
ChooseFI | Financial Independence Podcast
Jonathan & Brad explore the world of Financial Independence. They discuss reducing expenses, crushing debt, building passive income streams through online businesses and real estate. How to pay off debt, Crush your grocery bill and travel the world for free. No topic is too big or small as long as it speeds up the process of reaching financial independence.
Episodes
605 | Retire in Less Than 10 Years
At 21, Cody Berman appeared on ChooseFI as a college student discovering financial independence. Three years later, he retired at 26. Now 30 with a $5 million net worth, he's back to reveal exactly how he compressed a decades-long journey into a three-year sprint—and why the same principles work whether you're 25 or 55. The Journey from 22 to FI at 26 00:05:30 Cody's path to financial independence
604 | Getting Personal With Personal Finance: Bill Yount
Bill Yount reached financial independence at 60—then froze. His financial advisor confirmed 100% security, yet instead of relief, he felt disoriented fog. The emergency medicine physician who transformed from YOLO spender to 40% saver now struggles with a question that haunts many late starters: if I'm financially free, why can't I leave? Key Topics Discussed 00:05:30 The Wake-Up Call: From YOLO t
603 | 603: Crash Proof: The Science Of Stock Market Resilience | Brian Feroldi
The stock market crashes about once every three years—at least a 20% drop. Most investors panic and sell. But if you understood why markets always recover, you'd do the opposite. Brian Feroldi reveals three mechanical forces that guarantee long-term market resilience, transforming market crashes from terrifying events into predictable opportunities. Key Topics Discussed Introduction to Market Resi
602 | FI 201 Beyond FI Basics: Asset Allocation & Market Psychology Mastery
Most investors lose to the market because they're trying to pick winners in a game where only 4% of stocks have created 100% of market wealth over the past century. The math isn't in your favor—but there's a simpler path that is. Key Topics Discussed Introduction to FI 201 (00:00:00) Jonathan introduces the concept of Financial Independence 201, explaining how it builds on FI 101 to help individua
601 | Travel Rewards 101 | Devon Gimbel from Point Me to First Class
Devon Gimbel just booked over $250,000 in travel last year using credit card points—but she's the first to tell you award travel isn't "free." It's a strategy for 10x-ing your existing travel budget by strategically matching your routine spending to the right credit cards. Since ChooseFI's original Travel Rewards 101 in 2017, the landscape has matured: annual fees are higher, issuer rules are stri
600 | FI 101: Teaching Financial Independence to Your Community
A dead local meetup group attracted just 5 people to its first gathering at a brewery. Two years later, that same group draws 70+ attendees to structured educational sessions, with newcomers driving across multiple states to participate. The transformation reveals something most personal finance education gets fundamentally wrong. Introduction and St. Louis Group Overview [00:00:00] Jonathan and B
599 | ABLE Accounts: Major Update | Brynne Conroy
Brynne Conroy joins to discuss 529A ABLE accounts and massive new changes that nearly double eligibility for these accounts for those with disabilities.
598 | Deep Dive Hot Seat with Brad and Ginger
Ginger asks Brad a series of hard hitting questions on life and FI.
