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cover of episode Your guide to financial self-care in 2025

Your guide to financial self-care in 2025

2024/12/27
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Consider This from NPR

AI Deep Dive AI Insights AI Chapters Transcript
People
A
Akiva Ellis
B
Brent Weiss
M
Mariel
M
Mary Louise Kelly
经验丰富的广播记者和新闻主播,目前担任NPR《所有事情都被考虑》的共同主播。
P
Paco de Leon
S
Soledad
Topics
Mary Louise Kelly: 本节目介绍了Life Kit播客关于财务自我保健的理念,以及如何建立健康的财务习惯,旨在帮助听众在2025年及以后拥有健康的银行账户。 Mariel: 财务健康如同身体健康一样,需要日常、每周、每月和每年的定期维护。节目将讲解如何制定财务计划,包括日常的、每周的、每月的和每年的任务,并强调身心健康是进行财务规划的前提。 Brent Weiss: 建议先设定人生目标,再制定相应的财务目标。财务目标应该服务于更宏大的生活目标,例如安全感、快乐、自由等等。 Arzu Rezvani: 建议检查储蓄账户的利率,选择高利率的账户,并确保资金受到联邦政府的保险。 Soledad: 建议每年检查投资账户的回报率,理想情况下应至少达到年均10%。投资回报率会有波动,不必过于担心短期下跌。建议将投资回报率与标准普尔500指数进行比较,以了解市场整体表现。如果投资回报率与市场整体表现相似,则说明处于良好状态;否则,需要重新平衡投资组合。建议关注投资费率,选择费用低的投资产品。每月检查收入和职业目标,并更新个人简历或求职信息。每月反思自我保健情况,身心健康对财务规划至关重要。建议每天进行积极的自我肯定,以改变消极的思维模式。 Akiva Ellis: 建议更新W-4表格以调整税收预扣款。 Paco de Leon: 建议自由职业者建立税收储蓄账户,并定期存入一定比例的收入。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

What is financial self-care and why is it important?

Financial self-care involves creating routines and habits to maintain a healthy bank account and overall financial well-being. It’s important because an overwhelmed or exhausted brain cannot effectively engage in financial planning, making it crucial to establish manageable practices for long-term financial health.

What is the first step in setting financial goals according to Brent Weiss?

Brent Weiss suggests picking a time horizon (e.g., 3, 5, or 10 years) and asking yourself what needs to happen for that period to be considered wildly successful, without mentioning money. This helps define the life you want to live, which then informs your financial goals.

Why is it important to check the interest rate on your savings account?

Interest rates on savings accounts can vary significantly, with some big banks offering as low as 0.01%, while others offer 4-5%. Ensuring your money is in a high-yield account maximizes earnings, and it’s essential to confirm the account is FDIC or NCUA insured for safety.

What are some key annual financial tasks to prioritize?

Key annual tasks include filing taxes, checking insurance plans, updating retirement contributions, reviewing investment accounts, setting financial goals, and ensuring you’re not missing any workplace benefits or paying for unused subscriptions.

How often should you check your credit report and why?

You should check your credit report every four months, rotating between the three major bureaus (Equifax, TransUnion, Experian). This ensures accuracy, as errors can negatively impact your credit score and borrowing ability.

What is the recommended buffer for a checking account to avoid overdraft fees?

It’s recommended to keep a buffer of 10-25% of your monthly expenses in your checking account to avoid overdraft fees. However, avoid exceeding 25% as money in checking accounts doesn’t earn interest.

What is the purpose of a 'brag bank' and how can it help professionally?

A 'brag bank' is a document where you record professional wins, compliments, and evidence of your performance. It helps during annual reviews or job applications by providing a ready-made list of accomplishments.

What is thought work and how can it improve financial habits?

Thought work involves reflecting on your thoughts, especially negative ones about money, and replacing them with affirmations. This practice helps create a positive mindset, reducing stress and enabling better financial decision-making.

Chapters
This chapter introduces an exercise to define your ideal life without mentioning money, then translate those desires into actionable financial goals. It emphasizes aligning financial goals with personal aspirations for a fulfilling life.
  • Focus on defining your ideal life first, without considering money.
  • Financial goals should support your life vision, not be the sole focus.
  • Examples: paying off student loans, maximizing retirement investments, saving for a down payment.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

Hi, I'm Mary Louise Kelly. The holiday season is joyous and also expensive. From steep flight prices to a laundry list of presents to buy, when January 1st rolls around, you might feel like your bank account is hurting. Luckily, our friends at the Life Kit podcast have an answer for everything, including what they call financial self-care.

