Guess what? You're surrounded by rich doctors. You probably didn't even know it. You know why? Because doctors don't talk about that filthy lucre known as money. So while you're assuming that all the other doctors in your group, office building, and hospital are in the same position as you, you're wrong. Some of them are rich. There are 10 things they're not telling you, but which you probably need to know.
# 10 Rich Doctors Don't Care About Your Tesla
You know that Tesla you drive? It goes so fast. It's so environmentally responsible. It shows people that you're a doctor now, and a successful one at that. Guess what? The rich doctor across the hall doesn't care. She really doesn't. In fact, almost nobody does. You're buying things you don't need with money you don't have to impress people you don't like. Would you really want to hang out with someone impressed by your Tesla anyway?
# 9 They Don't Care What You Think About Their Beater
They don't care what you think about their spending choices either, whether it's their car, their house, their clothes, their vacations, their kids' schools, or their favorite restaurants. They're immune from keeping up with Dr. Jones.
# 8 They Never Owed as Much in Student Loans as You Still Do
You know that $300K student loan you're keeping under the bed? That rich doctor down the hall doesn't have that. She lived like a bum when she was a student, like a student when she was a resident, and like a resident for 2-5 years after residency. Her student loans were only 2/3 what yours were and she paid them off by Halloween after residency graduation by living like a resident.
# 7 They Don't Have Payments
It's not just the student loans. Those other docs don't have any payments. No student loan payments, no car payments, no credit card payments, no residency relocation loan payments, no timeshare payments, no ski condo payments, and not even a mortgage on their primary homes. There are lots of great mathematical arguments showing that you should drag out low-interest loans as long as you can, but most of those rich doctors stupidly paid them off early. Idiots. That lack of payments, however, did improve their cash flow and gave them the confidence they needed to take risks in their lives and their careers, and often times those risks paid off with higher incomes and better investment returns.

A few rich doctors in this group. They don't care about your Tesla either. A nice set of oars on the other hand…
# 6 They Have a Written Plan
Guess what else those dorks down the hall have? A written financial plan. Silly, huh? Some of them wrote it themselves after reading some books or taking a course, but lots of them met with a financial planner and some of them still do regularly. They could actually tell you where their money goes each month, about how much they have and will need for retirement and college, and what their investment returns have been. Weird huh?
# 5 They're Not Afraid to Take Ownership Risk
Rich people tend to own stuff, and that includes doctors. Owning stuff can be risky, whether that means a high stock allocation in your portfolio, owning a practice, owning a side business, or owning some rental real estate. But since they apply the same intelligence and hard work to ownership as they did to get into medical school, those risks generally pay off with more wealth.
# 4 They're Financially Literate
Not only does that rich doctor across the hall have a written financial plan, but she's also financially literate. She knows what a Roth IRA and a mutual fund are. She knows the difference between a savings rate, an expense ratio, and a safe withdrawal rate. She can calculate her investment return and the payments on a 15-year mortgage. She knows the going rate for financial advice and why a capitalization rate has nothing to do with a mid-cap stock. Do you? Would you like to? There are ways of learning this stuff almost effortlessly.
# 3 They Buy for Quality
If you went to their house, you might be surprised at some of the old furniture and sporting equipment they have. But when that stuff wears out and they replace it, they do so with top quality stuff. They want something that will last a long time. They have saved up for it and shopped for it and aren't afraid to spend money on it. They have plenty of money and are ready to enjoy it. But they're still going to wait until the old one wears out. They might be driving a 15-year-old Accord, but the next car will be a brand new Audi paid for with cash.
# 2 They Like Their Work More Than You Do
The doc down the hall likes her job more than you do too. How do you know that's true? Because she's there. She doesn't have to be, you know. She has enough money not to work at all. So if she didn't like it, she'd be off mountain biking, home with the kids, running a business, or pursuing a different career. Some people are surprised when they reach financial independence and find out they don't enjoy their work more. But guess what? They're not in clinic down the hall. They're somewhere else. The rich ones down the hall want to be there. But they don't put up with the crappy parts of the job. They can tell the administrator cracking the whip to shove it. They can pay someone else to work their night shifts or take their call. They no longer do procedures they don't enjoy. They've figured out how to eliminate most of the parts of their job that they don't like.
# 1 One House, One Spouse
Remember that rich doctor in the lounge that you would have never guessed is rich? He's been married for 25 years. To the same person. I know, right? He's also in the same house he bought when he moved to this town. It's been paid off for 18 years. No lake house or ski condo either. Maybe those decisions have something to do with his net worth. Or maybe it's just the X Factor.