597 | What if Your FI Life Started Tomorrow? | Adam Coelho | Ep 597
Adam Coelho stood on stage presenting to Google's CEO at a leadership conference, the culmination of his 14-year career training thousands of Googlers in mindfulness and emotional intelligence. One week later, he was placed on a performance improvement plan—the corporate equivalent of being told your time is up. His story reveals a fundamental truth about financial independence that most people mi
596 | Mistakes Were Made
Even financially independent people have lost fortunes to bad investments, high-fee funds, and speculation. Brad Barrett, Alan Donegan, and Katie Donegan lay bare their most expensive mistakes—from Alan's 90% dot-com crash loss to Katie's near-£1 million fee trap to Brad's decade-long real estate nightmare—proving that catastrophic errors don't prevent you from reaching FI if you learn the right l
595 | Value Matrix Case Study Series: Part 2 — Required Bloat
Most people trying to slash their budget hunt for obvious waste—daily lattes, unused subscriptions, impulse purchases. But what happens when you've already cut the fat and your highest expenses are the ones you can't seem to touch: the mortgage, the car payment, the daycare bill? That's required bloat, and it's quietly inflating your FI number by hundreds of thousands of dollars. Key Topics Discus
594 | Travel Rewards Deep Dive with Noah
Episode 45: Maximizing Travel Rewards with Financial Independence In this episode of ChooseFI, Brad Barrett and travel rewards expert Noah G. dive into the world of travel rewards, focusing on maximizing points to achieve financial independence and nearly free vacations. They discuss the value of points, strategies for their redemption, and introduce tools to optimize travel savings, offering prac
593 | Book Club: 'Goodbye, Things' with Liz Gets Loaded | Ep 593
Episode Show Notes Episode Summary Ginger and Liz from Liz Gets Loaded explore Fumio Sasaki's book, "Say Goodbye to Things," discussing the principles of minimalism and their impact on emotional well-being and lifestyle choices. They share personal insights and practical tips on downsizing and living a more intentional life. Key Topics Discussed Introduction to Minimalism Definition and Principles
592 | Value Matrix Case Study Series: Part 1 — Leaky Budget
Episode Show Notes Episode Summary In this episode, Jonathan Mendonsa and Brad Barrett introduce the Value Matrix, a tool that maps spending to life satisfaction. They analyze four real spending profiles to show how different approaches can affect financial independence. Learn how aligning expenses with personal values can transform your financial journey. Key Topics Discussed Introduction to the
591 | Parent Like a Millionaire Without Being One
Episode Show Notes Episode Summary Brad Barrett chats with Kristy Shen and Bryce Leung about their new book, Parent Like a Millionaire Without Being One. This episode delves into effective financial strategies for parenting while advancing towards financial independence, debunking myths about the high costs associated with raising children. Key Topics Discussed Misconceptions about the cost of rai
590 | Building An Extraordinary Life Through FI
In this special episode from Richmond's FI event, uncover insights on how fear impacts our journey toward financial independence. Learn to identify trust signals, experiment with new income ideas, and instill financial literacy into family life. Discover what it takes to live an extraordinary life and inspire future generations.
589 | How to Gain Insights from Your Expense Audit Using a Value Matrix
Most people think they know where their money goes each month… but when they actually run an expense audit, they find hundreds—sometimes thousands—of dollars quietly leaking out of their budget. Today we’re walking through how to run a simple expense audit, how to find those leaks, and how to use a “value matrix” to decide what’s worth keeping—and what’s quietly draining your life and your wallet.
588 | Navigating the Evolving Health Insurance Landscape
Cody Garrett provides an in-depth analysis of the changing landscape of health insurance in the U.S., focusing on the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and adjustments to premium tax credits. He emphasizes the critical role that zip codes play in determining healthcare costs and highlights the importance of understanding the 400% federal poverty level cliff, which poses financial risks for many families.
