How to Wait Until 70 for Social Security Without Spending Less
How can you wait until age 70 for Social Security but still spend more in the years before then? Here are some ideas to try.
How can you wait until age 70 for Social Security but still spend more in the years before then? Here are some ideas to try.
We didn't hold our monthly budget meeting for a while last year, so we had to do a little catching up. The spending totals were shocking.
You might not want to live like a resident once you're an attending, but here's why delaying your gratification can be so powerful for a doc.
Answering reader questions about 529 accounts, how to invest them, and how to spend them down. We also discuss ways to help pay for college, and we answer a question about when or if the political climate should ever cause you to change your financial plan.
Can't reach your goals because your spouse can't stop spending? Here's what you can do about it (and what you should have done years ago.)
As part of our 25th anniversary celebration, I rented a supercar for us to tool around in for a couple of days. We learned a few lessons.
What lessons can we learn from the divorced prominent plastic surgeon, who had to get rid of all their riches in an estate sale?
We talk plenty about how you have to live a good life along the way to retirement. And sometimes it’s OK to splurge in the present.
I'm getting better as a spender. But a recent trip to South America was a wakeup call to me that I've still got a long way to go.
Sharing one of our fan favorite sessions from WCICON25, as the WCI columnists joined Dr. Jim Dahle to talk about spending extravagantly.
Credit card travel rewards allowed me to take vacations I never dreamed I could. But does the travel hacking math really work in my favor?
Retirement/financial independence isn't an age; it's a number. Here’s what to focus on to ensure you’re working toward your goal.
I'm not even an attending yet, but we've saved up close to $1 million. How did we do it? It all started with some free food.
"Don't buy stuff you can't afford" is so simple it's laughable, yet too many of us live with debt we think acceptable. Here's how to change.
Some people are annoyed by having to collect Required Minimum Distributions and pay taxes on them. But here are some good ways to use them.