Afford Anything | Get Smarter With Money - podcast cover

Afford Anything | Get Smarter With Money

Paula Pant, Personal Finance Expert | Cumulus Podcast Networkaffordanything.com
45 million downloads. One question: what does it actually take to build wealth? Each week, Paula Pant brings in economists, investors, business leaders, authors, and researchers to dig into the five pillars of financial freedom — financial psychology, increasing income, investing, real estate, and entrepreneurship. Deep insights rooted in economics and behavioral finance. First-principles thinking. No surface-level tips. to hear new episodes every Tuesday and Friday. Get smarter with money. Build wealth.
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Episodes

Q&A: What $2.4 Million at 37 Actually Looks Like (It's Not What You Think)

#728: What do you do when you suddenly have $850,000 and no idea what to do with it? GET TOTAL CLARITY ON WHERE EVERY DOLLAR BELONGS 👉 https://affordanything.com/cornerstone On today’s Q&A, one caller recently inherited $850,000 from his mother. He's already wealthy, earns over $500K a year, and has a solid net worth — but he's anxious, lost, and doesn't want to make a decision he can't undo. Paula and Joe walk him through exactly what they'd do. Then, a federal law enforcement officer resp...

Jun 30, 20261 hr 1 minEp. 728

Hope Isn't a Feeling. It’s a Skill. - with Dr. Julia Garcia

727: Not sure what your next money move should be? Start with the free FiiRE Playbook 👉 https://affordanything.com/fiire Dr. Julia Garcia is a psychologist, behavioral researcher, and author of The Five Habits of Hope — and she's spent years studying why smart, hardworking people stay stuck. What if the biggest thing standing between you and your financial goals isn't your income, your debt, or the housing market — but your own brain? I sat down with Dr. Garcia to unpack the neuroscience of hop...

Jun 27, 20261 hr 21 minEp. 727

Q&A: She Has $884K Saved — So Why Can't She Retire?

#726: Hey, we're mixing it up today with a super deep dive. We normally go fairly deep on this show, but today we're going even deeper and turning one caller's question into a case study. Download the Four Cornerstone Worksheet to follow along: ⁠www.affordanything.com/cornerstone⁠ An anonymous caller is reevaluating their finances after a series of health challenges, caregiving responsibilities, and major life changes. With most of their wealth tied up in retirement accounts, they’re wondering h...

Jun 23, 20261 hr 20 minEp. 726

What Most Families Get Wrong About Passing Down Wealth, with Andrea Baumann Lustig

#725: Most people assume their financial advisor is legally required to put their interests first. That's not always true. Andrea Baumann Lustig, a wealth advisor with 30 years of experience, joins us to walk through the blind spots she sees most often in legacy planning -- the deeply held beliefs that quietly undermine people's financial futures. We start with something most people never think to ask: how is your advisor actually registered? There are three categories. Registered representative...

Jun 19, 20261 hr 29 minEp. 725

Why Does Every Good Idea Die in a Meeting? – with HBS Prof Linda Hill and Jason Wild

#724: Linda Hill, a Harvard Business School professor, and Jason Wild, an innovation consultant who has led projects in 40 countries, join us to break down how organizations innovate. Linda and Jason have spent decades studying companies that consistently produce breakthroughs - from Pixar to Delta Airlines to Cleveland Clinic - and they've identified three leadership roles that matter most: the Architect, the Bridger, and the Catalyst. The Architect builds a culture where people feel safe enoug...

Jun 16, 202659 minEp. 724

Six Levels of Wealth, with Nick Maggiulli [GREATEST HITS]

723: This episode originally aired in July 2025. Here's the thing about personal finance advice: what works when you have $10,000 won't work when you have $1 million. Yet most financial guidance treats everyone the same, whether you're scraping together a $1,000 emergency fund or deciding whether to upgrade to business class. Nick Maggiulli, author of "The Wealth Ladder," joins us to break down how money strategies must evolve as your net worth grows. He's mapped out 6 distinct wealth levels, ea...

Jun 12, 20261 hr 12 minEp. 723

Q&A: Why Do I Still Feel Anxious When I’m Clearly Doing Well?