587 | We’re Going to Be Millionaires — Now How Do I Tell My Spouse? | Andy Hill
Most people think "Coast FI" means coasting into retirement—but Andy Hill discovered it meant something entirely different: coasting through life while your investments do the heavy lifting. Eight years ago, Andy appeared on ChooseFI struggling to get his wife Nicole on the same financial page. Today, they're mortgage-free, working part-time by choice, and have transformed their marriage through a
586 | How to Do an Expense Audit
Most people chase financial independence through side hustles and raises. Brad and Jonathan flip that equation: audit your expenses first, then watch your FI date accelerate without earning another dollar. They walk through a structured four-step framework for conducting annual expense audits that help you identify money leaks and understand your true living costs. The discussion covers practical
585 | Getting to the Boring Middle: What You Need in Place First
Most people think financial independence is a straight line from broke to retired—it isn't. Progress compounds daily in ways you won't notice if you're only looking at your net worth spreadsheet. Brad and Jonathan break down why the "boring middle" is actually a spectrum of expanding options, not a slog to endure. They walk through the early phases of FI—discovery, awareness, and control—and why u
584 | Goal Setting for 2026
A 70% savings rate while buying a house? One listener proves it's possible — and their story is just one of many that'll make you rethink your 2026 financial plans. Brad and Jonathan turn over the mic to the community in this mashup episode, featuring listeners who called in with their goals, pivots, and breakthroughs for the year ahead. From creating local FI meetups to engineering a career trans
583 | A Table of Contents for FI: Part 2 — The Detour is the Journey
Most people think they'll be "done" learning about financial independence in a few months—then wonder why they're still obsessed years later. Brad and Jonathan confront this paradox head-on: if you can absorb 80% of FI fundamentals in weeks, why does the conversation stay wildly entertaining? Because the real value isn't the destination—it's the detours. Financial independence isn't just about hit
582 | A Table of Contents for FI: Part 1
Most people treat financial independence like a destination—a magic number to hit before life gets good. But what if the pursuit itself is where the real value lies? Jonathan and Brad challenge the "mythical number" mindset by exploring incremental gains—small, compounding changes that reshape your financial life long before you reach full independence. They dig into the concept of a "red X month,
581 | Are Roth Conversions Necessary?
Most people rushing to convert their traditional IRAs to Roth accounts have never stopped to ask whether they actually need to. Brad sits down with tax experts Sean Mullaney and Cody Garrett to cut through the Roth conversion hype and explain when these moves make sense—and when they're just expensive mistakes. Understanding the distinction between taxable Roth conversions and backdoor or mega bac
580 | 2026 Goals: Why This Year Everything Changes
Slashing $100 from your monthly budget shrinks your FI target by $30,000. Brad and Jonathan explore how small financial wins compound into life-changing freedom, and why 2026 marks a shift toward deeper community connection. The hosts kick off the year by introducing a new community app designed to help listeners share goals, celebrate frugal victories, and learn from each other's financial experi
579 | 2025 Biggest Takeaways with Ginger
One conversation stopped host Ginger in her tracks: Frank Vasquez's simple rule about only traveling when there's someone meaningful at the destination. It wasn't revolutionary advice—just an offhand comment—but weeks later, she's still thinking about it, questioning her own choices. That's the hallmark of a truly sticky idea. As the year winds down, Brad and Ginger reflect on which guest insights
578 | Year End Wins 2025
Watching someone hit Coast FI mid-career changes everything about how they view work. Brad and Ginger read listener wins from the past year, celebrating community members who maxed out retirement accounts, switched careers, helped family through financial crises, and redefined what success means to them. Many share breakthroughs in simplifying their lives, using travel rewards to create memory div
577 | Health and Fitness Update Plus 'Are Organic Foods Worth It?' with Dr. Bobby
