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Your Money Guide on the Side

The 80% Problem: Why Wealthy People Don't Save for a Rainy Day

Your Money Guide on the Side

Tyler Gardner

Business, Education, Entrepreneurship, Investing, How To

4.92.4K Ratings

🗓️ 1 June 2026

⏱️ 34 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Pre-order Tyler's book, Real Wealth, at ⁠⁠tyler.gardner.com/book⁠⁠ and be eligible for all monthly incentives between now and December 1st! And as always, a MASSIVE thank you to this week's sponsors: ⁠Facet⁠: → ⁠⁠facet.com/tyler⁠ for an exclusive $550 kickstart offer! LMNT⁠: → drinklmnt.com/tyler Become an INSIDER, just order the INSIDER Bundle–four boxes for the price of three, best value they offer–and get early access to limited time flavors and cool surprise gifts along the way. ⁠⁠Gelt⁠⁠: → ⁠⁠joingelt.com/tyler⁠ because Q2 is where strategic businesses (like mine!) make game-changing tax moves. If you're a business or a high-net worth individual, I'd encourage you to check this one out today. ⁠ Keeper: → keepersecurity.com/tyler for 60% off personal and family plans for our podcast listeners only! Use this link, so they know we sent you. And now, on to the show notes!! We’ve been taught that saving money is responsible: Save for a rainy day. Delay gratification. Spend less. Save more. But what if the way most people save is actually making them slightly poorer? In this episode, Tyler challenges one of personal finance’s most sacred ideas: that keeping large amounts of money sitting in savings is the safest thing you can do. Because safety and stagnation are not the same thing. In this episode, Tyler covers: Why inflation quietly destroys the value of traditional savings The hidden cost of opportunity cost — and what cash could have become if invested Why banks profit from your savings more than you do The problem with oversized emergency funds sitting idle Why fear — not math — drives many financial decisions Smarter alternatives for liquidity, from Treasury bills to Roth IRAs Why retirees often die with most of their wealth untouched The difference between saving as a tool vs. saving as an identity Tyler also makes a more personal argument: That many of us inherit financial beliefs built around scarcity, caution, and delayed gratification — even when we no longer need them. The core idea: Money is meant to support your life, not become the thing preventing you from living it. Invest broadly. Keep reasonable liquidity. Spend intentionally on the things that actually matter. And maybe, every once in a while… Eat the shrimp instead of the mashed potatoes. If the show’s been helpful, leaving a quick review on Apple or Spotify genuinely helps. Hope this gives you something to think about this week.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Here's what I know about the rainy day everyone's been saving for.

0:04.0

It almost never comes.

0:06.7

And when it does, it rarely costs as much as we had feared.

0:11.1

And the sunny days, the ones we skipped because we weren't sure we could afford them,

0:16.6

those are the ones we can never get back.

0:20.9

Hello, friends.

0:22.2

This is Tyler Gardner, welcoming you to another episode of your money guide on the side,

0:27.3

where it is my job to simplify what seems complex, add nuance to what seems simple,

0:32.6

and learn from and alongside some of the brightest minds in money, finance, and investing.

0:38.4

So let's get started and get you one step closer to where you need to be.

0:45.8

Quick note before we get into it, June's pre-order incentive for my book, Real Wealth,

0:51.1

is the most personal thing I've ever agreed to share.

0:55.0

Pre-order in June and submit your receipt at Tyler Gardner.com, and you'll get an exclusive

1:00.0

three-episode audio series that will never appear on this feed. Three pivotal moments in my

1:06.5

own financial life. The humbling one, the embarrassing one, and the one that made me rethink

1:12.0

everything. Three episodes, three moments, Tyler Gardner.com, pre-order, submit your receipt,

1:18.4

get the episodes delivered digitally in early July, and receive every additional monthly incentive

1:23.2

between now and the book's release on December 1st. And now, on to today's episode. I want to start

1:29.5

today by telling you a personal story about mashed potatoes. When I was nine years old, my family

1:36.1

made its annual pilgrimage to visit my grandparents in Connecticut. And if you grew up with grandparents

1:41.8

who believed that the highest expression of love was feeding

1:45.5

you until you couldn't move, you understand that these visits had a particular ritual to them.

...

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