The 3 best pieces of money advice I've ever received (2024)

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  • As a financial journalist, I'veheard tons of financial advice from dozens of financial experts.
  • Having these money conversations yield great tips, but three pieces of advice resonate the most.
  • The best pieces of advice are about your money mindset, automating your savings, and paying yourself first.

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The 3 best pieces of money advice I've ever received (3)

I have been a financial journalist for over a decade. I have heard tons of financial advice, but I've found that the best advice, and the insight that really resonates across the board, pertains to everyday money management.

Through my years of covering money, I have had the chance to speak with dozens of financial experts. These are the three best pieces of advice I have received:

1. Your money mindset will impact how you handle money

When I interviewed personal finance expert Stacy Tisdale, she discussed money scripts. Money scripts are beliefs that we have around money and they influence how we handle money.

"The way that we handle money is a direct result of our money scripts and how we view money," Tisdale told me. I thought about this and found that many people who struggle with money are afraid of money, or they think that money management is too hard. They don't speak with their creditors when they are having trouble paying the bills, and they view money as a source of stress and lack.

But the people who handle their money well view money as a tool. Financial issues are a temporary inconvenience, not a constant state of being. I even met someone years ago who was in a Chapter 13 bankruptcy, which most people would see as a massive blow, but this gentleman saw it as a step in getting his life together.

Your mindset or your money script around money is a very real thing.

2. Automate your savings

Lynette Khalfani-Cox has been teaching women for years how to increase their savings and prepare for retirement. She stressed the importance of putting your savings on autopilot.

"This builds the 'being consistent' part of saving. The only way to be successful with saving is to make it a habit," Cox said. She continued to say that when you automate deposits into your savings account, you can set it and forget it. "It's even better if you have it automatically deducted from your paycheck so that way you don't even miss it."

By saving money, you are building yourself a financial safety net. Oftentimes people are in high-interest debt because they did not have savings to fall back on when the unexpected happened.

3. Pay yourself first

This piece of advice is the best piece of advice because it came from my Dad. After grad school and internships, I started my first full-time job. My Dad was on the phone with me for an hour at least, telling me that I needed to pay myself first.

How? Of course, save your money, but in addition to that, he advised that I pay all of my household expenses first. He said to me, "There is no way that you should have a full-time job and your household bills aren't paid and your refrigerator isn't stocked, because you take care of those things first."

To this day, my savings is on autopilot, and the first thing I do when I get paid is pay my household bills (rent/mortgage, electric, internet, cellphone) and go to the grocery store.

This article was originally published in August 2023.

Jennifer Streaks

Senior Personal Finance Reporter and Spokesperson

Jennifer is a Senior Personal Finance Reporter and Spokesperson for the Personal Finance vertical at Business Insider. She started her career covering personal finance at Black Enterprise Magazine, went on to CNBC where she covered personal finance, women and money and tech and then Forbes, where she reported on personal finance, business, tech and money matters related to the economy, investing, credit and entrepreneurship. Jennifer is also the author of Thrive!...Affordably: Your Month to Month Guide to living your Best Life without breaking the bank. The book offers advice, tips and financial management lessons geared towards helping the reader highlight strengths, identify missteps and take control of their finances. In addition, she has extensive experience as an on-air financial commentator and has been a featured expert discussing credit and savings, investing and retirement, mortgages and all things money and personal finance. She has an ability to discuss and simplify complex financial issues and make them easier to understand. Follow her on Twitter @jstreaks.

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The 3 best pieces of money advice I've ever received (5)

The 3 best pieces of money advice I've ever received (2024)
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