Most Americans spend thousands extra on organic food assuming it's healthier — but what if you're optimizing the wrong metric? Dr. Bobby Dubois breaks down the cost-benefit analysis showing that a family's organic grocery premium could fund an entire gym membership instead. Brad Barrett shares updates on his health journey, detailing a machine-based workout routine he calls "brutally effective" —
576 | Raising FI‑Minded Kids: What Really Works | 15-Year-Old Rishi Vamdatt
A 15-year-old has produced over 1,000 personal finance videos and started investing at age seven. Rishi's story proves financial literacy doesn't require decades of experience—it requires the right mindset and early exposure. He began his finance journey at six after his parents read a book that sparked his curiosity, leading him to create Easy Peasy Finance, a YouTube channel dedicated to making
575 | Breaking the Golden Handcuffs with 5 Kids
Walking away from $147,000 a year sounds insane — unless you've built something better. Sunny Burns did exactly that, leaving his government engineering job seven months ago to spend full days with his family of seven. Now 35 and financially independent with a $3 million net worth, he's turned his New Jersey home into a cash machine: rent it out on Airbnb while traveling, pocket more than the trip
574 | Top Five Regrets of the Dying (Book Club with Frank Vasquez and Ginger)
You don't become wiser by studying what worked — you become wiser by studying what failed. Most people chase happiness by asking "What should I do?" but Bronnie Ware flipped the question: she asked the dying what they wished they had done. Ginger and Frank Vasquez walk through Ware's The Top Five Regrets of the Dying, a book that captures the raw confessions of people at life's final turn. The reg
573 | Cognitive Behavioral Tools for FI
Most people think financial independence is about money. It isn't. Clinical psychologist Jasper Lee makes the case that 90-95% of the FI journey is psychological—the mechanics of money are just 5-10%. In this conversation with Brad Barrett, Lee unpacks the mental frameworks that either accelerate or sabotage your financial progress, focusing on two powerful tools from cognitive behavioral therapy:
572 | Bias Towards Action: The Adventure List(s)
Tracking hundreds of life experiences sounds ambitious until you hear Emily W's simple system—and realize you've been overthinking adventure. Emily W and Emily C share practical frameworks for building richer friendships and more memorable experiences. They outline the "adventure list"—a flexible tool for capturing everything from weekend outings to dream trips—and reveal four distinct levels of t
571 | Getting Personal with Personal Finance: Maggie Tucker
Most people achieve financial independence and feel instant relief. Maggie Tucker felt paralyzing fear instead. At 41, after leaving a lucrative career to retire early, she found herself obsessing over worst-case scenarios—what if she ran out of money, what if she regretted walking away, what if she'd made a catastrophic mistake? Her solution wasn't to ignore these fears or push through them. She
570 | State of the Stock Market Q&A
The S&P 500 just notched its third consecutive year of double-digit gains, pushing valuations near a 25-year high — yet market veteran Brian Feroldi isn't hitting the panic button. In this deep-dive, Brad sits down with Brian to dissect where the market stands heading into the end of 2025, why sustained growth at this pace defies historical precedent, and how Brian is personally navigating the ten
569 | Always Come Back to the Why
Financial independence isn't about becoming the richest person in the graveyard — it's about designing a life worth living right now. Brad Barrett sits down with Katie and Alan Donegan from Rebel Finance School to explore the often-overlooked foundation of the FI journey: your "why." The discussion ranges from monthly finance meetings and intentional spending to the vulnerability required to build
568 | The FiiRE Framework
Most people think FIRE is about cutting expenses and index funds. Paula Pant flips that script with her F-double-I-R-E framework—starting with the one thing traditional personal finance ignores: your psychological relationship with money. Paula Pant, host of Afford Anything, introduces her F-double-I-R-E framework: Financial Psychology, Increasing Your Income, Investing, Real Estate, and Entrepren
567 | Are We Taking the Wrong Risks?
