BiggerPockets Money Podcast - 451: The 9-Step “Stairway to Wealth” That ANYONE Can Use to Become Rich
Episode Date: September 18, 2023This “financial order of operations” could be your ticket to financial freedom. If most Americans followed these steps, they would find themselves debt-free, with full retirement accounts, pass...ive income, and “wealth-accelerating” investments that only top-income earners can access. But you don’t need to make hundreds of thousands of dollars a year to follow this “Stairway to Wealth”; you just need to follow these steps! Andrew Giancola from The Personal Finance Podcast built the “Stairway to Wealth” after realizing that the common wealth-building plans, like Dave Ramsey’s “Baby Steps,” wouldn’t fit most people’s lifestyles. Instead, Andrew worked to develop a system that almost anyone could use, one that was tailored to TODAY’s financial environment and gave people more of a choice when it came to their investments. Following this nine-step plan, you can go from low cash and high debt to debt-free, financially safe and secure, and invested for your future. Whether you’re starting on step one or step nine, this type of financial framework can make financial independence and early retirement MUCH easier. In This Episode We Cover The “Stairway to Wealth” financial order of operations ANYONE can use to build wealth Emergency reserves and why the “$1,000 standard" amount ISN’T enough Roth IRAs, 401(k)s, and which retirement accounts to invest in Paying off debt and which interest rate is worth tackling first The “wealth accelerators” that boast massive returns but with higher risk The “super retirement account” that most Americans don’t know about And So Much More! Links from the Show BiggerPockets Money Facebook Group BiggerPockets Forums Finance Review Guest Onboarding Join BiggerPockets for FREE Scott's Instagram Mindy on BiggerPockets Grab Scott’s Book, “Set for Life” Listen to All Your Favorite BiggerPockets Podcasts in One Place Apply to Be a Guest on The Money Show Podcast Talent Search! Money Moment Learn from Other Real Estate Investors on the BiggerPockets Forums Start Your Real Estate Investing Journey with the “BiggerPockets Real Estate” Podcast Are Dave Ramsey’s 7 Baby Steps Overrated Master Money The Personal Finance Podcast The “Stairway to Wealth” Andrew on BiggerPockets Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome everybody to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast where we are interviewing Andrew Giancola today and talking about the stairway to wealth, the order of operations for your money.
Hello, hello, hello.
My name is Mindy Jensen.
And with me as always is my breakfast table date co-hosts Scott Trench.
Thanks, Minnie.
It's great to be here.
And with that, I'm going to let you continue on with this introduction.
Scott and I had breakfast this morning.
It was delightful.
And he was still able to come up with a pun.
Of course.
I have some great skillet this, Mindy.
Oh, my goodness.
I had a breakfast skillet.
I had cassidias.
I don't know how to say, uh, I can't, yeah, no, I'm not fast like that.
So you come up with one, Scott.
I can't come up with cheesy breakfast puns the way I can.
Oh, my goodness.
Oh, I quit.
I quit.
You just do it all.
Just kidding.
I'm going to do mine still.
Scott and I are here to make financial independence less scary, less just for somebody else.
to introduce you to every money story because we truly believe that financial freedom is attainable for everyone, no matter when or where you're starting.
That's right. Whether you want to retire early and travel the world or go on to make big time investments in assets like real estate, start your own business, or if you just want a financial plan that can help guide you on a correct course to financial independence and long-term wealth, will help you reach your financial goals and get money out of the way so you can launch yourself towards those dreams.
Scott, I'm going to raise a toast to your breakfast puns.
Oh, nice.
I didn't come up with that myself, though.
I do have to give credit where credit is due.
And that was from our producer, Kalin, who is just as quick as Scott is.
I am still way, way, way slow.
Thanks a brunch.
That was, she just, that was her message right now.
That was fantastic.
Oh, my goodness.
I can't even with all these puns.
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Andrew Giancola is the host of the Personal Finance Podcast, a top 40 investing podcast, and he's
also the founder of MasterMoney.com.
Andrew, welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast. I'm so excited to talk to you today.
Thank you guys so much for having me. I am really excited to be here.
Andrew, for people who haven't heard about you or your podcast, can you tell our audience a little bit about yourself and how you became interested in personal finance?
Sure. So my name is Andrew Jincola. I'm the host of the personal finance podcast. And it's a podcast that we started in 2020 trying to teach people how to build wealth. And we started that podcast off.
and just my mom and, you know, a couple of friends were listening at the beginning.
And then we kind of grew it over time and really, really passionate about teaching people how to build wealth.
And my background is actually in finance.
And I worked in finance for a long time and then built out some businesses and escaped the rat race in 9 to 5 and started working on some of those businesses and then building out some of those as well.
So have a long history of doing a bunch of different things.
But the podcast is one of the main things we focus on now.
Today we'd like to touch on your stairway to wealth, not to.
stairway to heaven, stairway to wealth, which is a framework you created to build wealth. How did you
create this order of operations? So when I was starting to get my money right, when I had my first
job in finance, believe it or not, I made $30,000 a year. So really quickly early on, I was living
paycheck to paycheck. I was not good with money very early. And so I had to figure out a system that
would allow me to actually learn how to build wealth. And I remember a moment in time when I went
to go fill up my tank of gas. I think it was 22 years old. And I didn't have enough money to actually
fill up my tank of gas. I had an old Chevy suburban and it took like 40 gallons of gas. And I remember
how frustrated and mad I was at that point in time. So I vowed that I would figure out a way to actually
get my money together and put together a step by step system that would allow me to do so. So what I did was
I researched a bunch of different personal finance experts that were out there, one of which was
obviously Dave Ramsey, Ramit Seati, a bunch of other folks. And they had all of these different
systems that I thought would work for my life. So I started to implement some of those systems and
take pieces of each one and then put them all together and the stairway to wealth is actually
what came together after doing all that.