#722: Free lesson: affordanything.com/mistakes Ask us a question: affordanything.com/voicemail What happens when your financial plan is technically working — but emotionally, it still doesn’t feel secure? Caitlin and her husband have their core expenses covered, but her side hustle brings in an extra $600 a month. With young kids, daycare costs, and long-term retirement goals all competing for attention, she’s wondering where that extra money should go right now. Anonymous is in a strong financi...

Jun 09, 202650 minEp. 722

First Friday: Fed Rate Hike Coming? Jobs & Housing News

#721: The US economy showed robust job growth in May, adding 172,000 new jobs, exceeding expectations. This suggests a broadening of economic recovery beyond essential services. Treasury yields have climbed significantly, reflecting investor concerns about inflation. Inflation remains a significant concern, driven largely by surging energy costs. And there's good news emerging in prescription drug prices. We're going to discuss all of this and more in the June 2026 First Friday episode. Timestam...

Jun 05, 202636 minEp. 721

Q&A: When the "Right" Decision Feels Harder Than The Math

#720: At what point does making the “right” financial decision start to feel emotionally harder than the math itself? Rebecca : is wondering whether the Rule of 72 means she can ease up on retirement contributions—or whether continuing to max out her Roth 401(k) is still the smarter move despite multiple mortgages, car loans, and college savings goals. Kate : feels trapped between the math and psychology of homeownership. A low-interest rental property could be sold to dramatically reduce a much...

Jun 03, 20261 hr 2 minEp. 720

Your Office Is Making You Sick, with Dr. John La Puma

This episode explores the "indoor epidemic" with Dr. John La Puma, a physician and researcher, who explains how our modern, predominantly indoor lifestyle disrupts circadian rhythms and overloads our brains with "digital obesity," leading to chronic diseases, burnout, and cognitive decline. He highlights that burnout is a biological problem, not a character flaw, and provides practical, low-cost strategies like intentional outdoor time (just two hours a week) and morning light exposure to restore health, improve sleep, and boost productivity. The discussion also covers the mental health costs of isolation and the benefits of "green exercise."

May 29, 20261 hr 24 minEp. 719

Q&A: The Goalposts Moved — Is That Actually a Problem?

Paula Pant and Joe Saul-Sehy answer listener questions on evolving financial strategies. They discuss how to maintain charitable giving after achieving financial independence, optimal management of complex retirement portfolios, and effective ways for landlords to respond to increased competition and market changes. The episode offers practical advice on balancing personal goals with smart financial decisions in uncertain times.

May 26, 202642 minEp. 718

The 5 Ways Investors Behave When Things Go Wrong, with Clare Flynn Levy

#717: Clare Flynn Levy was a hedge fund manager in London in the summer of 2007, watching her trading screens turn red — every single day. Merger arbitrage spreads were widening. Investors were pulling out. She didn't yet realize she was watching the early tremors of a global financial crisis. Clare joins us to talk about what that experience taught her about investor behavior, emotional bias, and the hidden forces that drive financial decisions. She now runs a firm that helps professional fund ...

May 22, 20261 hr 6 minEp. 717

Q&A: Your Kids Just Inherited $350,000 Each. Now What?

#716: When does a financial decision stop being purely about maximizing returns—and start becoming about building the life you actually want? Karen recently inherited sizable trusts for their children and is now navigating the complicated intersection of investing, taxes, legacy planning, and future financial aid eligibility. Matt has spent years building a solid index fund portfolio, but as retirement gets closer, he’s wrestling with a familiar investor problem: how do you know when optimizing ...

May 19, 20261 hr 14 minEp. 716

Mrs. Dow Jones: Your Childhood Is Running Your Bank Account

#715: She grew up with a Goldman Sachs dad. She still ended up broke in her 20’s. Here's what changed. Haley Sacks - known online as Mrs. Dow Jones - joins us to talk about the five-step financial framework she calls IBIZA. Despite every advantage, she spent her twenties anxious, financially dependent, and charging dinners to her parents' credit card. One birthday trip to a Toronto restaurant crystallized the problem: she couldn't afford the life she wanted, so she borrowed someone else's money ...

May 15, 20261 hr 9 minEp. 715

Q&A: Should I Sell One Property to Pay Off Another?

