A single $2 decision at dinnertime might be costing you financial independence. In episode 318, Brad and Jonathan demonstrate how dozens of seemingly minor optimizations—from digital billing to library cards to meal planning—compound into transformative wealth-building habits. They walk through specific actions across finances, health, learning, and community that each deliver small wins, showing how marginal gains aggregate into major life changes. Key Topics: [00:01:00] Introduction to 1% Impr...
May 03, 2021•58 min•Ep. 318
Most people stop hunting for life hacks when kids arrive—Chris Hutchins doubled down by launching an entire podcast about them. The "All The Hacks" founder joins Brad and Jonathan to share the optimization strategies that save time, money, and mental energy in the chaos of daily life. Key Topics & Timestamps [00:01:19] The Importance of Life Hacks Jonathan shares how discovering life hacks can streamline life, emphasizing the significance of optimizing daily activities. [00:02:30] Discussion...
Apr 29, 2021•1 hr 15 min•Ep. 317
Most pension advice focuses on contribution rates and vesting schedules — but what if you're looking at the wrong metrics? For Troy and Lindsay, measuring the true health of Lindsay's Virginia Retirement System pension meant examining funding ratios, cost-of-living adjustments, and even post-retirement healthcare — factors that could reshape their entire FI timeline. Troy and Lindsay, part of the Households of FI series, explore critical considerations surrounding Lindsay's pension with expert G...
Apr 26, 2021•51 min•Ep. 316
Today's investment options would have been unimaginable just a few decades ago — when actively managed funds charged 3% fees and you paid $100 per trade. Brad and Jonathan dissect what it actually means to live in investing's "golden age," examining how expense ratios, index funds, and technology have fundamentally reshaped what's possible for everyday investors. The conversation explores the shift from traditional investment methods to the modern toolkit available today, including how low-cost ...
Apr 23, 2021•1 hr 11 min•Ep. 315
Your paycheck already has concentration risk — why compound it with your investments? Christy participates in her company's Employee Stock Purchase Plan, buying shares at a 15% discount, but wonders whether to hold them long-term or sell immediately. Brian Feroldi walks through the tax math, explains how to use the Price-to-Earnings ratio to evaluate whether 3M stock is actually worth holding, and highlights why doubling down on your employer's stock can backfire if your job and portfolio both d...
Apr 19, 2021•37 min•Ep. 314
Ray Dalio calls holding just 15 uncorrelated assets "the Holy Grail of investing" — yet most portfolios contain hundreds of correlated bets masquerading as diversification. Jonathan Mendonsa and Brad Barrett team up with Frank Vasquez from Risk Parity Radio to examine whether your portfolio is actually diversified or simply different. They explore the real purpose behind diversification, the mechanics of asset correlation, and how to construct portfolios that can sustain higher withdrawal rates ...
Apr 16, 2021•1 hr 7 min•Ep. 313
Most homeowners believe their house is an investment—but what if it's actually one of your largest recurring expenses? Brad and Jonathan sit down with Scott Trench and Mindy Jensen from BiggerPockets to reframe the conversation around first-time home buying. Instead of asking "how much house can I afford?", they walk through a decision framework that treats housing as a lifestyle expense first, investment second. The discussion covers opportunity costs, the five-year rule for buy-vs-rent decisio...
Apr 12, 2021•57 min•Ep. 312
Most kids dream up wild business ideas in the shower — then let them evaporate just as quickly. Rob Thielen, founder of The Simple Startup, has coached hundreds of young entrepreneurs to actually launch, and he's distilled the process into a framework any parent can use at home. The secret isn't a million-dollar idea; it's identifying a problem someone else actually wants solved. Rob returns to share 102 business ideas kids can start today, focusing on how children can leverage their existing sk...
Mar 29, 2021•46 min•Ep. 308
Financial independence is actually easier to achieve than most people think — but it's also wildly misunderstood. Diana Merriam returns to dismantle the most persistent myths about the FIRE movement: that it's only for tech workers making six figures, that it requires eating ramen for a decade, or that it's fundamentally about greed. Brad and Jonathan join her to challenge these stereotypes and reframe financial independence as accessible financial literacy — a flexible approach to money managem...
Mar 22, 2021•45 min•Ep. 306
Your partner says you can't afford to retire early—but they're still spending $200 on brunch every weekend. Jonathan Mendonsa and Brad Barrett continue their relationships and money series with Jillian Johnsrud, tackling the financial conflicts that strain even the strongest partnerships. Through listener voicemails, they unpack how to handle parental financial support as an adult, combine finances as newlyweds without losing autonomy, and have productive money conversations that don't end in ar...