Andrew, why don't you go through and tell us what the nine steps you've got here are in the
order of operations form?
The nine steps of the stairway to wealth is first we lay the foundation.
So the foundation is budgeting, automating your money, that type of thing.
Then step one is the cash buffer.
So having some money to protect yourself against life as you go through this process.
Then step two is to get your employer match.
Step three is to pay down off high.
interest debt, any debt above 6% interest rate. Step four is getting your emergency fund in place. So having
six months of your income with your emergency fund. Then step five is your Roth 401k, Roth IRA or
HSA level. Then step six, we have max out pre-retirement accounts or invest in real estate. Step seven is
your wealth accelerators. Step eight is future expenses like saving for kids college, those types of
things. And then step nine is paying off low interest debt. I want to jump in here and ask the question
about the cash buffer because while I like Dave Ramsey's first three baby steps, I don't like
the $1,000 emergency fund that he suggests. I think it should be more. And it's better than nothing,
but it's real easy to spend $1,000 or way more on an emergency. So what sort of cash buffer are we
talking about here? So the big thing that we wanted to shift was that Dave's number just never changed.
So it never ever changed. It's always been $1,000.
Obviously, that amount of money is not worth the same amount as it has been in the past.
So the biggest thing we wanted to change is look at first, the average emergency fund in what it is.
And the average emergency is usually around $2,400.
But I do like the idea of, like if you know, Brian Preston and Beau from The Money Guy Show,
they have a system where they put into place where you save up enough for your highest deductible.
And I really like that idea because what that does is it protects you against anything in life
where you can utilize your insurance.
is and figure out what the highest deductible is. So one way that we look at that is we go through
and say, hey, what is your auto insurance deductible? What is your home insurance deductible?
What is your medical insurance deductible? Whichever one's the highest, just save that amount.
So at least you can get coverage on some of those deductibles and protect yourself as you're
proceeding through some of these steps. I think this is a great topic and there's no right
answer to this cash buffer and, you know, question. I think, you know, I'm not necessarily saying
I agree one way or the other. But I think if Dave Ramsey were here,
he would say, well, the reason it's $1,000 is because even if you have the emergency,
that that's $2,400 or your smallest, your highest deductible, I'm sorry, is a theoretical
emergency, and you have emergency right now, most likely if you're in this situation,
starting with his baby step one, your step one here, you might as well just start paying
off your emergency debt.
So what would be your answer to that, that response from our fictitious Dave Ramsey
impersonation that I'm doing?
Yeah, I think that is one great consideration, because,
high interest debt is obviously a huge wealth killer, which we'll get to here in a second.
But one big thing is that I think when emergencies come up, a lot of folks, if you look at a lot of
the data, when emergencies come up, that is what puts them even further backwards than they
already are. And there's a number of different situations where that can happen. But I just think
life is going to happen to you. It's not when. It's not if it's going to happen to you.
It's actually when is it going to happen to you. And you have to be prepared for that and at least
have enough to protect yourself against that. And then you can start attacking debt.
Well, again, you diverge here.
So with step two, can you walk us through what step two is and why you choose to do something other
than pay down high interest debt next?
Sure.
So step two is to get your employer match.
Now, if your employer does not offer an employer match, then obviously you can skip on to the next step.
But when it comes to your employer match, this is a 100% rate of return on your money.
This is a really, really powerful thing.
And so it's so incredibly important to make sure you get that.
Now, if you've never heard of an employer match, all this is is that,
is that when you open up a 401k plan at your employer or TSP or whatever else,
they will end up matching a percentage if they offer this actual premium thing that they offer
here. So for example, if you put in 3% in your 401k, they will match 3%.
It just depends on what the actual plan has available to you. And so to show how powerful this can
actually be, if you take an example of someone who makes $100,000 per year and they got a 3%
employer match, you do a 3% match and they do a 3% match every single.
year and you got an 8% rate of return on that match over the course of 30 years. It's amazing what can
happen and how powerful this can be. So just on that 3% match, you would have $704,000 over the course
of 30 years at an 8% rate of return if you just got that match. If you got a 4% match, it's
$938,000. At a 5% match is $1.1 million. And I have friends who have 6% matches and did the math
for them. It's $1.4 million that you'd have in that account if you got that 8% rate of return. So it's an
incredibly powerful thing to take advantage of because it is free money. And I love free money.
I don't know, I don't know about you, you, Mindy and Scott, if you guys love free money,
but that is the way that I kind of think about this and try to take advantage of this.
I love free money. And if anybody doesn't, you can email me for my address and I'll share that
with you. You can send me all the free money that you don't want. And then next, we're going to
talk about high interest debt. And high interest debt is making sure that you pay it down that high
interest debt. So you could think of things like credit cards, personal loans,
all of those different types of things because those are wealth killer. So we want to get rid of that
high interest debt as fast as we possibly can. Awesome. So we have 6% as this cut off between high and low
interest coming into step number three here. Why is 6%? Why are we cutting it off there? And is that
going to change if interest rates remain high in your view? So for me, it will not change much if
interest rates remain high. We really started out at 5% and adjusted it to 6% because the rate of return on
average for the market is somewhere between 7 to 10%. And I think 7% is kind of the conservative
approach that you can look at this for. And so the reason why we're looking at doing that is because
of that reason. I think your dollars or more productive in the market than they are paying off
that low interest debt below a 6% interest rate. But it is very difficult right now at the time that we're
in at the time we're recording this, interest rates are rising above seven, some are even above 8% when
people are getting mortgages right now. So it is a very difficult situation where you have to think
through that. But I think even specifically for mortgage debt, that is something that you can
consider when rates go down and we have no idea when they would go down. But if they do go down,
then you can kind of refinance out of those and go from 8% down to a lower interest rate.