Most financial independence seekers are winning at money but losing at life—and they don't even realize it. Chris Hutchins and Brad Barrett challenge the FI community's obsession with safety, exploring whether the real risk isn't running out of money, but running out of time to enjoy it. The conversation centers on a provocative premise: those pursuing 100% certainty in their withdrawal rates are,
566 | Risk-Based Guardrails for Retirement Drawdown
If you've mentally locked yourself into one rigid FI number and one fixed withdrawal rate for the rest of your life, you're doing it wrong. That's the realization Brad Barrett had after nine years of hosting this podcast — and it came from Aubrey Williams, a financial advisor and longtime ChooseFI community member. In his presentation at CampFI, Aubrey introduced a more dynamic approach: using his
565 | Tax Planning To and Through Early Retirement
Most early retirees worry they'll face crushing tax bills — yet thousands are legally paying zero federal income tax in retirement. Cody Garrett and Sean Mullaney, co-authors of Tax Planning To and Through Early Retirement, walk through how understanding the drawdown process and effective tax rates can transform retirement planning from fear-driven to evidence-based. Understanding the Drawdown Pro
564 | FI Back to Basics | Jackie Cummings Koski
Most people think saving $100 a month barely makes a dent in their retirement plans. Jackie Cummings Koski, certified financial planner and author of F.I.R.E. for Dummies, shows how that same $100 can slash your FI target by $30,000—a leverage most investors completely overlook. Jackie returns after five years to break down the fundamental principles of financial independence (FI) and early retire
563 | Safe Withdrawal Rates, Drawdown Strategies, RMDs and 50 Year FI Timelines
The 4% rule might be dead—but not for the reason you think. New research suggesting a 5.5% safe withdrawal rate has been making waves in the FI community, and it sounds like great news for early retirees. The problem? The math doesn't hold up when you're planning for a 50-year retirement instead of 30. Brad introduces a new ChooseFI feature where community questions get answered by financial indep
562 | Navigating Financial Conflicts in Relationships
Most people worry their retirement money is "trapped" until age 59½. It's not — and understanding why could reshape your entire FI strategy. Brad and Ginger tackle asset flexibility, breaking down how to think about taxable versus Roth versus traditional accounts and when each makes sense for your timeline. This episode emerged from listener questions after the recent middle-class trap discussion,
561 | Mini-Retirements: Test Driving Financial Independence
Most people plan for retirement like it's an on-off switch—decades of grinding followed by one big leap into the unknown. But what if you've never practiced living without work? Jillian Johnsrud, author of Retire Often, challenges this all-or-nothing approach by introducing a framework that's gaining traction in the FI community: mini retirements. These aren't sabbaticals to binge Netflix or catch
560 | Living Off the 4% Rule | Marla Taner
Marla Tanner reached financial independence in 2013 and has lived off the 4% rule ever since — through bull markets, bear markets, and a global pandemic. She recently ran the numbers on both her actual experience and a worst-case scenario retirement starting at the peak before 2008. Both outcomes? More than comfortable. Her journey challenges the anxiety many savers face when it's time to flip the
559 | Zero-Based Everything: FI, Travel, and the Art of Starting Fresh | Katie & Alan Donegan
Most people obsess over net worth. Katie and Alan Donegan calculate something entirely different: their freedom fund. Joined by Brad, the trio unpacks five and a half years of full-time travel, the psychological trap of dividend investing, and why zero-based thinking—"Knowing what I know now, would I choose this again?"—has become their most powerful decision-making tool. Katie and Alan share hard
558 | Designing an Intentional Life | Tim Ferriss
Tim Ferriss didn't design a card game to make money—he did it because most games today actively prevent the kind of connection that matters. Brad Barrett sits down with the author of The 4-Hour Workweek and host of The Tim Ferriss Show, exploring how the principles of financial independence intersect with something most people overlook: what you actually do with your freedom once you have it. Tim
557 | It's Big, But Is It Beautiful? Let's Talk About It
Congress just made early retirement cheaper—if you know which levers to pull. Tax expert Sean Mullaney joins Brad to break down the One Big Beautiful Bill and its surprisingly generous implications for the FI community. The law permanently extends current tax rates and increases the standard deduction, giving early retirees more planning certainty. Instead of facing a significant tax hike when pre
556 | Mailbag: Bond Funds, Roth Conversions, Advanced FI Strategies, Solo 401k and Backdoor Roth
Most people think bonds are the "safe" part of their portfolio — until interest rates spike and their bond fund drops 15%. Brad and Rachael Camp, a Certified Financial Planner, cut through the confusion in this mailbag episode covering bonds, Roth IRA conversions, pensions, and inheritance strategies. Timestamps and Key Topics 00:01:10 - Introduction to Bonds 00:03:15 - Bonds vs. Bond Funds 00:24:
555 | Are You Over-Optimizing? | Jesse Cramer
Most people spend more time planning a vacation than analyzing how their financial decisions ripple through their entire life. Jesse Kramer, a relationship manager at a financial planning firm and host of the Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors podcast, sits down with Brad Barrett to challenge that approach. Financial planning isn't a linear checklist — it's a web where tugging one thread can
554 | From Poverty to Semi-Retired | Kristen Knapp
Kristen Knapp grew up in poverty, hit a $0 net worth at 35, and thought she'd never retire. Now she's traveling the world part-time and leading group trips for the FI community. Her path didn't follow the typical script — no high-powered tech job, no frugal-from-birth origin story — just a relentless refusal to repeat her parents' financial struggles and a willingness to figure it out as she went.
