Updated
Updated · BuzzFeed · Jul 5
BuzzFeed Lists 27 Bad Money Tips, Warning Against 25% Card Balances
Updated
Updated · BuzzFeed · Jul 5

BuzzFeed Lists 27 Bad Money Tips, Warning Against 25% Card Balances

1 articles · Updated · BuzzFeed · Jul 5

Summary

  • BuzzFeed compiled 27 examples of widely repeated bad financial advice after a Reddit prompt asked users what money myths still persist.
  • Several entries targeted common misunderstandings: delaying saving when young, rejecting raises over tax-bracket fears, and carrying credit-card balances despite interest rates as high as 25%.
  • Other warnings focused on costly habits and products, including 96-month car loans, overspending on housing and delivery, gambling, crypto, extended warranties, and whole life insurance.
  • The list also argued that avoiding stock investing can be expensive, citing one example where $108,000 saved over 30 years grew to $171,000 in cash-like holdings versus $592,000 in the S&P 500.
  • Across the responses, the recurring message was that basic, disciplined choices—budgeting, saving early, understanding loans, and keeping steady employment—usually beat flashy shortcuts.

Insights

With financial stress affecting 83% of Americans, what is the single most overlooked habit for building long-term security?
As U.S. credit card debt hits $1.25 trillion, which common spending habit is most damaging to long-term wealth?
The 'trade-in treadmill' traps millions in car debt. What simple choices can consumers make to escape this costly cycle?