#714: When you’re making big financial decisions, what matters more: optimizing for the best long-term outcome, or choosing the path that gives you the most flexibility and peace of mind right now? Melissa retired early and now lives off rental income, but she’s considering selling one property to pay off another. The catch? Her monthly income would stay about the same—so the real question is whether giving up future appreciation is worth the simplicity and stability today. Von is trying to bett...

May 12, 202656 minEp. 714

BONUS: The Economy Added 115,000 Jobs. Consumer Confidence Just Hit a 74-Year Low. Let’s Unpack This.

The US economy added 115,000 jobs in April -- and the numbers look solid on the surface. But dig a little deeper and you'll find a tech sector in freefall, a housing market frozen in place, and consumer sentiment that hit a 74-year low. This bonus episode breaks down the May jobs report, which came out a week late because the Bureau of Labor Statistics pushed its release from the first Friday to the second Friday of the month. The job gains were concentrated in healthcare, transportation, wareho...

May 11, 202624 min

Why Smart People Still Sabotage Their Own Money, with Tiffany Aliche

#713: Tiffany Aliche spent her 30th birthday in her childhood bedroom, $300,000 in debt, unemployed, and freshly foreclosed on. Sixteen years later, she's generated over $50 million in gross revenue as a business owner. She joins us to talk about what actually happened in between. Aliche - known as The Budgetnista - built her personal finance platform almost by accident. After a friend stole $35,000 from her and the 2008 recession wiped out her condo's value, she started helping friends navigate...

May 08, 20261 hr 14 minEp. 713

The Rental Strategy That Survived Every City Crackdown, with Jeff Hurst

#712: Jeff Hurst, CEO of Furnished Finder, joins us to break down what midterm rentals are, who they're for, and why now might be the best time to get in. A midterm rental is a furnished unit rented for 30 days or longer - longer than a hotel stay, shorter than a traditional lease. Cities have been regulating Airbnb-style short-term rentals out of existence, leaving a wave of furnished properties with nowhere to go. That supply is now shifting toward the midterm market, driven by three primary t...

May 05, 20261 hr 33 minEp. 712

Is a Computer Science Degree Still Worth the Debt?, with Ron Lieber

New York Times columnist Ron Lieber examines the ongoing worth of a college degree amidst a changing job market and AI, arguing for its long-term financial benefits despite short-term uncertainties. He highlights using the College Scorecard, understanding federal undergraduate loan caps (around $31,000), and the often-overlooked value of alumni networks and lifelong friendships. Lieber also addresses the nuanced realities of community college and financial aid office pressures, advising parents to maintain open communication with their children about their educational paths.

May 01, 20261 hrEp. 711

Q&A: He Wants to Die With Zero – Here’s How to Spend $1M Without Running Out

#710: What does it really look like to balance financial optimization with real-life tradeoffs—whether that’s choosing meaningful work, spending down your savings, or deciding where your next dollar should go? Mike is planning to retire at 60 with $1 million saved and a clear goal: spend it all during his lifetime. He wants to know how to structure his withdrawals so he can maximize income now while still covering the decades ahead. Kip was planning to retire after feeling burned out—until a cha...

Apr 28, 20261 hr 13 minEp. 710

The Financial Reality of Developmental Disabilities, with Keith Wargo

#709: Keith Wargo has spent decades navigating one of the most daunting financial planning challenges a family can face: raising a child with a developmental disability. He joins us to share what families need to know. The financial stakes are significant. Keith, who is the CEO of Autism Speaks, estimates lifetime care costs for a person with a developmental disability can run between $1.4 and $2.4 million - and that figure may be conservative. Yet many families put off financial planning becaus...

Apr 24, 20261 hr 1 minEp. 709

Q&A: My Mom Is 73. She Has a House — But It Doesn’t Pay the Bills. Now What?

#708: What’s the smartest way to handle big financial transitions—when the stakes are high and the “right” answer isn’t always obvious? Anonymous “Cyndi Jr.” is helping their 73-year-old mother relocate across the country and needs to decide how to use the proceeds from a home sale to balance long-term housing security with inflation protection. Anonymous is trying to figure out how to handle quarterly estimated taxes on investment income—without relying on safe harbor rules that don’t always re...