553 | Deep Dive: Putting the Middle-Class Trap to Bed
Most people in the FI community have this completely backward: those retirement accounts you think are "trapping" you? They're actually your fastest path to freedom. Brad Barrett and CFP® Cody Garrett dismantle the so-called middle-class trap through four concrete case studies, showing why this perceived barrier exists only in our heads—not in our finances. The discussion examines how psychologica
552 | Unraveling Your Relationship with Money | Shannah Game
Most people think managing money is about spreadsheets and willpower—but what if your biggest financial obstacle is a story you've been telling yourself since childhood? Shannah Game, a certified financial planner and author of Unraveling Your Relationship with Money, reveals that personal finance is 90% psychology and emotion, not just numbers and logic. She explores how money trauma affects anyo
551 | Roundup: Buy vs. Rent, Mortgage Amortization, Minimalism and More
Most mortgage payoff advice treats it like a pure math problem—but Ginger's story proves emotions matter just as much. When she shares her excitement about paying off her mortgage early, Brad pushes back with the numbers, sparking a candid back-and-forth on whether a 15-year or 30-year mortgage makes more sense, whether renting beats owning for flexibility, and how to avoid overspending while chas
550 | Getting Personal with Personal Finance: Meghan & Ginger
Most people obsess over whether they're savers or spenders—Meghan Combs thinks that's a trap. Ginger sits down with the Everyday FI podcast host to unpack her $527,000 net worth, a sub-$10,000 wedding, and why locking into a fixed money identity might be holding you back more than helping you move forward. Meghan shares her approach to budgeting after getting married, emphasizing alignment between
548 | FI Service Corps
A former CPA walked away from steady paychecks in 2023 to launch an organization that didn't exist yet — one that would blend financial independence with hands-on volunteering. Ryan Brennan, founder of the FI Service Corps, is betting that the FI community is hungry for more than meetups and spreadsheets: they want connection and the chance to give back, together. Ryan's background as a CPA gave h
549 | Deep Dive: Taxable Brokerage Accounts
Most early retirees obsess over 401(k)s and IRAs — but they're ignoring the account that might actually matter most. Brad and Cody Garrett, CFP®, tackle the taxable brokerage account, the "most underappreciated account type" in the financial independence toolkit. While everyone chases tax-deferred contributions, taxable accounts offer something equally powerful: unlimited contributions, zero withd
547 | The Simple Path Revisited in 2025 With JL Collins
Most personal finance books promise you'll need decades of complex strategies to build wealth. JL Collins made millions by saying the opposite. Brad Barrett sits down with the author whose Simple Path to Wealth has sold over a million copies and become the blueprint for an entire movement. Collins reveals why his strategy—avoid debt, live below your means, invest in low-cost index funds—has remain
546 | Sleep Masterclass with Dr. Bobby
Dr. Bobby DuBois returns to discuss the essential role of sleep in achieving financial independence and enhancing overall health. He addresses the worrying trend of sleep deprivation among Americans and its significant consequences on heart health, weight management, and cognitive functionality. This episode is filled with evidence-based insights and practical strategies aimed at prioritizing slee
545 | Tax-Efficient Withdrawal Strategies for Early Retirement
Most people think retirement account withdrawals come with a massive tax hit—but with a few strategic moves, you can reduce your lifetime tax burden by six figures or more. Brad Barrett and tax pro Rachael Camp break down how different account types—taxable brokerage, traditional IRAs, and 401ks—are taxed, and how to time your withdrawals to keep more money in your pocket. The conversation zeroes
544 | Roundup | Zero-Based Thinking: How to Rethink Your Life Choices