Mar 05, 2021•51 min•Ep. 301
Most people know they should invest, but they freeze when staring at $6,000 in savings, unsure whether to pay down debt, bulk up emergency funds, or finally open that brokerage account. Brad Barrett and Jonathan Mendonsa tackle this exact paralysis in a live interactive format, fielding real-time questions from listeners navigating their own barriers to financial independence. From understanding risk tolerance to accessing retirement accounts early, they cut through the noise to focus on what ac...
Feb 26, 2021•1 hr 16 min•Ep. 299
Most people think wealth building requires a six-figure income or a finance degree. Julian and Kirsten from Rich and Regular prove otherwise — their approach centers on habits, community, and the creativity of financial independence rather than raw earning power alone. Brad and Jonathan explore wealth-building through a conversation with Julian and Kirsten, who share their personal experiences navigating debt payoff, understanding dividends, and maintaining clarity on financial goals. The discus...
Feb 22, 2021•1 hr 29 min•Ep. 298
A furloughed hospitality worker landed a high-paying Salesforce role within months—with zero tech background. Anita's career pivot started during the pandemic lockdown, when she turned to online resources and the Talent Stacker program to retrain herself. Within a short time, she completed her certification and secured a job that dramatically increased her income. Her success demonstrates that career transformation doesn't require years of experience or a related degree—just the willingness to l...
Feb 19, 2021•57 min•Ep. 297
Military pensions act as lottery tickets for retirement—but only if you understand how to use them effectively while you're still in service. Matt and Megan, a dual military couple navigating their careers alongside financial independence, sit down with Doug Nordman, author of "Raising Your Money Savvy Family for Next Generation Financial Independence," to tackle the financial and emotional complexities of transitioning to civilian life. The discussion centers on recognizing the value of militar...
Feb 15, 2021•1 hr 42 min•Ep. 296
Most people sit on piles of cash "for emergencies" while inflation slowly erodes its value — but what if that safety net is actually costing you money? Brad and Jonathan challenge the sacred rule of keeping 3–6 months of expenses in cash, examining how your emergency fund should evolve as your financial situation changes. As you build wealth, gain income stability, and develop multiple liquidity options, that massive cash reserve starts to look less like prudent planning and more like opportunit...
Feb 12, 2021•56 min•Ep. 295
A Reddit mob sent GameStop's stock soaring by 1,700% in two weeks, bankrupting billion-dollar hedge funds in the process. But here's what most coverage missed: this wasn't just a meme stock frenzy — it was a masterclass in how market mechanics break when human behavior collides with financial engineering. Brad, Jonathan, and investor Brian Feroldi unpack the short squeeze that shook Wall Street and what it reveals about who really controls the market. Key Topics Discussed Introduction to GameSto...
Feb 05, 2021•1 hr 6 min•Ep. 293
M1 Finance's "pie" interface looks gimmicky until you understand what it actually does: build a perfectly rebalanced portfolio while harvesting tax losses in the background, automatically, with every dollar you deposit. Brian Barnes didn't set out to create another robo-advisor—he built M1 Finance to solve a problem that frustrated him as an early investor: why should assembling a diversified portfolio require either massive capital or constant manual rebalancing? Brian's path to founding M1 beg...
Jan 31, 2021•1 hr 4 min•Ep. 292
Half a percent sounds trivial until you realize it could mean an extra million dollars in your pocket over a lifetime of investing. After four years of podcasting about financial independence, Jonathan and Brad reflect on the lessons that moved the needle most—the fee decisions, timing choices, and skill investments that actually changed outcomes. Key Topics Discussed: Introduction to Lessons Learned [00:01:00] Reflection on four years of podcasting and key insights for listeners. Importance of ...
Jan 29, 2021•1 hr•Ep. 291
Most investors chase last year's winners, but what if a more boring portfolio could mean millions more at retirement? Paul Merriman returns to break down his new book, "We're Talking Millions," where he simplifies decades of research into a single investment framework. The conversation cuts through the hype around large-cap growth stocks—the darlings of recent bull markets—and makes the case for diversification into small-cap and value stocks that most people ignore. Merriman walks through why s...
Jan 25, 2021•1 hr 2 min•Ep. 290
Most people think paying taxes now sounds like a terrible deal — but here's the counterintuitive truth: locking in today's low tax rate via a Roth 401(k) might save you thousands when you're older and wealthier. Brad and Jonathan tackle two seemingly unrelated topics in this listener-question roundup: Roth 401(k) strategy with Sean Mulaney (the Five Tax Guy) and a meal-planning financial literacy project with Dani Mendonca. The Roth segment zeroes in on when paying taxes upfront makes sense — es...