Awesome. And do you recommend fully paying off every penny of high interest rate debt before
moving on a step four? Or so it's every debt that's above 6% interest, you pay down 100%
before moving on a step four in your nine step program here. Exactly. So that's kind of
the thought process that we have specifically as they get higher. Because for most,
people, this high interest debt level is going to fall into things like credit card debt or personal loans. And if you look at the numbers on things like personal loans now, they are rising rapidly, which I was very surprised looking at the numbers. The average person has $12,000 to $14,000 in personal loans now. So a lot of this high interest debt is going to fall into the credit card or personal loan category. Well, walk us through step four here then. What's the emergency fund and how much should I, how much should I save up and why that amount? Sure. So the emergency fund is one of the most powerful things that you can do to protect your money.
as you start to build wealth. And like we said with the cash buffer, it is not if an emergency
is going to happen, but when will an emergency happen? So you have to have an emergency fund in place
to protect yourself. And there's a number of different ways that you can do this. But my favorite
way is to put it into a high yield savings account because that's just going to keep your money there
with somewhat of a higher interest rate. It's going to keep it safe. And when it comes to how much
emergency fund you should have, I truly believe that you should have six months in your emergency
fund for most financial situations. And the reason why I think about that is your emergency fund is in place
for emergencies. One of the biggest reasons it's there for is to protect you against job loss. So if you think
of the process of losing your job, what's going to happen is you're going to have one to two months
where you are going out and applying for jobs. Maybe you have another two months where you're going
through interviews. And then finally, you figure out, you know, which job you're going to land on. So six
months kind of gives you that runway and allows you to be able to protect yourself from job loss.
But it's also for a number of other things. If your car breaks down, if you're
you have issues with your house. It also allows you to invest in rental properties, because as you
both know, investing in rental properties, you have to have some cash reserves available there
before you start doing something like that. And it's also protection against the things that you
don't like in life. For example, if you have a brand new boss and you absolutely hate that boss and
they're taking away some of your mental health and all these different things, then it's going to
allow you to protect against that as well. So there's a lot of really cool stuff that's available in
the emergency fund that's going to allow you to at least kind of protect yourself against life. So
I like six months. We started to say three to six months, but three months for most people seemed
like they were still getting into sticky financial situations with that three months timeframe.
So I love at least having six months. And then if you're self-employed, I like to have an even
longer runway nine months to a year. Okay, I love the six months. I really get the hebie-jeebies
when I hear the other guy, Dave Ramsey, say three to six months because I think a lot of people
who are in the position that they need this kind of help here three months.
And they're like, oh, gosh, I don't know if I can ever get to three months.
I barely get to three months.
And then I stop saving.
They don't get to three months and then maybe start working on the next one while
continuing to save to six months.
So I love that you're suggesting six months to start with.
How does step four and step one work together?
So step one is create a cash buffer safety net, which you alluded to.
was the largest deductible or, you know, some amount like that. And then step four is six
months of expenses. How are those, like, do you still have your largest deductible in addition
to the six months of expenses? Or are you just adding on to that? That's a great question. So this is
something where you have two options here, one of which you can keep that largest deductible thing for
things like your car breaking down, your house having issues, any of those types of emergencies. You can
keep it available there if you want to and or you can roll it in to start your emergency fund.
Emergency funds are really hard for a lot of people to save up for because it's, you know,
thousands and thousands of dollars.
You have to have saved up to protect your income.
So you can roll it into your emergency fund as well and just have your emergency fund as your
cash buffer as you build that out and or if you make a high enough income, you can have
both available.
One is protecting you against things like, you know, small things that happen in life and
the other one is protecting you against job loss or having a sabbatical or whatever else you
want to do with that money. So you have two options there depending on your situation. I like to be
as conservative as possible, especially for people who are just starting to fix their finances.
They've never paid attention before or they've discovered that they're in a big hole and they
want to start paying attention now. It can seem really daunting to have all of this money just sitting
there doing nothing, I say in air quotes, but it's not doing nothing. It is waiting for an emergency.
So how much fun is it to get hit with, you know, four flat tires or whatever and then be like,
oh, gosh, how am I going to pay for this as opposed to, hey, that's what that emergency fund was for.
So I would suggest, you know, have them both.
Do step one.
And like, you don't do all of this in one day.
You don't just like knock step one through nine out all in one day or all in one week.
This is a long process.
But it's better than starting from zero.
or starting from the negative, like when you finish with step nine or step one or step two or
like wherever you are, you're still in a better position than you were when you start paying
attention. So it's every day is more progress. Andrew, who's the target of these nine steps?
Who are you writing them for? So originally I wrote them for myself. This was a system I kind of
put into place for myself, a young professional who was trying to figure out how to get their money
together. And so for most people, that is what this is for people trying to figure out how to get their
money together. They want the step-by-step guide for this. But if you are, you know, a few steps in
advance already, you can jump right in and figure out, hey, well, what investing order do I need,
which we'll talk about, I'm sure soon, and you can just use the investing order if you want to do it
that way. If you already have your emergency fund, you don't have any high interest debt,
you can just jump into that step. So it just depends on what stage you are in life. But for a lot of
folks, they want that step-by-step guide to figure out, you know, exactly what they need to do,
because they're trying to figure it out, you know, they get TikToks all day long or they're seeing things on social media and they're just trying to, you know, get through the weeds here.
And so that's what we kind of created this for was I used it in my own life. It worked really, really well. And then I was able to kind of, you know, teach other people the same exact system I used.