Apr 21, 20261 hr 9 minEp. 708

Q&A LIVE from Texas A&M Texarkana

#707: Joe and I traveled to the campus of Texas A&M University-Texarkana for a very special live recording. We were joined by Jay Davis, the Executive Director of Financial and Entrepreneurship Engagement, to answer questions from an incredible audience of students. Whether you’re just starting your career or looking to "reset" your habits, this episode covers the essential transition from the classroom to the professional world. Student Questions Hannah (Psychology Major) : How do I navigat...

Apr 17, 202650 minEp. 707

Q&A: The Case for NOT Paying Off Your Student Loans

#706: When the numbers look straightforward—but the rules, timing, and future are uncertain—how do you decide what to do next? KJ has $90,000 in student loans, a recent inheritance, and a lot of uncertainty around changing repayment policies, and is trying to decide whether to pay down debt now or hold onto cash in case future payments become unaffordable. Anonymous (let’s call her Andrea) is about seven years away from retirement with $1.9 million saved and is thinking about sequence of returns...

Apr 14, 20261 hr 13 minEp. 706

What to Fix First When Everything Feels Stuck, with former Lyft COO and Tesla President Jon McNeill

#705: Jon McNeill, former president of Tesla and COO of Lyft, starts with a simple problem: his teenage son is about to start driving, and he’s worried about texting behind the wheel. Instead of setting rules, he builds a solution. That idea becomes TruMotion, a company that uses smartphone sensors to track driving behavior. You hear how the app figures out whether someone is actually in the driver’s seat, and how that technology ends up powering programs used by major insurance companies. From ...

Apr 10, 20261 hr 28 minEp. 705

Q&A: Should I Quit My Job to Be a Stay-at-Home Dad

#704: How do you make smart financial decisions when you’re balancing debt, investing, and big life changes … all at the same time? Today, Brigham and his wife, ages 25 and 23, wonder: can they buy a $500,000 home AND still support a stay-at-home parent? Next, JVR asks how to balance high-interest credit card debt, student loans, and a large cash reserve while planning for a future home purchase in the Bay Area. Then we’ll hear back from Elizabeth, from Episode 611 (from just under 1 year ago), ...

Apr 07, 202652 minEp. 704

First Friday: Jobs Are Up. So Why Does the Economy Feel Worse?

#703: April’s jobs report comes in much stronger than expected, with 178,000 jobs added and unemployment ticking down to 4.3 percent. That headline deserves a closer look, especially when other labor data still points to a slower, lower-hiring environment. From there, we break down what the latest Fed decision means, why mortgage rates remain elevated, and how a sudden spike in oil and gas prices could affect inflation, consumer sentiment, and the broader economy. We also cover recent market vol...

Apr 03, 202641 minEp. 703

Q&A: Why 3 Years Is a Weird Timeline for Money

Paula Pant and Joe Salsehigh advise listeners on critical financial decisions. They guide Olivia on secure options for a three-year savings goal, cautioning against market volatility, and assist Robert in optimizing Roth versus taxable accounts for early retirement, including an explanation of 72T distributions. Finally, they offer strategic insights for starting an adult day center, contrasting LLCs and nonprofits, and detailing essential entrepreneurial planning and leadership aspects.

Mar 31, 20261 hr 3 minEp. 702

What Retirement Planning Gets Wrong, with Jamie Hopkins

#701: Forget the idea that you need a magic number to retire. Jamie Hopkins is a certified financial planner, professor of taxation at the American College of Financial Services, director of the New York Life Center for Retirement Income, and Top 40 Under 40 financial services professionals from InvestmentNews. His take on retirement planning will make you rethink a few things. We start with the "no magic number" concept. Hopkins explains that fixating on a savings target - whether it's $1 milli...

Mar 27, 20261 hr 31 minEp. 701

Q&A: A $30K Promotion Near FI, Learning Put Options, and Scaling a 16-Unit Portfolio

#700: Today we’re tackling three different financial questions from our listeners. First, we’ll hear from Melanie, who is deciding whether to pursue a promotion that would increase her salary by $30,000 but may add more stress, even though she’s already close to financial independence. Next, Ami wants to learn how options trading works and is wondering how to find legitimate training without falling into expensive or questionable courses. And later in the episode, we’ll revisit Ben who called in...

Mar 24, 20261 hr 10 minEp. 700
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