Today, we're bringing you one of their episodes that is all about creating routines for a healthy bank account in 2025 and beyond. Happy listening and happy new year. Hey, everybody. It's Mariel. There are these things that you're supposed to do every day, week, month, and year to stay healthy.

Like brush your teeth twice a day, floss once a day, shower every so often, go to the doctor, get that colonoscopy, move your body at least 150 minutes per week. I know, it's a lot and we're not doing all of these things consistently. Give yourself a break. Do your best.

The reason I bring this up is that there's a version of this for your financial health. When it comes to money, there are certain things you should do to take care of yourself, and they have a cadence, daily, weekly, monthly, and yearly. You could almost plot them out on a calendar. On this episode of Life Kit, we're going to walk through that calendar with you. We'll talk about the super practical stuff. You know, here's when to check on your tax withholdings and your investment accounts, but

But we'll also go beyond the number crunching because something I always tell people is the overwhelmed, overstimulated, exhausted brain cannot engage in financial planning. That's coming up after the break.

Okay, we're going to start with an exercise. It comes from Brent Weiss, who co-founded a financial advice company called Facet and has a whole bunch of letters after his name. Right. A little bit of the alphabet soup. So CFP is Certified Financial Planner. CHFC is Chartered Financial Consultant. And CLC is actually Certified Life Coach.

He tells his clients to pick a time horizon, say three years, five years, or 10 years from now, and then ask themselves. What has to happen for you to look back and say that was a wildly successful period of my life? And I go, but here's the trick. You can't mention money. Because money really is a means to an end. That end might be security and safety, pleasure, freedom. It might be a move to another country or the chance to start a business.

Brent says your financial goals should get you closer to whatever it is that you want. So it's really an exercise in sort of defining the life I want to live, the person I want to be. And then you can create the goals. Like, I need to pay off my student loans, or max out my retirement investments, or save up for a down payment on a house.

Speaking of savings, make sure you're getting a competitive interest rate on the money you keep in the bank. I talked to NPR reporter Arzu Rezvani about this for another episode of Life Kit. She says, take a look at your savings account. And this might be an account that you started years and years ago when you were really young. Maybe this is an account that you haven't checked in on in quite a while. And take a look at what kind of interest you're accruing there.

It's not uncommon if you have an account at a very big bank that you will be getting an interest rate of like 0.01 percent. So not all savings accounts are created equal. Right now, some banks are offering between 4 and 5 percent interest. When you pick one, just make sure that your money is insured by the federal government. Look for the acronym FDIC or NCUA insured.

Anyway, setting financial goals is a great annual practice, and you can pick any time of year to do it. But it can help to lump it in with the other financial stuff that you need to do annually. For instance, taxes. In mid-April, tax returns are due for most individuals. Unless you choose to file based on a fiscal year or you're self-employed and making estimated payments, those happen quarterly. We're not going to go super in-depth on taxes here, but mark the important dates on your calendar. And check out our other episodes on this topic.

There's also open enrollment, which tends to start in November. And that's a window when you can get a new health insurance plan on government-run exchanges. And if you have an employer, that's when they'll say, OK, time to pick your health insurance for the year. Brent says a lot of people just let last year's benefits roll over.

Don't do that. Take the time, sit down, look at any updates to your health insurance plans. And make sure you're happy with your other insurance plans. Also, check on your retirement plan contributions and make sure your beneficiaries are up to date. Those are the people who get a life insurance payout or the money in your retirement account when you die.

You can also use this moment to see if there are any benefits you're missing at work, like a gym reimbursement or an employer 401k match, and to check on your subscriptions. Make sure you're not paying for things you don't use. Also, look at your credit card benefits. Like maybe you'll realize that one of your cards offers extended warranties on big purchases, and you want to use that in the future. Another annual task is to check on your investment accounts. Maybe that's a 401k or a Roth IRA or a brokerage account.

For this one, we're going to turn to Rita Soledad Fernandez-Paulino. You can call me Soledad. I am the CEO of Wealth Para Todos, and I'm a money and self-care coach. She says the first thing you'll want to do is look at the rate of return you're getting. So the rate of return being how much money did you earn from your investments? You can find that in your account statements or on the online portal for your brokerage firm. Ideally, you're going to earn at least 10%.

average over 10 years. There are going to be years where your rate of return is going to be really high, 21%. And there are going to be years that it's low.