Awesome. So, you know, and I think that's important to call out here. This system, it does not seem is written for, you know, or built for the totally broke person who has proven that they're totally irresponsible with money for many.
years and needs a hard reset, which is what Dave Ramsey's program is for, right? Dave Ramsey is for
folks that have completely, you know, you know, been botched it with their personal finances and he's
all about that. Whatever your plan was, what I'm working. You should start again with my plan here.
And I think in context of his first three baby steps, which are one, save $1,000, pay off all debt,
except your home mortgage, and then build a three month to six month emergency reserve.
Well, you can get away with three-month emergency reserve.
If you know, you've paid off all of your debts, right, including your low interest rate ones,
because that's that, you know, you don't need quite as much of an emergency reserve.
In your order, you're doing one that's for someone a little bit more savvy, wants to get a little bit more returns there maybe, you know, hasn't made a long history of mistakes.
And so can can responsibly continue to maintain some debt on their balance sheet, I think.
And so that in that case, you need more of a, uh, um, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh,
an emergency reserve in that particular case. And then I think from a super aggressive person as
well, someone who is willing to go all out in pursuit of financial independence, which may be
many listeners of bigger pockets money, for example, you're saving 50 plus percent of your income,
your after-tax take home pay. Then I think, again, some of the rules begin to change for you
or the guidelines you can afford to be much more aggressive when you're saving that high of a
percentage of your income, paradoxically, because you're so conservative with your household budget.
So would you agree with that from just a philosophical, philosophizing high level viewpoint?
I absolutely would agree because as you stated, you really do have to be responsible with that low
interest debt if you're going to go about and doing these steps. And for a lot of people and a lot of
people in my audience as well, and I was very interested in this. I was very interested in financial
independence. So you can kind of tailor this into financial independence by hitting all these steps
each and every single year. And you can see as we get to some of these later steps, you have to have
a higher income to hit all of these steps in a row. So that's kind of how we tailored.
it as well was to make sure that these are people who, you know, can actually manage that low
interest debt and be able to kind of go step by step and follow the steps and stay disciplined.
Well, okay. So with that, we've got our six-month emergency reserve bill. What's, what's coming next
and why why we invest in there? Sure. So the next step is the Roth IRA and the HSA. So this can be
Roth 401k, Roth IRA or HSA. So it's just the Roth level there. And the way that we look at this is you can
do either or you can do both, but you have a couple of options here. So for the Roth IRA, I
absolutely love Roth accounts for two reasons, the tax-free growth and then being able to pull the
money out tax-free. So you contribute money directly from your paycheck. It's already been taxed out of your
paycheck. The money grows tax-free and you could pull the money out tax-free. So if you do this over
the course of 30 years and say, for example, you maxed out your Roth IRA at $6,500 per year,
then what happens here is you have a little over a million dollars, $1.1 million in that account over
the 30 years. And $800,000 of that is going to be the growth. And so this is completely taxed
free money, $800,000 of tax-free money. There's not many places that you can do something like that
with the Roth IRA. And then the HSA is probably one of my favorite accounts that are out there. I call it the
super retirement account, but the HSA has a couple of different caveat. So it stands for health savings
account and you contribute money tax-free. You can invest the money inside the HSA and it can grow
tax-free and you can pull the money out tax-free as long as you have a qualified medical expense.
And that is the major caveat. Now, the IRS has a huge list of qualified medical expenses.
that you can reimburse yourself for.
I just save my receipts and then I put them in a drop box and then I just keep a spreadsheet
of how much I've had available.
And what you do with the HSA is if you don't use the money for qualified medical expense
by the time you turned H-65, it just turns into virtually IRA essentially.
And so that's the cool thing about the HSA, but it has those triple tax benefits if you have
those qualified medical expenses.
Now, the other caveat with the HSA is you have to have a high deductible health plan.
So if you don't have a high deductible health plan, you don't call.
qualify for the HSA, which is why we have both the Roth and the HSA at this level.
If you have both accounts, which one do you recommend maxing out first?
If you're available, if you have the Roth IRA available to you.
So if you have both available to you, and even if you make too much for the Roth IRA,
I love the backdoor Roth IRA as well.
But if you have both available, I personally will contribute to the Roth first, then go to the
HSA.
And the only reason I do that is because I shift from a high deductible health plan to
to a regular health plan a lot of different times. So I can't max it out every single year,
like specifically, you know, in the years where my wife is pregnant, for example, we know we're
going to have a lot of different hospital bills. Then that's when I will make those shifts.
But for the most part, I go Roth because I know I'll be able to at least max out that Roth every
single year. Then I go back to the HSA. So that's just the way I think about it. But a lot of people
would actually reverse that because of those triple tax benefits. Well, one thing to call out with
the HSA, as you alluded to here, and again, just to reinforce and hammer the point home, is
The HSA compatible health care plans, by definition, have very high deductibles and very high out-of-pocket
maximums.
So they're often essentially a worse health care plan than the ones that are not HSA-compatible.
And so a lot of reasonable people will switch back and forth between them, just like you said.
It's probably a better financial decision to skip the HSA.
And in a year, you know you're likely to have high medical bills, for example, or you think
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and forego the HSA benefits that year.
Exactly. That's one of the biggest keys with the HSA is that you have to kind of be
flexible with how you're handling those plans.
Specifically, like you said, if you have high medical bills that year, that's a big key there.
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development and information technology. Learn more at aboutamazon.ca. Okay, so now, after all this,
we're on step six here and we're into the 401k or real estate investing. You have a divergence here.
