• anon6789
    link
    134 months ago

    The Bogleheads Guide to Investing was the thing that helped me the most. My family got me prepared for day to day finance, but nobody explained retirement savings to me.

    This book broke everything down into easy to understand terms, and made me feel comfortable investing wisely.

    The book used to be free online, but I don’t see it anymore. You could search up a PDF, or they have a really good wiki that covers most of it, but more briefly. Here is the Getting Started page.

  • atomic peach
    link
    fedilink
    114 months ago

    I’ve had a lot of success taking the rules that YNAB uses and applying to my own budgeting method. I recommend checking out Actual Budget if you’re capable of self-hosting and want a fancier software instead of a spreadsheet. The rules are key, though; pick a methodology/mindset you agree with and stick with it.

  • john
    link
    fedilink
    English
    74 months ago

    Honestly, everyone else has it spot on with the retirement advice. Even people that are north of $10M net worth follow that same advice.

    For personal day-to-day stuff I would recommend You Need A Budget.

    This is a fantastic way to keep a budget.

    • @SendMePhotos
      link
      24 months ago

      If you’re a student, you can get one year free.

    • Bakkoda
      link
      fedilink
      English
      14 months ago

      I’ve used YNAB forever. It’s the partner sync that makes it work but the price has become prohibitive. Honestly if you can find an app that syncs work a second device and utilizes a flexible envelope style system, give it a shot.

  • @MoonlightFox
    link
    5
    edit-2
    4 months ago

    Watch videos from these three and you will learn a lot:

    Ben Felix

    Plain Bagle

    Two Cents

    Avoid any youtubers that give advice on specific stocks to buy. All mentioned above are professionals, with different specialities within finance and personal finance.

    Also be very skeptical about cryptocurrencies. If you really want to invest in it, then consider a very low allocation. Maybe 1-2% of your net wealth. Most cryptocurrencies and projects are a scam. The youtubers I suggested do not promote crypto, or specific stocks.

    I am not a professional, so keep that in mind :)

  • @hungover_pilot
    link
    4
    edit-2
    4 months ago

    The book “I will teach you to be rich” has a great overview of how to best leverage credit cards, high yield savings accounts, setting up automatic investments, saving, and lots of other ‘good to know’ topics about money.

    For investing specifically I use the Boglehead method.

  • Nasko
    link
    34 months ago

    Starting to manage your personal finances using a dedicated software application will help you adopt healthy financial habits.

    I’d recommend this free and open-source personal finance application: MoneyManager Ex - https://moneymanagerex.org/

    It works on Windows, MacOS, Linux, and Android.

    Disclaimer: I’m not affiliated in any way. I’ve just been happy with the application for more than 7 years.

  • DominusOfMegadeus
    link
    fedilink
    3
    edit-2
    4 months ago

    I tried a few different things, and eventually settled on my own budgeting spreadsheet that I did in Apple numbers. I have tabs for each pay period, and I am working on having amounts automatically roll over to the next tab.

    EDIT: I tried YNAB and was tearing out my non-existent hair. What a non-intuitive cluster fuck of twisted logic.

    • Nasko
      link
      44 months ago

      What’s wrong with the Save button?

        • Nasko
          link
          14 months ago

          Oh, my bad - hadn’t noticed the ‘kbin’ part of your username.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    24 months ago

    Barefoot Investor was really good for my wife and I when we joined finances. Particularly having our own “splurge” accounts means we don’t need to ask each other before buying our own personal or frivolous things.