The Trump administration is preparing to unveil a plan that would allow Americans to tap their 401(k) retirement accounts to fund a down payment on a home. The proposal, expected to be announced next week at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, is framed as part of a broader effort to ease Americans’ cost-of-living pressures, particularly around housing affordability. Read the rest

Many people gravitate toward pricey purchases because they offer a quick boost of confidence and satisfaction. But when those splurges become a habit, they can quietly drain your finances, leading to overspending, growing debt, and a much tougher path toward long‑term financial stability. 1. Expensive Gym Memberships While going to the gym can be an … Read more

Money has a funny way of revealing our quirks, especially when it comes to what we’re willing or completely unwilling to spend it on. In a world obsessed with getting rich fast, people’s spending priorities can be surprisingly odd, making the things they refuse to buy one of the most fascinating financial habits to explore. … Read more

Image source: shutterstock.com Most grocery shopping mistakes don’t happen because you picked the “wrong brand,” they happen because you brought home food that was already halfway out the door. Stores rotate, but they also get busy, and older items can hide behind fresh stock like they’re playing a sneaky little game. If you’re couponing, stocking up, or shopping sales, that risk goes up because discounted items often sit longer. A quick check takes two seconds […]

Well folks, after 60 agonizing days of dealing with car salespeople, test-driving far too many vehicles, visiting two auto mechanics to diagnose and fix my current car, and wasting an unhealthy amount of time on online research, I have decided not to buy a new car. I know this may disappoint everyone who generously shared […] The post The Main Reason I Won’t Be Buying a New Car Anytime Soon appeared first on Financial Samurai.

The Short Version: You don’t need $100K (or even $50K) to start investing in real estate. There are legitimate paths in with $10K or less. The traditional “buy a rental property” model isn’t your only option and for most busy professionals, it’s not the best one either. Some low-cost entry points are more hands-on than others. Knowing the trade-offs helps you pick the right path. Access to quality deals used to be reserved for the wealthy. That’s changing. There’s a persistent myth in real estate that you need serious capital to get started. Six figures in the bank. A hefty down payment. The kind of money most people don’t have sitting around, especially in their 20s and 30s when they’re still building their careers. The truth is, you don’t need $100,000 to start investing in real estate. Or $10,000. You don’t even need $25,000. There are legitimate paths into real estate with as little as $5,000 – $10,000 (some requiring even less than that.) The options look different than buying a rental property outright, but they’re real, and they work. Let me walk you through what’s actually possible when you’re starting with limited capital, what the trade-offs are, and how I’d approach it if I were starting from scratch today. The Misconception That Keeps People on the Sidelines Most people picture real estate investing as buying a property. A single-family home, maybe a duplex. You scrape together a down payment, get a mortgage, find tenants, and become a landlord. That’s the mental model, and it’s not wrong. It’s just incomplete. The problem is that this traditional path does require significant capital. Even with a low down payment loan, you’re typically looking at $30,000 to $50,000 minimum when you factor in the down payment, closing costs, and reserves for repairs and vacancies. In expensive markets, double or triple that. So people assume they’re locked out. They figure they’ll wait until they’ve saved more, and in the meantime, they park their money in a savings account earning 3% while inflation quietly eats away at it. Or they throw it into the stock market and hope for the best, watching their portfolio rise and fall with every news cycle. Here’s what I wish someone had told me earlier: you don’t have to buy a property to invest in real estate. There are ways to get real estate exposure, real estate returns, and real estate diversification with a fraction of the capital. Some of these options are more hands-on, others are completely passive. But all of them are accessible to someone with $10,000 or less. Option 1: House Hacking (If You’re Willing to Get Hands-On) House hacking is the classic low-money-down strategy, and it works. The basic idea is that you buy a small multifamily property (a duplex, triplex, or fourplex) live in one unit, and rent out the others. Because you’re occupying the property, you can use owner-occupied financing with down payments as low as 3.5%

Image source: shutterstock.com Having two incomes and no childcare costs can make budgeting feel simpler, at least at first. Without school calendars, daycare bills, and kid-related emergencies, many couples assume their money will naturally stack up. Then life happens: travel gets bigger, lifestyle upgrades sneak in, and “adult responsibilities” show up with price tags you didn’t plan for. The tricky part is that these expenses don’t look like one big bill—they show up as a […]

Sammie Ellard-King I’m Sammie, a money expert and business owner passionate about helping you take control of your wallet. My mission with Up the Gains is to create a safe space to help improve your finances, cut your costs and make you feel good while doing it. Share to Facebook Getting on the property ladder feels impossible for a lot of people right now. And fresh research from Nationwide Building Society shows exactly why. First-time […]

Parag Parikh Large Cap Fund, an actively managed large cap fund benchmarked to the Nifty 100 TRI, is currently in its NFO period (19th -30th Jan 2026). We discuss whether investors should consider buying this fund. The fund is marketed as a “passive plus” fund with a low expense ratio that tends to track the… The post Parag Parikh Large Cap Fund – should you buy appeared first on freefincal.

Owning a home is the ultimate dream for many. Since I was 21, I have always wanted to be a property owner. The thought of paying rent every month was discouraging, and I wanted to leap to ownership, but so did millions of other people. However, times have changed, and people are increasingly considering renting rather than buying property. Mortgage rates remain high, and may be stalling your ability to buy a home. Depending on […]

I find January quite exciting because you have the opportunity to review your past year and you can plan the year ahead. It’s a time of reflection and hope. I spend a lot of time in January reviewing my spending in the previous year and … Read morePF Blog Round Up: Reviewing and Planning Edition The post PF Blog Round Up: Reviewing and Planning Edition appeared first on Genymoney.ca.

While buying your first car is exciting, the numbers show that a bit of planning can pay off. Nearly three million used cars are sold in the UK each year, so most first-time buyers are likely to start with a used car rather than a new one. At the same time, the average car on UK roads is getting older, with an average age of 9.4 years, meaning wear-and-tear-related faults are more common than they […]

One of the most important ideas in financial planning is also one of the most misunderstood: the time value of money. At its core, it simply recognizes that a dollar today is not the same as a dollar received in the future. How and when money is received matters, and understanding this concept clarifies many common planning decisions. Even small differences in timing or assumptions can meaningfully change which strategy appears “better,” even when the […]