Food is the second largest expense category for most households — but how much of yours ends up in the trash? Brad and Ginger tackle listener questions on everything from mindful grocery spending and travel rewards strategies to building muscle without misery and maximizing the real ROI of FI events. Chapters 00:00:00 - Introduction to Events 00:02:02 - Highlights from the Economy Conference Ginge
543 | Is the Middle-Class Trap Something to Worry About? | Mindy Jensen
The financial independence community recently ignited over a single phrase: "the middle-class trap." Mindy from BiggerPockets Money coined it to describe people who look wealthy on paper—substantial home equity, healthy retirement accounts—yet feel anything but free. Chris Mamula from Can I Retire Yet? pushed back, arguing the concept might mislead more than it helps. Brad Barrett brings them both
542 | Mastering Tax Strategies: How to Optimize Your Path to Financial Independence
Starting at 35 cuts your runway to retirement in half compared to starting at 25. Does that make financial independence impossible? Not even close—and the real question isn't about your age, it's about the tax strategy you're using right now. Brad and Sean Mulaney tackle listener questions about tax basketing, asset location, and retirement account optimization. The conversation covers how to mini
541 | Getting Personal with Personal Finance: Vicki Robin & Ginger
Financial independence isn't just about early retirement—it's about preparing for the parts of life we're taught not to discuss. Vicki Robin, author of Your Money or Your Life, joins Ginger to explore the myths, isolation, and unexpected challenges of aging—and how building community now determines your quality of life later. The conversation confronts the loneliness many older individuals face, t
540 | Breaking the Mold: How Lexi Redefined Her Financial Goals with ChooseFI
Most people think teachers can't build wealth—but what if chasing homeownership was the real trap? Lexi, a first-grade teacher from Las Vegas, discovered that letting go of her single financial goal opened doors she never knew existed. After watching the COVID housing market boom price her out, she pivoted: invested in a master's degree, discovered high-yield savings accounts that actually worked
539 | Rebelutionaries: Stages of FI | Katie & Alan Donegan
Most people spend their entire financial journey waiting—waiting to have enough money, waiting for the perfect moment to invest, waiting to feel ready to quit a job they've outgrown. Katie and Alan Donegan decided to set that mindset to music. After receiving British Empire medals for their work in financial education, they created "Money Revolution," the world's first FI-themed album that turns t
538 | Coast FI Masterclass | The Fioneers
At age 31, Jess and Corey discovered they needed only $245,000 invested to retire by 62 — and suddenly, aggressive saving became optional. The Fioneers, who brought CoastFI into mainstream FI discourse, discuss making the psychological leap from high savings rates to actually living the flexibility they'd planned for years. They walk through experimenting with purposeful spending on camper van adv
537 | Navigating the Path to FI: Bill Powell's Blue Collar Journey from Debt to Empowerment
Bill Powell clawed his way out of credit card debt on a blue-collar income and reached financial independence — no six-figure salary required. Community member Bill Powell shares how he went from deep in credit card debt to years away from FI while working in the trades. He walks through the accountability practices that kept him on track — weekly email check-ins, journaling, and mentorship — and
536 | Getting Personal with Personal Finance: Ron & Ginger
Ron Babcock thought he had to choose between financial security and doing what he loved—until he realized the two could work together. A TV editor and stand-up comedian, Ron brings an unconventional perspective to financial independence, blending creative work with deliberate money management. He shares how discovering the FI community ended his isolation, why he prioritizes long-term thinking ove
535 | The Top 10 Ten Investing Mistakes We All Make