So how do you think about that divergence? Why, what's the, walk us through this step and why there's a
divergence and what routes you took personally? Absolutely. So for me specifically, one of the biggest
things here was that when we started to talk about this, we had the 401k at this level and then we had
real estate actually at the next level. But what I realized very quickly was I didn't actually take
that path. I did the 401k and real estate at the same time. Now, I did not, when I did not make a lot
of money, I did not max out my 401k at that time, but I would invest in my 401k and I would invest in real
estate both at the same time. And so this was something where when we went to this process, I realized very
quickly that you can accelerate your path to wealth if you put real estate investing at this level.
Now, the thought process of having it at this level is you have that emergency fund already
in place. You have some retirement accounts that are building up if you have a Roth or an HSA there.
And now you have real estate available to you and or if you don't have any interest whatsoever,
which real estate's obviously not for everybody. If you don't have interest in real estate,
then you can go the 401k route. So those are two options there that are available or whatever
your pre-tax account is that you have. Okay. Step 7 is wealth,
accelerators. So I would like to hear what you have to say about that and how that differs from step
six, specifically the real estate investing part. Sure. So the real estate investing part on that front for
wealth accelerators is for a lot of people, if you want to do things like flips, for example,
or maybe some bigger deals, that's where we have wealth accelerators here. But in addition,
when it comes to, you know, when it comes to real estate, the other side of this is I've gotten
really interested in things like boring businesses. So things like automatic car washes or laundromats
or all those different things are really, really cool stuff that you could be investing in.
And I think it can really accelerate your path to wealth, but you have to have some of these
other things covered ahead of it before you actually start investing in that kind of stuff.
So that's where we kind of think through the wealth accelerators.
And then bigger real estate deals and or flips are another thing that we have here as well
in the wealth accelerators.
So what do you mean by real estate investing in step six when step seven is like the
larger deals and flips. So the way I did it in step six was learning how to invest in real estate.
So I would invest in single families, small multi-families, those types of properties early on in
step six. And that's how I personally did it. Now, I think you could scale up to much larger
deals in step six as well. If you know what you're doing, you know how to run the numbers,
you understand how to invest in real estate. I think it depends on your knowledge level and where you
are. But at the same time, I think you could do it in either or. But if you want to scale up to those much
larger deals and you have not done yet that yet, then the wealth accelerator level is where I
would consider doing something like that. Okay, I like that you have these so far down the
list of your nine steps. You're in the last third of the nine steps here. And I am going to
take a moment to plug this little website called biggerpockets.com. If you want to start investing
in real estate, you absolutely need to be educated in the process. Sure, anybody can buy a house,
But you, and you can make money in real estate.
I know, I've done it.
Scott's done it.
Andrew's done it.
But you can also lose a lot of money in real estate if you don't know what you're doing.
So if you want to get more information about it, you want to learn about real estate investing,
learn how to do it the right way.
Go to biggerpockets.com slash forums.
Okay.
End rant.
Now, this show is sponsored by biggerpockets.com.
Let's talk about, we did step seven, step eight.
future expenses. And why is this all the way down in step eight and not before? So what do you
categorize as future expenses? And why is that almost at the bottom? So for future expenses,
this is a big one that a lot of people do too early. And for me, we talk about the oxygen
mask method, which other people have talked about as well. But what that means is like when an airplane
is going down, you take care of your own oxygen mask first and then you help somebody else along
the way. And this is the same thought process that you have to take with your money. You have to
take care of your retirement and your wealth building first, then you can help take care of others.
So with these future expenses, these are things like saving for your kids college, a 529 plan
or however else you want to save for your kids college. Along these same lines is saving up for
wedding expenses for your kids and those types of future expenses if you have a sinking fund
or something along those lines for that. Or investing for your children. This is a topic we talk about
all the time on our podcast is investing for your kids. And I think it is one of the most powerful
things you can do for your kids. But doing it too early when you're not saving for your own
retirement can be a detriment to your financial situation. And then lastly, it is just saving,
you know, extra funds for your retirement, like having extra cash on hand or longer emergency funds.
Those types of things are all the future expenses that we're talking about here. So this is
something where it's very difficult to not put your children before you because that's what you do
and everything else in life. But at the same time, you got to take care of your own retirement
first. Then you can take care of everyone else. One really awesome quip that I have heard about
that is you can always finance your kids college. You can't finance your retirement. Exactly. And that's kind of the
thought process along this whole thing because at least there is always student loans available. And obviously,
if you are interested in finance or personal finance or fire, all these different things, we do not want to, you know,
have our kids taking on loans. But sometimes in a lot of situations, that is what's available to you. But there is no loan for
your retirement. So it is so powerful to make sure that you take care of your retirement first. Okay. And can you do future expenses? Can you
start that in tandem with any of the other steps? Or would you recommend waiting until you've
gotten your pre-tax or real estate, step six, and your wealth accelerators in step seven?
So I think if you have your retirement goals and you're hitting those retirement goals,
so say, for example, you look at your retirement number and figure out that it's 25 extra
expenses, say you need $80,000 per year and you multiply that by 25 and you have $2 million
available there. If you're hitting and on track for those goals by the time you want to retire,
then I think it's okay to start saving for those future expenses. Maybe you have no interest in
wealth accelerators. You just want to save in your retirement accounts or in the market. And then you
want to move on to saving for your kids and helping your kids out. A lot of people are in that
situation. And so that's where I think you can save at the same time in tandem. If a step does not
apply to your specific situation, you can always skip it and go to the next step.
