - Independent contractor or freelancer. No taxes are withheld - you’re responsible for paying them yourself, usually quarterly. You also pay self-employment tax (about 15.3%) to cover Social Security and Medicare.
If you’re doing side hustles or freelancing, set aside 25-30% of what you earn for taxes. Don’t spend it all and get blindsided in April.
Deductions and Credits
- Deductions reduce your taxable income. Example: if you earn $50,000 and have $10,000 in deductions, you only pay tax on $40,000.
- Credits reduce your tax bill directly. A $1,000 credit means you owe $1,000 less in taxes.
Common deductions/credits for young people:
- Standard deduction ($14,600 for single filers in 2026)
- Student loan interest deduction
- Retirement account contributions (Traditional IRA/401k)
- Education credits (if you’re in school)
You’ll hear people talk about “writing off” expenses. This just means deducting a business expense from your taxable income. If you earn $50,000 and write off $5,000 in legitimate business expenses, you only pay tax on $45,000.
Here’s the key: a write-off doesn’t make something free. If you’re in the 22% tax bracket and write off a $1,000 expense, you save $220 in taxes - but you still spent $1,000. Some people misunderstand this completely:
Write-offs only apply to legitimate business expenses. You can’t just “write off” personal purchases. The IRS has rules, and violating them leads to audits, penalties, and back taxes.
Filing Your Taxes
Every year, you have a legal obligation to file your taxes. Here’s how the process works and what you need to know.
Tax season timeline:
Each year from January through April 15th is “tax season.” Here’s what happens:
January: Your employer prepares your W-2 form - a document showing how much you earned and what taxes were withheld from your paychecks. They must provide this to you by January 31st.
February-April 15th: You file your taxes by filling out IRS Form 1040. This is where you report your income, deductions, and credits to calculate whether you overpaid or underpaid taxes during the year.
Outcome: After calculating, you either get a tax refund (if you overpaid) or you owe taxes (if you didn’t pay enough).
If you get a refund: The IRS will send you a check or direct deposit for the overpayment, usually within 21 days of filing electronically.
If you didn’t pay enough during the year and owe money, do not ignore it. The IRS charges interest and penalties on unpaid taxes, and these compound quickly. In extreme cases of willful non-payment, you can face criminal charges for tax evasion under 26 U.S. Code § 7201, which carries fines up to $100,000 and up to 5 years in prison.
If you can’t pay what you owe by April 15th, file your return on time anyway and immediately contact the IRS to set up a payment plan. They’d much rather work with you than chase you down.
For simple situations (W-2 employee only, standard deduction), use free software:
- IRS Free File - Free for income under $79,000
- FreeTaxUSA - Federal always free, state for $15
- Cash App Taxes - Completely free, federal and state
For moderate complexity (homeowner, multiple income sources, investments): Consider paid software like TurboTax or H&R Block software. They cost $50-150 but walk you through more complicated scenarios with better guidance.
For complex situations (business owner, rental property, significant investments): Hire a CPA (Certified Public Accountant) or professional tax preparer like H&R Block in-person service. Yes, it costs $200-500+, but it’s worth it to avoid costly mistakes and ensure you’re maximizing legitimate deductions.
Asset Protection and Business Structures
Once you start building wealth and multiple income streams, you need to think about protecting what you’ve built. This gets complex quickly, so we’ll cover the basics and point you toward professional help.
Personal Ownership vs Business Structures
When you own things personally - a car, a house, investments - you’re personally liable if something goes wrong. If you cause an accident or get sued, they can come after everything you own.
