12/16/2025
50K a year on financial education sounds insane until you do the math.
Most people hear that number and immediately think it's a scam or nonsense...l get it
But l've watched this play out across thousands of entrepreneurs and the pattern is annoyingly consistent.
The ones spending the most on learning are the ones keeping the most of what they make.
Here's what bugs me about how we talk about financial education.
We celebrate someone dropping 80K on an MBA that teaches outdated case studies. We nod approvingly when someone spends 40K on a car that loses half its value in three years. But suggest spending money to learn how money actually works and suddenly you're being reckless.
The wealthy figured out something that a lot of people miss. A single tax strategy can return 3x to 10x what the education cost. One conversation about entity structure.
One depreciation technique you didn't know existed.
These aren't theoretical gains. They're money you were already losing that you get to stop losing.
I talked to a founder last month who learned one cost segregation strategy at a seminar that cost him 8K to attend. Saved him 90K in year one. He'll use that same knowledge every year for the rest of his career, meanwhile his neighbor is still just proud of the 0.5% he negotiated off his mortgage rate.
The math on knowledge is different from the math on money
Money grows at whatever rate the market decides, but knowledge doesn't work like that. You learn something about taxes, you apply it immediately, you keep more money starting now.
Not in 10 years. Now.
And it stacks. Every new thing you learn sits on top of everything you already know. Your second year of serious financial education builds on your first. By year five you're seeing opportunities that are invisible to people who stopped learning after their last required finance class in college.
What actually keeps people broke is the gap between what they earn and what they understand.
If you look at someone making 500k who doesn't understand tax strategy vs someone making 300K who spent years learning how to keep more of it, the person with a smaller salary might just end up with more money at the end of the year.
Where it can get uncomfortable to talk about is that the financial education industry has a lot of garbage in it, but the existence of bad options doesn't mean good options don't exist.
Stop asking "is this expensive?" & start asking "what's the cost of not knowing this?"
Because you're already paying that cost, you just can't see it on a statement