I think that's an important point to drill into here. And again, you know, talking about
because there's nine steps here, it's people I think will naturally compare it to Dave
Ramsey's baby steps. You know, we start with the three to six month emergency reserve in step three,
and then the step four is invest 15% of your household income in retirement. People don't have to
agree with that, but it's very clear where the breakdown is, right? Once you've started investing 15%
of your household income in retirement and have your three to six month emergency reserve, now I'm going
on to step five. I think that's, that's a great question that Mindy was asking there, and I love to drill
another layer of depth in when, okay, I've maxed out my Roth and HSA, that's super clear. Steps one through
five, know exactly where the cutoff is. Where is that cutoff between real estate investing and wealth
accelerators, for example, though? Is it, you know, hey, I'm going to, is it step six is
get to your retirement number at 4% rule with your pre-tax IRA contributions? Make sure you're on
track for that. Then go to real estate investing for a certain amount. That's six and a half,
and then seven as wealth accelerators? Or how do you break that down? How do you advise people on that?
That's a great question. So that is one big differentiator that we've had in the past.
when we did this the first time, we had that question come in all over the place. And that was the big
differentiator. So you have to figure out what your end goal is before you start this. So if your goal,
for example, is to have a tandem and a flexible thing between investing in retirement accounts and
real estate investing, you have to do two calculations here. A, you have to figure out how much
cash flow you want to have with your real estate investing for that freedom number for, say, it's
50-50. For 50% of your income that you need, you need to figure out how many properties you need to have
available to you to actually cover that 50% of your expenses and your goal, whatever your goal is
in retirement. And then the other 50%, the target needs to be hit for that 25x expenses in your Roth IRA,
and maybe you have to trickle some into your 401k as well in order to be able to invest enough
to hit that number. So that's kind of how we think about both of those, is making sure that you know
your goals ahead of time and then having those trickle in as you go through that process.
Okay. So after step five, when we've maxed out our Roth and or HSA,
Or as we approach that, more precisely, there needs to be a precision of goal setting or precision
of planning that we go through that really narrows in exactly what we want that end state
portfolio that we're going to try to back into to look like. Is that right? Exactly. So you have
to have those numbers nailed down so that if you're going to do both, if you're going to do a hybrid
method is what we call it. If you're going to do both of those things, you need to know what the goals
are for each one and just understand the math. The math is very easy, but it's just understanding
the map and learning how it works is going to be the best thing that you can do going forward.
Awesome. And then that informs how much to contribute to my 401K, how much to contribute to my
real estate down payment fund, how much to contribute to starting a small business or buying
a small business, those types of things, how much to contribute to college or wedding funds,
all that kind of stuff. And then when to cut the investing and begin paying off the low interest
debt, which is your last step. Exactly. And I know how difficult it can be to save for multiple
savings goals, especially if you only make a certain amount of money. So putting together this plan
and having this in place and then kind of mapping out those goals is going to be one of the best
things that you can do. It's one of my favorite things that I did early on because once you start
to see this to work, it's really, really powerful to watch that compound. Awesome. So let me pose a
hypothetical here. We've got a $60,000 per year income earner, ambitious to get their finances in order.
A couple, you know, not a crazy bad financial situation. And we're starting to go through this.
So we save up the cash buffer.
And by the way, the expenses are, let's call it $4,000 a month.
So $48,000 a year, they've got about $5,000 or $6,000 to play with on top of that.
So we save up the emergency reserve in the first couple of months.
We take the match, and that's 4% of the paycheck.
So that's, what is that, four times, that's about $2,400 there, but it's pre-taxed.
I still have another couple thousand to play around with.
I pay off my debt that takes me about 18 to 24 months to pay off my high interest debt.
And now I've got this emergency fund.
But the problem is that after I max out my Roth and or HSA, I have no additional cash
left over with which to pursue the other wealth building avenues here of buying a house
or house hacking or real estate investing or contributing more to my 401K or trying my hand
at a small business.
And I'm ambitious to do those things.
How would you advise that person proceed, you know, assuming that they're already optimized
on the income front?
So if they are already optimized on the income front, you're saying they can't increase their income anymore, that would be the first step that I would look at.
If they can't increase their income anymore, that's what I did because I was in this exact situation where I was going through and maxing out everything that I could.
I went to my Roth and I went to my HSA and doing those two things.
And then beyond that, when I wasn't making much money, then I looked on the income side to try to increase my income.
That's the biggest thing that you can do in that front.
But if you are really, really interested in something like real estate investing, for example, and say all you have,
per year is to be able to invest a certain amount and you're getting, you know, your max on your
Roth IRA, for example, and you have maybe just a little bit left over, but you are really,
you know, gung-ho on real estate investing. I have no issue with somebody, you know,
allocating more dollars towards real estate investing if they know what they're doing and
understand that because I do truly think that you can accelerate your path to financial
independence through real estate investing. We've seen so many different examples, obviously
on this show, bigger pockets as well, where you've seen people be able to really accelerate their
path to financial independence through real estate investing. So I have no issue with that. But I think
the number one thing is, is to increase your income so that you can allocate more dollars towards that
through side hustles and a bunch of other options that you have available. Awesome. Yeah. I just think
that's a challenge that from a practical sense folks have when they're confronted with lists,
you know, these step-by-step approaches to building wealth. They are right answers. Yours is a right
answer here to that. But then I think it's great to hear that even you're acknowledging,
hey, my rules, you should break them if you really want to get into real estate and begin
contributing there more heavily in there. And I think that's the big challenge is there's
a sacrifice that has to be made here at some point if you want to get ahead in the wealth building
journey. I love how your first instinct is the right answer is work harder. Get more, earn another
source of income. Figure out how to increase your income because that solves a bunch of these
problems. And now you can go down the ladder here of, you know, taking a match.
then the maxing out the 401k, HSA, Roth IRA, and have some surplus left over in real estate.
But the consequence of that, what's implied there underneath is the grind, right?
There's a multi-year grind if you want to actually go through all of these steps,
maxing them all out, and then getting into having enough left over to begin actually pursuing these other wealth builders.
Exactly.