What do you think? Why are some doctors richer than others? Is it genetics, environment, better decisions, sheer dumb luck or some combination of the above? Are you the rich doctor next door? Do you know any? Comment below!
it’s often quoted that the richest people drive the most “normal” cars. Buffet drives a Cadillac for example. Zuckerberg drives a Toyota I think. PoF and WCI both drive normal cars but based on their own disclosed net worth could run out and buy brand new Italian sports cars. I suspect that many readers if they had that net worth would do that. I think one would argue its the frugality that gets them to this point that prevents them from splurging on cars.
Also, I think it’s about choices and what you value. Last year my car was dying and I was on the waitlist for a Tesla Model 3. I seriously toyed with saying screw it and just getting the Model S. I just couldn’t stomach spending 90k on a car even if I could afford it and went with a more practical Acura. Granted I have no problem spending money on other things…
Driving the 15 year old minivan as I still need the kid mover and it still runs just fine. Paid off my loans within 3-4 yrs after residency while living within my means. Over a million in retirement and in my mid 40s by maxing my yearly contributions. Hardly owe anything on our house. Same spouse for 21 yrs. I do sometimes wish I had a fancy car but I just can’t justify it because cars are a terrible investment We take our family of 6 on incredible vacations- recently Tokyo- but never feel the need for “luxury travel”. My friends are teachers and middle class folks. I feel so lucky for our financial freedom and really don’t want for anything more.
What happened to compounding interest? Doctors early in their practice need to mazimize their retirement savings, not pay off low interest loans. e.g. if one can reliably make 7% returns on investment and a bank is willing to offer a loan at 4.5%, I would advise maximizing investment and minimizing loan payments.
When nearing retirement and returns exceed money invested, then pay off the house.
Not an unreasonable plan, although at current interest rates I see even a 4.5% guaranteed return as fairly attractive. No sense in carrying a loan like that if you’re investing in bonds paying 2-3%.
Funny
Also they don’t trust financial advisors there their own
They also use consults or even informal opinions.
Nice to be close acquaintances with doctors, lawyers, insurance, and different professionals (including financial advisors).
If it’s complicated or significant, pay them by the hour or barter. It’s a lot easier to accomplish when favors are owed.
I love your website blog and advice; but in one area your advice is shallow and unhelpful.
“One spouse “
Sometimes a marriage fails. Sometimes it’s because of abuse, substance, physical or mental. Sometimes it’s because of depression, or other mental illness. And yess sometimes it’s because someone is just not interests in being married anymore.
How about some advice for those docs who’s marriage end and it wasn’t a choice. Give those docs some advice !!!
Avoiding divorce is certainly good financial advice, so I will likely to continue to give that. Or do you feel like it benefited you financially? (Exactly.) I do know a few docs whose former spouse was such a spendthrift that they were better off losing half their assets and paying alimony just to stop the damage though.
At any rate, divorce has been hit on the blog and forum several times over the years:
https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/finances-divorce/
https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/death-taxes-and-divorce/
https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/the-pros-and-cons-of-prenuptial-agreements/
https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/forums/topic/financial-issues-in-divorce/
https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/forums/topic/how-to-protect-assets-from-divorce/
https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/forums/topic/irrevocable-trust-over-prenup/
Hope something there helps.
This was the most humble bragging money shaming bitter little article I’ve ever read in my life
Wow! That’s quite an achievement. I’ll see if I can top it at some point. Thanks for the feedback. As my “humble bragging” posts go, I wouldn’t have even put this one in the top 50.
Nice of you to chime in 8 months later. Very useful post. All the wokeness we need in one simple sentence.
I’m glad I could be of help! Good luck getting on my level of woke, you’ll need it!
Humble brag indeed.
I have owned 4 Tesla’s so far and live in a 2.5M house. I fly all over the world in lie flat seats 2 or 3 times a year when Covid isn’t an issue. I employ a personal assistant and a personal chef, each full time. I did follow the outlined financial principles when I was a young doc. As a result I now have zero debt and pay off my credit cards in full every month. Each year we are donating more and more to many good charitable causes.
Once the net worth, the stock investments, the real estate investments, and the start up businesses reach a certain level, you have achieved escape velocity. There are now hundreds of happy, highly compensated employees who work for the businesses that I started.
seems simple but all true
be conservative, but use your money for what you need and what makes you happy
Everyone is correct, as long as you’re not killing anyone spiritually, morally or ethically. (I intentionally left out physically because, reality)
Trips, lawn service, cleaners, au pairs, multiple cars, or burying all your cash under a mattress, none of it matters, and at the same time, all of it matters. It all depends on how you feel about yourself and those closest to you.