Business structures (LLCs, corporations, trusts) create legal separation between you and your assets or businesses. They can’t take everything if something goes wrong.
graph TB
subgraph Personal["Personal Ownership"]
You1("You")
Assets1("Assets")
You1 -->|"Owns Directly"| Assets1
end
subgraph Protected["Trust Structure"]
You2("You")
Trust("Trust")
Assets2("Assets")
You2 -->|"Controls"| Trust
Trust -->|"Owns"| Assets2
end
classDef person fill:#4A90E2,stroke:#2E5C8A,stroke-width:3px,color:#fff
classDef trust fill:#7B68EE,stroke:#5A4CB8,stroke-width:3px,color:#fff
classDef assets fill:#50C878,stroke:#3A9B5C,stroke-width:3px,color:#fff
class You1,You2 person
class Trust trust
class Assets1,Assets2 assetsRevocable Living Trusts
A trust is a legal entity that can own property. A revocable living trust is one you control while you’re alive and can change anytime.
Benefits:
- Assets in the trust avoid probate (the legal process after death)
- Can provide privacy (trusts aren’t public record like wills)
- Allows for easier management if you become incapacitated
- Can protect assets in certain situations
When it makes sense: Usually when you have significant assets (house, investments, etc.) or complex family situations.
This isn’t something you need at 18, but understand it exists. When you’re older and have more assets, talk to an estate planning attorney.
LLCs (Limited Liability Companies)
An LLC is a business structure that separates business assets and liabilities from personal ones.
Benefits:
- If the business gets sued, they can’t take your personal house or car
- Certain tax advantages depending on how it’s structured
- Looks more professional than operating as an individual
When it makes sense: When you have a serious side business or rental property. Not necessary for small-time freelancing.
Don’t try to set up trusts or LLCs based on internet advice alone. Talk to an attorney and CPA. The costs of setting these up wrong far exceed the cost of professional guidance. This section is just to make you aware these tools exist.
Insurance: What You Need (and Don’t)
Insurance is risk management. You pay a premium to protect against catastrophic losses. The key is insuring things that would financially destroy you while skipping insurance that’s unnecessary.
Insurance You Need
- Health Insurance - Non-negotiable. Even if you’re young and healthy, one accident or serious illness without insurance can bankrupt you. If your employer offers it, take it. If not, get a plan through the Healthcare Marketplace.
- Auto Insurance - Required by law in most states, and for good reason. Minimum liability coverage protects others if you cause an accident. Consider higher limits if you have assets to protect.
- Renter’s/Homeowner’s Insurance - Renter’s insurance is cheap ($15-30/month) and covers your belongings if there’s a fire, theft, or other disaster. Homeowner’s insurance is required by your mortgage lender and protects your biggest asset.
- Umbrella Insurance - This provides extra liability coverage beyond your auto/home policies. For $200-300/year, you can get $1-2 million in additional coverage. Worth it once you have assets to protect or a decent income.
Life Insurance: Term vs Whole
- Term Life Insurance - Pure insurance. You pay a premium, and if you die during the term (usually 20-30 years), your beneficiaries get a payout. It’s cheap when you’re young. Get this if you have dependents (spouse, kids).
- Whole Life Insurance - Combines insurance with a savings/investment component. Part of your premium goes to a cash value account that grows over time. You can borrow against this cash value (borrowing from yourself).
The controversy: Whole life is much more expensive than term. Many financial experts say to “buy term and invest the difference” - the returns are better. Others like whole life for the forced savings and tax advantages.
The truth: For most young people, term life is sufficient. Whole life can make sense later in life for estate planning or if you’re terrible at saving otherwise. It’s not for everyone.
Insurance You Probably Don’t Need
- Extended warranties - Usually a bad deal mathematically
- Credit card insurance - Expensive and rarely worth it
- Flight insurance - Your odds of dying in a plane crash are microscopic
- Life insurance if you have no dependents - Why insure your life if no one depends on your income?
Don’t just accept the first quote. Shop around. Use comparison sites like Policygenius for life insurance or The Zebra for auto insurance. You can save hundreds by comparing.
The Power of Giving
Let’s talk about the 10% you’re supposed to give away. This might seem counterintuitive when you’re trying to build wealth, but it’s one of the most important financial habits you’ll develop.
