The full series
All explainers, in order.
whole lifes actual return
Why term life insurance beats whole life for most working adults
The honest answer depends on two numbers: the policy's internal fees and the expected return of low-cost index funds.
interchange on every swipe
Why 0% APR credit cards still make money for banks
Banks earn revenue through interchange fees and balance-transfer charges, even when the annual percentage rate is zero for the consumer.
taxed twice on the same dollar
Why a 401k loan looks better than it actually is
401k loans pay interest to yourself, but opportunity cost and double taxation make them expensive compared to leaving the capital invested.
of compounding beats double the contribution
Why index funds don't make you rich quickly
The math behind index funds shows that compounding time outweighs monthly contribution rates. A 23-year-old investing $500/month often finishes richer than a 43-year-old investing $1,500/month.
the renter's 7-year lead
Why renting isn't throwing money away
The rent-versus-buy calculation depends on maintenance costs, mortgage interest rates, and the opportunity cost of the down payment.
what you pay vs the sticker price
Why a 30-Year Mortgage Costs Roughly Twice the Price of the House
An amortization schedule reveals the true cost of borrowing. On a standard loan, total interest often exceeds the principal amount.
tax-advantaged: in, growth, out
Why an HSA beats a 401(k) for some people and how to know if you're one of them
The HSA offers triple tax advantages that a 401(k) cannot match for eligible health savings account holders.
national average savings rate
Why do banks pay almost nothing on savings while charging 22% on credit cards?
The gap between a savings rate and a credit card APR comes down to net interest margin and deposit funding costs. Big banks have other sources; online banks do not.
for checking your own score
Why checking your own credit score does not lower it
Checking your own credit score is a soft inquiry and does not affect your rating. Drops usually come from hard inquiries or utilization changes.
of a $2,884 biweekly slot
Why your biweekly paycheck is smaller than your salary divided by 26
A $75,000 salary divided by 26 yields $2,884.62, but the actual deposit is closer to $1,900. The gap exists because three separate tax bases stack onto the same gross — and one of them won't budge no matter what you contribute to retirement.
for a $4 coffee
Why overdraft fees exist (and why they're so much bigger than the overdraft)
The $35 your bank charges to cover a $4 coffee isn't a punishment fee. It's the price of a tiny short-term loan you didn't ask for — but the math behind it is real.
your card APR vs ~5% savings
Should I pay off my credit card first or save for emergencies?
The honest answer depends on three numbers: your card's APR, the size of the safety net you need, and how likely you are to actually use the card again if you pay it off.
the bracket where it flips
Roth IRA vs Traditional IRA: the actual decision rule
It's not 'are you young?' or 'do you want tax-free retirement?' The real question is whether your tax rate today is higher or lower than your tax rate in retirement — and there's a way to estimate that.
you loaned the IRS at 0%
Why your tax refund is not actually good news
A $3,000 refund means you gave the IRS a $3,000 interest-free loan for the year. The fact that it feels like a windfall is a UX trick, not a financial win.