Quick Read
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The critical issue is savings rate, not income: a $200,000 earner saving 20% ($40,000/year) builds more wealth than a $500,000 earner saving 3% ($15,000/year), since the latter funds a lifestyle that requires $5-6 million in assets by retirement (10-12x final salary per Fidelity guidelines) but saves like someone earning $100,000.
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High earners trap themselves through lifestyle creep by failing to redirect raises into retirement accounts (most max only a Roth IRA at $7,500 when they could shelter up to $72,000 in combined 2026 contributions) and rationalizing spending on upgrades, with U.S. personal savings falling from $1.33 trillion to $942.3 billion as disposable income rose.
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If you’re focused on picking the right stocks and ETFs you may be missing the bigger picture: retirement income. That is exactly what The Definitive Guide to Retirement Income was created to solve, and it’s free today. Read more here
On a recent episode of the Money Guy Show titled Even Smart People Make These Massive Money Mistakes, co-host Bo Hanson delivered the line that should be taped to every high earner’s bathroom mirror: “Just because you can doesn’t mean you always should”, his framing for decisions about upgrading houses, cars, and lifestyle. He was reacting to a Goldman Sachs finding that 40% of Americans earning more than $500,000 a year report living paycheck to paycheck.
If you make a quarter of what those households earn and assume the income gap solves everything, that statistic should rearrange your thinking. The stakes are simple: a paycheck-to-paycheck life on $500,000 is a future retirement collapse, because the lifestyle you build today is the lifestyle you have to fund for 25 or 30 years after the paychecks stop.
The verdict: the Money Guy rule is correct, and the math is brutal
Hanson and Brian Preston are right. Their core defense, that your savings rate must increase along with your income, is the only mechanic that prevents lifestyle creep from converting a high salary into a high-pressure trap.
If you’re focused on picking the right stocks and ETFs you may be missing the bigger picture: retirement income. That is exactly what The Definitive Guide to Retirement Income was created to solve, and it’s free today. Read more here
Here is the math most high earners never run. Fidelity’s retirement guideline is 10x your final salary saved by age 67 to maintain your lifestyle, and 12x if you want to travel extensively in retirement. A household earning $500,000 that wants to keep living like a household earning $500,000 needs roughly $5 million in invested assets at retirement. To travel, closer to $6 million.
Now layer in Preston’s warning. He describes the classic trap: someone starts saving, maxes out a Roth IRA at $7,500, then the income goes up and they never change their savings. On a $500,000 salary, a maxed Roth IRA is a savings rate of roughly 2%. That is a rounding error masquerading as a retirement plan.
Compare it to what the tax code actually lets a high earner shelter. The 2026 standard 401(k) contribution limit is $24,500, with an $8,000 catch-up for workers 50 to 59 and 64-plus, and an $11,250 super catch-up for ages 60 to 63. Total combined employee and employer contributions can reach $72,000 in 2026. The runway exists. Most $500,000 earners simply do not use it.
The variable that flips the outcome: savings rate, not income
The single factor that decides whether high income builds wealth or builds a cage is the percentage of every raise that goes to savings before it touches your checking account.
Run two scenarios. Earner A pulls in $500,000 and saves 3%, or $15,000 a year. Earner B pulls in $200,000 and saves 20%, or $40,000 a year. Earner B is socking away more in absolute dollars and building a retirement number tied to a far cheaper lifestyle. Earner A is funding a $500,000 lifestyle with a savings habit that would not maintain a $100,000 one.
The national picture confirms how rare disciplined saving has become. The U.S. personal savings rate sat at 4% in the first quarter of 2026, down from 6% two years earlier. Over that stretch, disposable income climbed while total personal savings fell from $1.33 trillion to $942.3 billion. Americans across every income tier are spending raises faster than they earn them.
Preston’s framing nails the psychology. He notes that “wherever we are in our socioeconomic status, we always want to compare up”. The neighbor with the bigger boat is always there. So is the rationalization Hanson flags, “I’m a car person,” “I value experiences,” “this house is an investment”, each one a permission slip to spend the raise instead of saving it.
What to actually do this week
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Calculate your true savings rate. Divide every dollar going to retirement accounts, taxable brokerage, and principal paydown by your gross income. If the number starts with a 1 or a 0, you are the statistic.
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Pre-commit the next raise. Tell your payroll system to push at least half of any salary increase straight into your 401(k) before it ever hits your paycheck.
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Set the contribution to the legal max. For 2026 that is $24,500 under 50, $32,500 ages 50 to 59, and $35,750 ages 60 to 63.
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Multiply your current annual spending by 25. That is the rough nest egg you need. If the number scares you, your lifestyle, not your income, is the problem.
The Money Guy guys are right about the core mechanic. A high income only builds wealth if your savings rate climbs with it. Otherwise you are just renting a more expensive version of paycheck-to-paycheck.
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Most investors spend years learning how to pick good stocks and funds. Far fewer have a clear plan for turning those investments into a reliable retirement paycheck. The truth is, the transition from “building wealth” to “living on wealth” is one of the most overlooked risks facing successful investors in their 50s, 60s and 70s.
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