Biblical Foundation
The practice of tithing (giving 10%) comes from Scripture. In the Old Testament, God commanded His people to give the first 10% of their income:
“Honor the Lord with your possessions, and with the firstfruits of all your increase; so your barns will be filled with plenty, and your vats will overflow with new wine.” - Proverbs 3:9-10 (NKJV)
“Bring all the tithes into the storehouse, that there may be food in My house, and try Me now in this,” says the Lord of hosts, “If I will not open for you the windows of heaven and pour out for you such blessing that there will not be room enough to receive it.” - Malachi 3:10 (NKJV)
The principle: give God the first portion, not what’s left over. This demonstrates trust that He’ll provide for your needs.
Beyond Religion: The Practical Benefits
Even from a purely secular perspective, regular giving has powerful effects:
- Prevents greed and materialism - When you make giving a habit, money stays in its proper place as a tool, not an object of worship.
- Builds character - Generosity is a muscle. The more you practice, the easier it becomes.
- Psychological benefits - Research shows that giving activates pleasure centers in the brain and increases life satisfaction. A Harvard study found that people who give to others are happier than those who spend on themselves.
- Creates perspective - Regular giving reminds you that others have real needs. It keeps you from obsessing over your own finances.
- It just works - This is harder to quantify, but countless people report that when they give consistently, their finances somehow work out. There’s a mysterious abundance that comes from generosity.
Where to Give
“Tithing” traditionally meant giving to your church, but the principle is broader: give to something beyond yourself.
Options include:
- Local churches or religious organizations
- Food banks and homeless shelters
- Scholarship funds
- Disaster relief organizations
- Supporting individuals in need
- Causes you care deeply about
The key is consistency and intentionality. Decide where you’re giving, and do it regularly. Don’t wait until you “have extra” - make it part of your budget from the start.
Whether you’re making minimum wage or six figures, start giving 10%. Yes, even when money is tight. You’ll find that 90% with generosity goes further than 100% with a gripped fist.
There’s a principle here: how you handle little determines how you’ll handle much. Scripture puts it this way:
“He who is faithful in what is least is faithful also in much” - Luke 16:10 (NKJV)
If you can’t manage $100 wisely, you won’t suddenly be wise with $100,000. Practice generosity now, while the stakes are low, and it’ll be part of who you are when you have more.
Financial Traps to Avoid
Let’s talk about common ways people destroy their finances. Awareness is your best defense.
Multi-Level Marketing (MLM) Schemes
You’ll encounter these constantly: “Be your own boss!” “Work from home!” “Unlimited income potential!” They go by names like Amway, Herbalife, Cutco, or newer companies in crypto/wellness.
How they work:
- You pay to join, buy inventory, and recruit others to join under you
- You make money from your recruits, not from selling products
- The company and top recruiters profit while 99%+ of participants lose money
Why they’re bad:
- Over 99% of MLM participants lose money
- Products are usually overpriced and hard to sell
- You’ll alienate friends and family by constantly trying to recruit them
- You’ll waste time and money that could go toward legitimate opportunities
How to spot them: If the focus is on recruiting others rather than selling products, if you have to buy inventory upfront, or if income claims seem too good to be true - run.
Ponzi Schemes and “Get Rich Quick”
These promise high returns with little risk. Bernie Madoff ran one of the largest Ponzi schemes ever - promising consistent returns while actually just paying old investors with new investors’ money.
Red flags:
- Guaranteed high returns (10%+ monthly)
- “Secret” investment strategies
- Pressure to recruit others
- Difficulty withdrawing money
- Lack of transparency
The rule: If it sounds too good to be true, it is. Legitimate investments have risk and don’t guarantee outsized returns.
Cryptocurrency Hype
Crypto can be part of a portfolio, but it’s highly speculative. Many people have lost everything chasing the next Bitcoin.
Yes, some people have made life-changing money when Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies pump. Those stories are real. But so are the horror stories of people watching their investments lose 50-70% of their value in a matter of hours or days.
Bitcoin has swung from $20,000 to $3,000 (85% loss), then to $60,000 (1,900% gain), then back to $20,000 (67% loss), then to $100,000+ - all in the span of a few years. That’s not normal market behavior.