You're spot on on that because that is one of the things that's actually baked into this.
Now, the beautiful thing about this is I really am flexible once you get to the investing zone.
So I'm not really flexible if you're not going to pay your high interest debt off or any of that.
I don't think you could skip any of those steps when it comes to paying off your credit cards or anything like that.
But outside of that, once you get to the investing zone, there may be someone who's a super high earner.
And it makes more sense for them.
Their CPA tells them, hey, you need to contribute to your 401K first before you go to the Roth IRA because, you know, we need to get some of these pre-tax benefits here.
So there are situations like that where it is flexible once you get to this investing.
zone, especially if you are really proficient in one area. Say, for example, like real estate
investing, you're an amazing real estate investor. And that may be the best path for your dollars to go
is towards real estate investing instead of putting it into the market. So I love to have the
hybrid approach. That's what I did. But it may not be for every single person. And so once you get
to this investing area, you can be flexible on that front. Yeah, I completely agree. I think there's
one right answer, one set of principles that involve bare bones cash emergency reserve or safety net
or $1,000, whatever it is, right?
We could debate the number whether it's $1,000 or a smallest deductible or the $2,400 or whatever.
Then it's crush your high interest rate debt or bad debt.
I love taking the match from your employer.
I think that's right.
And not talked about enough here.
And then building out some sort of semblance of an emergency reserve.
And then from there, the options explode.
And that's where a prioritization has to take place that's congruent with your goals.
And, you know, you could, I think the Roth HSA is, is a perfect one from there.
But then after that, I think you're right.
Like, who knows what the right answer is there?
Is it the wedding fund?
Is it the real estate?
Is it the wealth accelerators in that?
And so it seems like there's like these steps six through nine are a set of guidelines,
a starting suggestion, but feel free to break them and, and go after the one that's most
important or relevant to your goals there.
Exactly.
And I think that's why it's so important to kind of look at it that way and have that
flexibility available is because each situation is very, very different.
and it's just going to change for each person on what the optimal way to go is.
Like I said earlier, this isn't all in one day that you're doing steps one through five.
So I think by the time you get to step six, you're more comfortable with your money.
You have a more fundamental understanding of how it works, your risk tolerance, what you want.
I mean, I can see this taking years to get to step six, you know, two, three years to get comfortable to this step six.
period, especially if you're just starting out, you're making $30,000 a year. I was making 24 when I
started out and thought I was just rich. But at $24,000 a year, you can't max any of these things out
and still be able to eat. So, you know, getting comfortable with all of this, then you start
thinking about your pre-tax, your real estate investing, your wealth accelerators. I mean, I wasn't
thinking about wealth accelerators until, I don't know, five years ago, 10 years ago. And even then, I was like, I mean, outside of real estate, which I don't, you've got it on step six. And I'm just, I'm thinking of wealth accelerators as businesses. But I see how that could be real estate too. But yeah, like once you get to this point, then you're, you're more able to diverge from the path and take this as more of a guideline than a, you know, set in stone rule. And you're spot on on that because the big thing with this is this is the long game.
This is how you have to think about this is throughout your financial life.
It took me 10 years just to get to the wealth accelerator level where I was doing all of
these things and at that wealth accelerator level.
So that I think is really, really important distinction is to make sure you understand
this is just a long game.
This is something that it takes time to build wealth.
And so this is where you really need to land.
Contrary to what things on social media or whatever else talks about, they say it happens
in two or three years.
But really it does take a long time and you really have to build up to some of this stuff.
I love that.
I completely agree.
Right.
You know, it's taken me 10 years to get to, you know, the point of thinking about those types of things as well.
What do you say to all of the people, all the content, all of the hype that's going on around skipping steps one through five here and going straight to the buying a business when you have no money or no income, no credit, and those types of things?
Like, what would you say to somebody who's seeing that, really interested in it and a little, you know, and excited about that.
doesn't want to spend the next four years going through steps one through five.
I can see how people can be enticed by something like that.
But the biggest thing is your risk level, your personal finance risk level increases significantly
when you do something like that.
So if you get into something without having, say, cash reserves, for example, and anything
goes wrong, then you are having a huge financial detriment and you were going backwards,
10, 15 steps, even from what we're talking about here, if you have some catastrophic financial
event.
And we've been talking about Dave Ramsey's baby steps the whole time.
This happened to him in his 20s.
where he was over leveraged when it came to real estate.
And he talks about this all the time.
And he had to claw his way out out of bankruptcy and all these different things because he
skipped all these steps.
And then that's where he started the baby steps as well was because of that reason.
So there's a bunch of different examples of people.
And for most people, there's not a lot of actual real examples out there.
I've seen a lot of people, looks like they're lying, to be honest.
So I think realistically, I think it's going to take you more time over that time frame
than what most people say.
I think that I would completely agree with you.
And I'd say, we are here on Bigger Pockets Money and you know, and you are the host of the
personal finance podcast because the right answer is to spend several years fixing your financial
foundation and building it to a strong position and then make highly leveraged investments into
things like real estate investment, your first home or a business, a small business,
for example.
And one thing I could say is if you are, say, for example, you're really anxious to get
started building a business or real estate investing. One key that you can do over this time frame
as you're starting these steps is learning how to do it during that time. That's one of the most
powerful things that you can invest in your time into is that knowledge. I remember before I started
real estate investing, I listened to the Bigger Pockets podcast. I listened to every single episode for
three straight years, went through all the forums. I was always on there all the time. And so I bought
every book, everything. And so I spent so many years just learning and understanding it so that once
I started, at least I had that baseline knowledge. Obviously, obviously there's a lot of
of things that happened in real estate investing where you have to learn by doing. But I had that
base nine knowledge and it saw so many different examples of mistakes that people made just by
listening to some of those episodes where it allowed me to actually have, you know, just more
more savvy when it came to investing in real estate. So I think that's one of the most powerful things
that you can do as you start to go through some of these steps. Love it. I think it's great.
