What you should be doing with your money mostly depends on where you’re at in your career and life.
Consider convenience fees and interest before you change the way you pay your landlord. They could erase any credit card rewards.
Thirty-six states require students to take a personal finance course to graduate. We visit classrooms to learn how it works.
The envelope budgeting method combines nostalgia with Instagram-worthy aesthetics, and a desire to get better at personal finance.
Plus, we meet the team’s pets and learn how to code switch as a billionaire in this week’s newsletter.
Plus: What we’re doing with the last of our summer produce and “day in the life” TikToks about life at NPR
Plus, financial educator Sahirenys Pierce defends her splurge and more in this week’s This Is Uncomfortable Newsletter.
Plus, comedian Josh Gondelman defends his splurge in this week’s “This Is Uncomfortable” newsletter.
thirty five states now require these courses — 12 more than two years ago, according to a new survey.
Consumers’ plans for spending on fun edge out everyday essentials and big-ticket items, according to a survey from the New York Fed.