If you invest in crypto, understand you’re signing up for extreme volatility. There will be super highs. There will be super lows. Your stomach needs to be strong enough to watch your portfolio drop 40% overnight without panic-selling. Most people can’t handle that psychologically.
Reasonable approach: Maybe 5-10% of your portfolio in established cryptocurrencies (Bitcoin, Ethereum) if you believe in the technology. Treat it as speculative and risky.
What to avoid:
- Putting your life savings in crypto - This is gambling with your financial future
- ICOs and new coin launches - These are the modern-day penny stocks. Yes, some people hit it big when they got in early on the “next Bitcoin.” But for every success story, there are hundreds of people who lost everything on coins that went to zero. Crypto bros will hype these as “sure things” with promises of 100x returns - they’re not. Most ICOs fail, and many are outright scams. If you can’t afford to lose 100% of what you invest, don’t touch ICOs.
- Pump-and-dump schemes - Coordinated efforts to inflate a coin’s price, then sell, leaving late buyers holding worthless assets
- Unknown coins with no track record - If you’ve never heard of it and it’s not in the top 20 by market cap, extreme caution
- Believing promises of easy money - If crypto investing were easy and guaranteed, everyone would be rich
Lifestyle Inflation
This is subtle but deadly. You get a raise, so you immediately increase your spending to match. New car, nicer apartment, more eating out. Your income grows, but you never build wealth because spending grows too.
The alternative: When you get a raise, increase your savings and investing proportionally. If you get a $500/month raise, save/invest $300 of it and enjoy $200. You’re still living better, but you’re also building wealth.
Keeping Up with the Joneses
Comparing yourself to others financially is poison. Your coworker drives a BMW, so you feel like you need a nice car too. Your friend goes on expensive vacations, so you book trips you can’t afford.
The reality: You have no idea what their situation is. They might be drowning in debt. They might have family money. They might make twice what you do.
Comparison is theft of joy and destroyer of wealth.
Live according to your own goals and values, not someone else’s Instagram highlight reel.
Financing Depreciating Assets
A depreciating asset loses value over time. Cars, electronics, furniture - they’re all worth less the moment you buy them and continue losing value.
Financing these (paying interest to borrow money for them) means you’re paying extra for something that’s becoming worthless. You’re going backwards.
Cash Cars vs Financing vs Leasing
Cars are one of the biggest financial decisions you’ll make. Here’s the honest breakdown:
Buying a car cash (especially used):
Pros:
- No monthly payments
- No interest charges
- You own it outright
- Lower insurance requirements (no lender requirements)
- Let someone else take the depreciation hit
Cons:
- Ties up a large chunk of savings
- Older cars mean more maintenance and repair costs
- Risk of sudden major repairs ($1,500 transmission, $2,000 engine work)
- Less reliability - might leave you stranded
- Usually less safe (older safety features)
Buying a new car (cash or financed):
Pros:
- Full warranty (usually 3yr/36k miles bumper-to-bumper)
- Latest safety features
- Most reliable - unlikely to break down
- Modern tech and fuel efficiency
- You know its full history
Cons:
- Massive depreciation (20-30% in first year alone)
- Higher insurance costs
- Higher registration fees
- If financing: paying interest on a depreciating asset
Financing a car (taking out a loan to buy):
What it means: You borrow money from a bank/credit union to buy the car, then pay it back monthly with interest over 3-7 years. You own the car, but the lender has a lien until it’s paid off.
Pros:
- Drive a nicer/newer car than you could buy with cash
- Build credit history if managed well
- Keep your savings liquid for emergencies
Cons:
- Pay thousands in interest over the loan term
- Required to carry full insurance (expensive)
- Risk of being “upside down” (owing more than car is worth)
- Monthly payment locks up your income
- Miss payments = repossession and credit damage
Leasing a car:
What it means: You’re essentially renting the car for 2-4 years. You pay for the vehicle’s depreciation during that time, then return it. You never own it.
