Practical, evidence-backed tips you can act on today — organized by category so you find exactly what you need.
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Set up an automatic transfer to savings the day your paycheck hits. Treat savings as a non-negotiable bill. Most people who succeed financially automate this before spending a single dollar.
Traditional savings accounts earn ~0.01% APY. High-yield accounts earn 4–5% APY. On $10,000, that's $400–500 in passive interest annually — for doing nothing differently.
The average person wastes $219/month on forgotten subscriptions. Do a quarterly audit — cancel anything you haven't actively used in 30 days.
Call your internet, insurance, and phone providers annually. Simply asking for a loyalty discount or competitor match saves most people $30–80/month. That's $360–960/year.
Before any purchase over $50 that isn't a necessity, wait 24 hours. This simple delay eliminates 70–80% of impulse purchases and dramatically reduces buyer's remorse.
The standard deduction for 2024 is $14,600 (single) or $29,200 (married). Only itemize if your deductions exceed these amounts. Most people should just take the standard deduction.
HSA contributions are triple-tax advantaged: pre-tax contributions, tax-free growth, and tax-free withdrawals for medical expenses. It's the best savings vehicle most people ignore.
Instead of $5,000/year for 2 years, donate $10,000 in year 1 and claim itemized deductions, then take the standard deduction in year 2. You get the same giving impact with more tax benefit.
If you work from home and are self-employed, you can deduct a proportional share of rent, utilities, and internet. The simplified method allows $5 per square foot, up to 300 sq ft.
List all debts by interest rate. Pay minimums on all, but throw every extra dollar at the highest-rate debt. This saves the most money in interest over time — mathematically optimal.
Many cards offer 0% APR balance transfers for 12–21 months. Transfer high-interest credit card debt and aggressively pay it down during the intro period — potentially saving 20%+ in interest.
A $5,000 credit card balance at 22% APR with minimum payments takes 20+ years to pay off and costs $7,000+ in interest. Always pay more than the minimum — ideally 3–5x more.