Jan 22, 2021•59 min•Ep. 289
Most people who reach financial independence think they've crossed the finish line—Brandon discovered he'd been running the wrong race entirely. After years of sprinting toward FI, convinced it would unlock his dream of making music, he hit his number and found himself no closer to creating the weird electronic tracks he'd been imagining. The problem wasn't the goal itself, but the goal-oriented mindset that had him delaying happiness until some arbitrary future date. Now, Brandon's approach has...
Jan 18, 2021•1 hr 7 min•Ep. 288
Most New Year's resolutions fail because they're vague wishes, not systems. Brad and Dominick break down what actually works when you're trying to change your life at the start of a new year — and it's not about setting better goals. They discuss personal health experiments, the concept of living an examined life, and why community matters more than willpower. The conversation covers testing dietary impacts, building intentional systems instead of hoping for motivation, and finding mentors who'v...
Jan 15, 2021•51 min•Ep. 287
Two layoffs in "safe" industries taught Daniella that job security is an illusion. After losing positions in retail IT and web development, she stopped waiting for stability to find her and started building it herself—through freelancing, talent stacking, and multiple income streams. Her shift from employee to entrepreneur wasn't just about survival; it became a blueprint for financial independence. Daniella's career began in retail IT before transitioning to web development. When layoffs disrup...
Jan 11, 2021•39 min•Ep. 286
Your investment returns aren't suffering because your strategy is too simple—they're suffering because it's too complicated. Jl Collins, whose book The Simple Path to Wealth has sold hundreds of thousands of copies on zero marketing budget (every sale driven by word of mouth), explains why the most powerful investment approach is also the easiest. Originally written as blog posts for his daughter, his guide has become the most influential resource in the financial independence community precisel...
Jan 03, 2021•1 hr 12 min•Ep. 284
John Schneider and David Auten were working in financial services, helping clients manage money and plan for retirement — all while drowning in $51,000 of credit card debt themselves. Their story challenges the assumption that financial expertise translates to personal discipline, and their Debt Lasso method offers a concrete alternative to the usual avalanche-versus-snowball debate. In this conversation, John and David discuss the unique financial pressures facing the LGBTQ+ community, from sys...
Dec 21, 2020•52 min•Ep. 280
Most teachers discover they've lost hundreds of thousands in retirement savings only after it's too late to recover them. The culprit? Hidden 403(b) fees that can silently drain 1.25% to 3% of their nest egg annually — compounding to devastating losses over a 30-year career. Dan Otter from 403B Wise has spent decades helping educators spot these predatory investment products, often sold by sales agents who show up in staff lounges with confusing paperwork and zero fiduciary duty. He joins Brad a...
Dec 18, 2020•40 min•Ep. 279
Most people spend decades chasing the appearance of wealth instead of building actual wealth. Amy Blacklock thought she was doing everything right—good job, nice house, keeping up with the neighbors—until a wake-up call in her early forties revealed she had virtually no net worth. What happened next transformed her trajectory and proved that financial independence isn't reserved for people who started saving in their twenties. Amy, founder of Life Simplified and Women Who Money, shares her journ...
Dec 14, 2020•46 min•Ep. 278
Ten burpees a day could change your life—not because burpees are magic, but because you'd be someone who does hard things daily. Brad and Jonathan expand this idea from fitness into your investment portfolio, exploring why your strategy needs regular reassessment just like your workout routine. Key Topics Investor Policy Statement Your investment strategy isn't set-it-and-forget-it. Brad and Jonathan walk through why you need a living document that outlines your strategy, risk tolerance, and goa...
Dec 11, 2020•1 hr 1 min•Ep. 277
Most people stumble into their financial setup by copying what their parents did or following advice from the nearest coworker—not exactly a recipe for optimizing your money. Brad and Jonathan lay out a more strategic approach to building the foundation of financial independence: setting up banking that works for you, not against you, and understanding how to start investing without falling into common traps. Key Topics [00:00:54] Introduction to Financial Independence Overview of the back-to-ba...
Dec 07, 2020•52 min•Ep. 276
Most people think their risk tolerance is fixed — until their portfolio drops 30% and they realize they had no idea what they were actually comfortable losing. Understanding your financial risk tolerance and re-evaluating your investment strategy are crucial components of achieving financial independence. Brad and Jonathan explore "war gaming" your finances by assessing personal variables that influence financial decisions. They explore the analogy between life and board games, where knowing the...
Dec 04, 2020•52 min•Ep. 275