How to break bad money habits, from financial psychologist

If you want to make better money decisions but you feel like you’re stuck in a rut, don’t beat yourself up, says Charles Chaffin, co-founder of the Financial Psychology Institute and a professor at Iowa State University. It’s natural to do what’s familiar.

“We’re inherently lazy — we call it status quo bias,” he says. “Basically, we don’t want to make big changes. It’s just how our brains are wired from 100,000 years ago.”

That means you’re likely to continue spending and saving and investing the way you always have, even if an overhaul help you get closer to reaching your financial goals.

To overcome this bias and get better at managing money, he says, set up systems that add a layer of difficulty to the things you shouldn’t be doing. Then you make the positive habits you want to add seamless. Here’s how.

‘Make it tougher’ to spend money and easier to save

Keep specific goals in mind

No matter how serious you are about saving more or spending less, none of your habits are going to stick unless you’re clear about what you hope to accomplish with your money, says Chaffin.

“Without goals, all of these things relative to friction are meaningless,” he says. “Whereas if you have some goals identified, you can start to think about eliminating some of the frictions that come into play.”

The more specific your goals, the more likely you are to adhere to better financial habits. If you say you hope to save $5,000, you may get halfway through and decide you’re better off spending it, Chaffin says. “If I say, ‘I need $5,000 to go to Hawai’i by the end of the year,’ I’m more likely to reach that goal than if it were just an arbitrary number.”

Remember: you can’t do anything to change money habits that don’t work for you if you’re not willing to address the problem. Chaffin recommends checking in on your finances regularly to examine where you’re succeeding and where you’re coming up short.

The more you avoid reckoning with your money habits, the worse things will get, he says.

“People who are money avoidant tend to have terrible issues, because they don’t want to look at it,” he says. “If you’re looking at it, and you’re focused on it, you’re more likely to change your behaviors to be consistent with what your goals are.”

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