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Ready for a Rich 2026? Read These Tips from Ramit Sethi

Ramit Sethi Wants You to Spend Less Time on Money and More on Life — Here’s How
The 'How to Get Rich,' host says managing your money should take less than an hour a month. He shares how to design a 'Rich Life,' tackle debt and start the new year on stronger financial footing.
Stop asking ‘Can I afford this?’
Q When you think about a financial glow up what does that mean to you beyond just earning more or saving more? Q When you think about a financial glow up what does that mean to you beyond just earning more or saving more? A: A glow up goes beyond saving an extra $3,000. A true glow up means radically reconceptualizing your relationship with money. That means seeing money as a source of adventure, generosity, and possibility rather than one of scarcity and restriction. A glow up means mastering your own money psychology. For example, you stop asking, "Can I afford this?" and start asking "What do I want? And how do I use money to get it?" That’s why my new MasterClass is called Financial Wellness — because building a healthy relationship with money goes far beyond the numbers. Financial wellness means you’re confident with money, competent with money, and it actually feels good. Q: What is something people can do right now, at the end of the year, to make 2026 better financially? Q: What is something people can do right now, at the end of the year, to make 2026 better financially? A: Set up a system once, then let it run on autopilot. Stop logging in every week. Delete your financial apps. You don’t need them if you set your system up right. A: Automate your savings (5%-10% of take-home pay, ideally more), your investing (10%+), your bills. If you have debt, create a debt-payoff plan so you know the exact month and year you’ll be debt free.Meet MoneyNerd, your weekly news decoder
So much news. So little time. NerdWallet's new weekly newsletter makes sense of the headlines that affect your wallet.So much news. So little time. NerdWallet's new weekly newsletter makes sense of the headlines that affect your wallet.
So much news. So little time. NerdWallet's new weekly newsletter makes sense of the headlines that affect your wallet.
» MORE: The best investments for 2026 » MORE: Q: A lot of personal finance advice focuses on cutting back, while yours emphasizes designing a "rich life." How do you define that for this moment, especially when costs are up? Q: A lot of personal finance advice focuses on cutting back, while yours emphasizes designing a "rich life." How do you define that for this moment, especially when costs are up? A: A rich life can be traveling for two months every year, or buying a beautiful cashmere coat, or picking your kids up from school. A: One of the first rich life moments many people experience is not having to look at the prices at the grocery store. Imagine that feeling of joy and freedom! In my work, I show you how to identify the things you truly love — your "money dials" — and actually spend more on those things.
Stop agonizing over $3 decisions while ignoring $30,000 ones
Q: What inspired your new MasterClass, and what do you hope viewers will take away from it? Q: What inspired your new MasterClass, and what do you hope viewers will take away from it? A: I got tired of watching people agonize over $3 decisions while ignoring the $30,000 ones. My class teaches people how to master their money psychology, automate their system, and actually enjoy their money. Most financial advice is condescending and filled with shame. Mine is built on freedom, clarity, and action. A: Q: For readers unfamiliar with your “Conscious Spending Plan,” how would you explain it in one sentence? Q: For readers unfamiliar with your “Conscious Spending Plan,” how would you explain it in one sentence? A: The Conscious Spending Plan gives you specific guidelines for how to spend money to live your rich life. I recommend 50%-60% of take-home pay for fixed costs, 5%-10% for savings, 5%-10% for investments, and 20%-35% for guilt-free spending. A: Using our free template, you can instantly see where your finances stack up. Q: With holiday bills and buy now, pay later payments coming due in January, what’s the first step you’d recommend to someone trying to dig out of that debt? Q: With holiday bills and buy now, pay later payments coming due in January, what’s the first step you’d recommend to someone trying to dig out of that debt? A: I have not seen a single good reason to use BNPL services. If you can’t afford it now, don’t buy it. A: I’ve found that many people in debt will do everything except pay off their debt. They’ll play 0% balance transfer games, BNPL, or simply ignore it. No! The key is to accept that you have debt, make a debt-payoff plan, and then automate it. That might mean you can’t spend much on the holidays this year. That’s fine. Making a plan lets you know exactly when you’ll be debt free.To the couples out there: Don’t get stuck in the numbers
Q: How can high-earning couples with very different spending habits create a budget that feels fair to both partners? Q: How can high-earning couples with very different spending habits create a budget that feels fair to both partners? A: Start with a vision of what your rich life is. It’s too easy to get stuck in the numbers, like how much one person spends at Target. A: Instead, zoom up. What do we love? What’s our rich life? Start there, then go deeper into what you want now, in June, and even 10 years from now. Finally, set up a time to talk regularly about money every single month. Q: What’s one conversation every couple should have before they move in together or get married — but often don’t? Q: What’s one conversation every couple should have before they move in together or get married — but often don’t? A: Beyond sharing your actual numbers — income, debt, expenses — ask each other: "What does money mean to you?" A: If one of you grew up with scarcity and the other with abundance, you’ll approach spending completely differently. Does money mean you have 12 months of savings? Or that you’ll pay for your kids’ education? Does it mean growth, safety or adventure? » MORE: I make six figures, but I still worry about money » MORE:Meet MoneyNerd, your weekly news decoder
So much news. So little time. NerdWallet's new weekly newsletter makes sense of the headlines that affect your wallet.So much news. So little time. NerdWallet's new weekly newsletter makes sense of the headlines that affect your wallet.
So much news. So little time. NerdWallet's new weekly newsletter makes sense of the headlines that affect your wallet.