Pros:
- Lower monthly payments than buying
- Always under warranty
- Drive a new car every few years
- No worries about selling or trade-in
Cons:
- You own nothing at the end - all that money is gone
- Mileage limits (usually 10-15k/year) with expensive overage fees
- Must keep it in good condition or pay fees
- Can’t modify or customize
- Can’t end the lease early without hefty penalties
- Perpetual payment cycle - never free
The smart approach:
For most young people: Buy a reliable used car (3-5 years old) with cash if possible. If you must finance, keep it under 4 years and put at least 20% down. Avoid leasing unless you have specific business reasons and write it off as a business expense.
Young guys especially fall for this: financing an expensive truck with a 7-year loan at $600-800/month. That vehicle will be worth half what you paid by the time it’s paid off, and you’ve paid thousands in interest on top. Drive a beater until you can afford better with cash.
Resources and Next Steps
Financial literacy is a lifelong journey. Here are resources to keep learning:
Books
- “The Total Money Makeover” by Dave Ramsey - Getting out of debt and building wealth
- “The Simple Path to Wealth” by JL Collins - Index investing made simple
- “I Will Teach You to Be Rich” by Ramit Sethi - Practical money management for young people
- “Rich Dad Poor Dad” by Robert Kiyosaki - Mindset about money and assets
- “Your Money or Your Life” by Vicki Robin - Financial independence and life purpose
Websites and Communities
- r/personalfinance - Free advice and comprehensive wiki
- Bogleheads.org - Index investing community
- Mr. Money Mustache - Financial independence blog
- The White Coat Investor - For high-income professionals but good general advice
Podcasts and YouTube
- The Money Guy Show - Brian Preston and Bo Hanson cover all financial topics
- BiggerPockets Money Podcast - Financial independence focus
- Graham Stephan - YouTube, real estate and investing
- Dave Ramsey Show - Debt elimination and financial advice (some controversy, but solid fundamentals)
Tools
- YNAB - Budgeting software
- Personal Capital - Free investment tracking
- Credit Karma - Free credit monitoring
- Compound Interest Calculator - See your investment growth
When to Get Professional Help
You don’t need to figure everything out alone. Consider consulting professionals for:
- CPA/Tax Professional - Complex tax situations, business income, significant investments
- Fee-only Financial Advisor - Overall financial planning (avoid commission-based advisors)
- Estate Planning Attorney - Wills, trusts, complex family situations
- Insurance Agent - Comparing policies and coverage needs
Summary
Financial literacy isn’t one skill - it’s a collection of knowledge that compounds over time. Here’s what we’ve covered:
Mindset
- Money is a tool for freedom, not the goal
- Practice the 70/10/10/10 rule: live on 70%, invest 10%, save 10%, give 10%
- Build multiple income streams for security and independence
Foundation
- Budget intentionally using YNAB or similar
- Build emergency fund: $1,000 first, then 3-6 months expenses
- Understand and manage debt strategically
- Use credit cards responsibly or not at all
Building Wealth
- Understand your credit score and how to improve it
- Start investing early, even small amounts
- Use employer 401(k) match and Roth IRAs
- Index funds, diversification, and long-term thinking
Protection
- Understand how taxes work and file correctly
- Know when trusts and LLCs make sense (and get professional help)
- Carry appropriate insurance: health, auto, renter’s/homeowner’s, umbrella
- Avoid financial traps: MLMs, Ponzi schemes, lifestyle inflation
Generosity
- Give 10% consistently, regardless of income
- Generosity prevents greed and builds character
- It’s both biblically commanded and psychologically beneficial
The goal is financial independence - where your investments provide for your needs and you work because you want to, not because you have to. That’s achievable, but it requires understanding these principles and applying them consistently.
Start today. Build your budget. Open that emergency fund. Start that side hustle. Invest that first $50. Give that first 10%.
Every wealthy person started exactly where you are. The difference is they started and stayed consistent. Now it’s your turn.
Financial freedom isn’t about having millions in the bank. It’s about having options, being generous, and building a life where money serves your mission instead of controlling it. That’s within reach. Go get it.