Right. Sometimes stock prices drop across the board for some global reason, like a recession or fears of one, for instance. And as a coach, Soledad sees her clients get nervous when that happens. You know, they want to pull all their money out. And I'm like, baby, everyone, everyone's dealing with that right now, which is why it's so important to compare, to check in, to see what how the entire market is doing, not just your portfolio.

And that's step two here. Compare your rate of return to the S&P 500, which is a stock market index made up of 500 of the largest publicly traded companies in the U.S.,

That'll give you a sense of how the market is doing in general. And you can just Google S&P 500 rate of return 2023 or 2024. And then you just compare between those two. If your investments are doing about the same as the S&P 500, Soledad says you're probably in a good position. But if not, you'll want to rebalance your portfolio. That just simply means you're going to adjust the stock to bond mix that you have. And

And this can get complicated. You know, it depends on your situation, how much risk you want to take on, how long it is until you'll want to use the money. We have done a couple deep dive episodes on investing, so check those out. Also, when you're checking your investments, pay attention to fees. You'll find those listed for individual funds under the term expense ratio. The lower the expense ratios, that means that's less fees you're paying a brokerage firm for investing and more money that you get to keep and that gets to grow.

And I personally don't have any investments with an expense ratio that is greater than 0.15%. You may find that the fees in your retirement plan are higher than this, but she says to go for funds with lower expense ratios when you can. All right, so that's the annual stuff. Let's move into the tasks you're going to do a handful of times a year.

Here's a big one. Get a credit report. A credit report lists information about the money you owe or have owed in the past. It'll say whether you missed a payment on a credit card or closed an account, for instance. And you want to make sure that it's accurate because this is one of the main things lenders look at when they decide whether to loan you money.

Every year you can get a free report from each of the credit bureaus. Those are Equifax, TransUnion, and Experian. You can go to annualcreditreport.com to request those. Brent suggests that every four months you request one from a different bureau. And do yourself a favor. Look it over. Because there might be something that's up. I actually had an old student loan payment. One student loan payment from when I was like 22 that I missed.

That was on my credit report. And then I called back and I said, hey, I don't remember missing it. Turns out they actually went back. They had it removed and it jumped up my credit score. By the way, on the topic of loans and debt. If you haven't looked at your debt in a while, do it now. Make it really easy for yourself. Just list what you have, the balances, the interest rates, the monthly payments, etc. Figure out if you need to make any changes. Maybe you should be paying more towards one bill or trying to consolidate your loans or refinance.

All right, back to taxes for a moment. If you get a paycheck from an employer, it's a good idea to check on your tax withholding during the year. That's how much money your employer is taking out of your paycheck and sending to the government on your behalf.

If they take out too little, you might get a big bill when you file your taxes. An accountant or a tax planner can do this math for you. But also, the IRS website has a calculator you can use. It'll give you an estimate of what your employer should be withholding. You just need to have your last pay stub handy. If you find that the numbers are off...

Consider updating your tax withholdings, right? If you are an employee, right, you can ask your employer for a new form W-4 so that you can properly tell them how much taxes to take out of your check. You can also get a W-4 on the IRS website and then submit it to your employer. That was Akiva Ellis, by the way. She's a certified financial planner, and I talked to her for one of our tax episodes.

So that's if you have an employer who withholds taxes from your paycheck. If you're self-employed or you're an independent contractor, your cadence is going to be different.

We also have an episode on how to handle your finances when you're a freelancer. One tip from that episode from Paco de Leon, a financial coach and bookkeeper. I think a really good habit to build right away is to set up a tax savings account. There's a general rule of thumb that you should be saving anywhere between 10% to as much as 30% of every dollar you earn. Dump it into your tax savings account, and that way you are saving for potentially paying income taxes.

All right, moving on to the monthly stuff. This is just basic financial housekeeping. You want to be paying your bills on time. Brent pays all of his bills on the first of the month. You might set your bills to auto pay whenever possible. Whatever you do, Soledad says it's a good idea to keep a buffer in your checking account so that you don't overdraft and then get hit with fees. I say between 10% to 25% of your monthly expenses should be kept in your checking account buffer.

I say no more than 25% because, again, any money that's in your checking account is not going to be earning interest. And then a couple times a month, so every two weeks, look over your accounts for fraud. Like maybe you'll see a charge from a shoe store, but you didn't buy any shoes. Call your credit card company or report that as fraud online so they can freeze the old card and send you a new one.

