7 Money Traps Keeping You Broke, According to Ramit Sethi
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If you work hard and still feel like you can’t get ahead, you’re not alone. In 2026, certain money habits can quietly cost people years of financial progress. Financial expert Ramit Sethi said most people struggle not because they’re irresponsible, but because they fall into repeat patterns that slowly drain their money.
Many of these habits feel normal or even responsible, which is why people often don’t realize the damage until years later.
It’s usually “one or more of these silent traps that are quietly draining their money,” Sethi said in one of his YouTube videos.
Here are the money traps Sethi said are keeping people stuck, along with the shifts that matter most.
Feeling Like You’re Always Behind
Social media makes it easy to compare your life to someone else’s. That pressure often leads to spending on things you do not actually value. In his video, Sethi used an example where he was looking at mansions on Zillow with his wife and later realized he preferred access to the convenience of city living.
Sethi said the way out of this cycle is by defining your own “rich life,” which helps you sidestep comparison and spend intentionally.
Avoiding Money Conversations
Money stress often shows up in relationships when people avoid talking about it. Sethi noted that 50% of the people he talks to “don’t even know their household income.”
He encouraged couples to talk about money early and often so expectations and priorities are clear.
Misunderstanding Debt
Debt can feel manageable until interest quietly takes over. Sethi described debt as “deeply psychological” and warns that ignoring it can drain people for decades.
For example, a $10,000 credit card balance at 25% APR could take 30 years to pay off if only minimum payments are made. He recommended prioritizing high-interest debt and calling card issuers to negotiate lower rates.
Confusing Frugality With Being Smart
Cutting small expenses can feel productive, but Sethi said these are “$3 questions that miss the bigger picture.”
Instead, he urged people to focus on “$30,000 questions,” such as earning more, negotiating salary and reducing major fees.
Chasing Credit Card Rewards
Credit card points can feel like a win, but they can also encourage overspending or justify carrying a balance. Sethi said chasing rewards is “another way of playing small.”
He recommended keeping credit cards simple and focusing on building savings first.
Investing Without a Strategy
Trying to pick stocks based on trends or online advice often leads to inconsistent results. Sethi advised people to “implement a real strategy” and stop trying to time the market.
He pointed to diversified options like target-date retirement funds, which he describes as a way to invest without “trying to pick stocks or time the market,” since the portfolio automatically adjusts risk over time.
Saving Without a System
Many people save whatever is left at the end of the month after expenses. Sethi said that approach rarely works because “saving last means saving never,” arguing that money decisions should be automated first.
Instead of relying on willpower, he recommended setting up a system that automatically divides income as soon as it comes in. His approach prioritizes fixed costs, investments and savings first, while still leaving room for guilt-free spending, so progress happens without constant tracking.
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