Obviously, a big fan of bigger pockets here as well. I think that's a great use of time with
it. And I also want to point out that combining combined with that knowledge and that,
investment you made in your self-education, you also had a margin of safety with your
a six-month emergency reserve after completing steps, one through five here.
That's why you have the reserves in the first place. All these people who say, you know,
I don't have any, oh, my banker is demanding that I have six months reserves. Yeah, you want to
know why they want you to have that because they know that you don't have any experience
and they have experience. You can either be, learn from somebody else's mistakes or you can be
the mistake that somebody else learns from. Exactly. And you've named. You've
It's what that's a quote Warren Buffett had. I read a long time ago. I remember he said,
you know, you can make or you can learn from most people mistakes with something along those lines.
And so I've always taken that to heart and kind of listen and trying to learn from other people's
mistakes so that I don't make those same exact mistakes. There's a lot of the same mistakes that
are being made over and over again in real estate. And if you back to the bigger pockets forums,
biggerpockets.com slash forums, if you go in there and you read people will say, you know,
oh, my sister wants to rent from me. Should I rent to my sister?
Here's a thousand people saying don't rent to friends or family.
Do you know why they're saying that?
Because they rented to friends or family and it was a mistake.
Trust me, it's a mistake.
It's always a mistake.
Don't rent to friends or family.
You think it's going to be different for you.
It's not 100% of the time.
I can guarantee you it's going to end in a disaster and a ruined relationship.
Just make life easy and learn from somebody else's mistake.
Exactly.
And even I remember listening to podcasts, for example, with my first rental property and my first tenant
that I had in there, they said, hey, listen, I don't have enough money for the security deposit or my
last month's rent. But I remember reading through every single book and listening to the podcast
and how many things could happen if you actually went through that process. So just even little
things like that will help protect you in your finances by learning all that stuff. So it's really,
really important to have that knowledge ahead of time, especially with things like real estate,
buying boring businesses, all that kind of stuff. We really appreciate this discussion, Andrew.
Thank you for sharing the awesome steps that you have here for building wealth. We really
appreciate it. And where can people find out more about you? Sure. So you can check me out on the personal
finance podcast, whatever your favorite podcast player is. And if you want a PDF version of this,
we have it at mastermoney.com slash stairway to wealth where you can see it visually, if you're more
of a visual person when it comes to some of these steps or you just want to hold on to those
and so you can remember which steps go in what order. And we thank you guys so much for having me.
This was a really fun conversation. This was a lot of fun. Thank you, Andrew. And we will talk to you
soon. All right. That was Andrew. You know, Scott, I like his stairway to wealth because it's nine
steps. It's not six. And he's not telling you to save up a nominal amount. I really, really,
really love that step number one is create a cash buffer that is not an emergency reserve. It's just
to get you started. I love his thoughts on that. It's not $1,000. I really don't like the $1,000 emergency
reserve that Dave Ramsey suggests. I really like his lowest deductible or every, the average
American emergency is $2,400. Start there. But that's just a start. If having that much money
doesn't make you feel comfortable, increase it before you start on step two with it, which is the
match for your employer. What did you think of his nine step process, Scott? Yeah, I'm always immediately,
you know, kind of questioning of a, of a process for, for, for.
wealth building, right? You know, every, it's got to be predicated on who it's for, and I'm glad he
knows exactly who it's for, right? This kind of professional who wants to achieve financial independence,
but isn't in a complete mess, you know, starting from zero or whatever with that. So I think that's
really important because there's no one right answer to building wealth that depends on your
goals. And I love how he also acknowledges that once he gets past the, you know, the initial
hurdles there of an emergency reserve and a strong financial foundation, the options begin to multiply.
and there's lots of right answers, and the divergence between steps really depends on your financial goals.
So I think that it's a wonderful system for folks who are willing to invest more time, for example,
in studying this and be a little bit more aggressive than, for example, Dave Ramsey's Baby Steps,
and who know that they're going to have to make their own choices.
They can't just surrender themselves to the system and the order of operations like you can with Dave
Ravisie Baby Steps.
You have to actually think and have a plan and specific goals of that where you want it to go
afterwards. So I think that's a really powerful approach there. But I also think it's really
telling that, you know, I have yet to really come across folks who broadly disagree with the,
hey, get your financial house in order, pay off all your high interest rate debt, build an
emergency reserve, and then invest. Don't skip ahead to the, you know, try to make a billion dollars
overnight with some crazy investment thing here. It's get the foundation house.
set before making those big investments because those reserves and that financial
foundations, which you're going to lean back on over the course of decades as you build wealth.
Yes.
And I have come across people who disagree with that, but their argument doesn't hold water and
you can quickly ascertain that they don't know what they're talking about.
So everybody that I know that I respect as a financial person is saying the exact same
thing.
You have to have a firm foundation.
Otherwise, everything else is going to go to garbage.
Let's use that word.
There you go.
All right, Scott, should we get out of here?
Let's do it.
That wraps up this episode of the Bigger Pockets Money podcast.
He is Scott Trench and I am Indy Jensen saying so long, King Kong.
If you enjoyed today's episode, please give us a five-star review on Spotify or Apple.
And if you're looking for even more money content, feel free to visit our YouTube channel
at YouTube.com slash BiggerPockets Money.
Pockets Money was created by Mindy Jensen and Scott Trench, produced by Kaelin Bennett, editing by Exodus Media, copywriting by Nate Weintraub.
Lastly, a big thank you to the Bigger Pockets team for making this show possible.