Soledad says every month we should also check on our income and career goals. That might mean updating your LinkedIn or applying for a new job or making a new contact in your industry or just adding to your brag bank. Your brag bank is a document. It could be a Google Doc where you just record how you're performing in your job, like the wins, the compliments that you received, whatever.

whatever evidence you have of how you are performing so well. So when it comes to your annual review, you have this evidence already gathered.

Next, remember those annual financial goals that you set? Brent suggests that you check in on them monthly to start. Because what we're trying to create in the first couple months is momentum. And when you do meet a goal, do something nice for yourself. Give yourself the lollipop or get a bottle of wine or whatever it is. Drink some tea, whatever your choice is. Do a little celebration. Make it fun, right? Because no one else is usually going to celebrate your success except for you.

On that note, Soledad says it's important to reflect monthly on how you're taking care of yourself, your mind, your body, your spirit.

She's noticed that it's much harder for clients to work on their finances when they're exhausted. And they'll start to say like, oh, I'm so bad with money because, you know, I can't create this budget. It feels overwhelming. And it's like, no, you're not bad with money. The issue is that you had you worked really long days. You had car troubles. You had a friend who called you crying and you stayed up really late talking to her. And all these different stressors have happened and you haven't given yourself an opportunity to rest.

So now you don't have the emotional and mental bandwidth to deal with your finances or like open a Roth IRA. Now, self-care is going to look different for everyone, but it could mean setting aside money to do things that bring you joy. It could mean saying no to plans or saying yes to plans. Or if you're always rushing around, it could be something as simple as blocking off time to eat three meals a day. And on that note, it's time for the daily tasks.

The good news is there's no money equivalent to brushing your teeth. Nothing you absolutely have to do every day for your financial health. Except maybe go to work. Bummer. I know. But here are some nice-to-haves. Brent says you can make a daily habit of reflecting on your purchases. Just look back at those decisions and think about, where did I spend money intentionally? Or maybe where did I spend emotionally? And are my choices lining up with what matters to me? Are they helping me build the life that I want?

Soleilad likes to do something called thought work. You can do this on paper or in a voice note. It can start with a brain dump of whatever's in your mind. And this is like one of my favorite forms of self-care is writing.

engaging in what I think is a spiritual practice of knowing what you're thinking, the thoughts that are creating an energy leak, and then creating space to decide whether you want to keep repeating those thoughts to yourself. Maybe you're constantly telling yourself, I'm so bad with money, or I'm not saving fast enough, or I feel like I'm never going to pay off my loans.

Once you know what those things are, you can create daily affirmations. These are some of hers. My wellness is essential to the collective. When I take care of myself, I make good money. When I take really good care of myself, I make really good money. I operate on divine time. I'm divinely protected. Those are like some of the main ones that really work for me that allows me to then take actions aligned with the results that I want.

Okay, it's time for a recap. Every year, you should be paying your taxes, checking on your insurance plans and your investment accounts, setting financial goals, and seeing if you're missing any benefits at work or through your bank. Also, get a free credit report from each of the credit bureaus every year.

And then monthly, make sure that you pay your bills on time. Keep a buffer in your checking account so you don't overdraft. Look over your bank and credit card activity for fraud and keep track of your financial goals. Daily, take care of yourself. Journal, do your affirmations and reflect on how you're spending your money. You know, does it align with the life you're building?

For more Life Kit, check out our other episodes. We have ones about how to invest, how to do your taxes, and how to budget. You can find those at npr.org slash life kit. And if you love Life Kit and want even more, subscribe to our newsletter at npr.org slash life kit newsletter.

Also, have you signed up for Life Kit Plus yet? Becoming a subscriber to Life Kit Plus means you're supporting the work we do here at NPR. Subscribers also get to listen to the show without any sponsor breaks. To find out more, head over to plus.npr.org slash life kit. This episode of Life Kit was produced by Sylvie Douglas. Our visuals editor is Beck Harlan and our digital editor is Malika Gareeb. Megan Cain is our supervising editor and Beth Donovan is our executive producer.

Our production team also includes Andy Tagle, Audrey Nguyen, Claire Marie Schneider, Margaret Serino, and Sylvie Douglas. Engineering support comes from Hannah Glovna. I'm Mary El-Segara. Thanks for listening.