Most investors — even sophisticated ones tracking every basis point — leave real money on the table through simple oversight. Cody Garrett, CFP® at Measure Twice Money, recently outlined ten mistakes that trip up DIY investors and financial advisors alike. Brad and Cody walk through each one, from asset location missteps to overlooked HSA opportunities, with a focus on making optimization practica
534 | Inherited Accounts, Barista FI, and Saving When Starting a Business
You have $750,000 saved and desperately want to quit your soul-crushing job — but can you actually withdraw from that money right now? Brad Barrett and financial planner Rachael Camp tackle this listener question alongside Coast FI calculations, the Secure Act's 10-year inheritance bomb for non-spouse beneficiaries, and whether entrepreneurial spending counts as "real" investing. Timestamps & Key
533 | Getting Personal with Personal Finance: Brad & Ginger
Brad Barrett built one of the most respected voices in financial independence—then watched his marriage fall apart. That paradox sits at the heart of this conversation, where Ginger pushes Brad to go beyond the optimized spreadsheets and tactical wins to confront what happens when life doesn't follow the FI script. This is Brad's story, eight years into hosting ChooseFI, reflecting on the personal
532 | Opening the Aperture: Dreaming Big About Financial Independence
Ten years ago, Jonathan walked away from his corporate accounting job with no clear path forward. Today, he's reflecting on the decade that followed—one shaped entirely by pursuing financial independence and the options it created. Brad and Jonathan kick off 2025 with a new "Wouldn't It Be Cool If" (WIBSF) series, starting with the most fundamental question: what could your life look like if finan
531 | 2025 State of the Stock Market | Brian Feroldi
The top 10 companies in the S&P 500 now control 39% of the entire index—an all-time high. Brad Barrett sits down with Brian Feroldi, ChooseFI's go-to stock market expert, to break down what 2024's 25% gain really means and whether investors should expect the same in 2025. Review of 2024 Market Performance [00:00:44] The S&P 500 saw a 25% increase in 2024, following a 26% rise in 2023. 20%+ returns
530 | The FI Case for Electric Vehicles
Chris Terrell has owned two electric vehicles in under two years and saved over $8,000 on fuel by charging at home. His experience challenges the assumption that EVs are either too expensive or too limiting—and his analysis breaks down exactly when an EV makes financial sense. Brad and Chris Terrell examine the real costs and benefits of EV ownership from a financial independence lens. Chris share
529 | Getting Personal With Personal Finance Laura And Ginger
Most people who retire early either hate their jobs or plan to pivot to something easier. At 51, associate professor Laura is walking away from a career defining genetic research — and wrestling with who she'll be when the lab coat comes off. Laura shares her experiences balancing the relentless pressure of grant-funded academia with raising two sons, detailing how the pandemic and her husband's e
528 | The Purpose Code | Jordan Grumet
Most people obsessed with finding their "life's purpose" are looking in the wrong place. Jordan Grumet, hospice doctor and author of The Purpose Code, spent years at patients' bedsides learning what actually matters at the end of life — and it's not the big, audacious goals we're told to chase. Brad sits down with Jordan to unpack the difference between "big P purpose" (the goal-oriented, achievem
527 | Buy What You Love Without Going Broke | Frugal Friends
Most people pursuing financial independence swing between two extremes: overspending in one area while ruthlessly cutting back in another, never quite finding sustainable balance. Jen and Jill, hosts of the Frugal Friends podcast, challenge this pattern by introducing what they call the "radical middle" — a space where frugality meets intentionality without sacrifice. Frugality, explored through t
526 | 2024 Year-End Celebration: Inspiring Wins from the ChooseFI Community
One listener maxed out every tax-advantaged account available while another walked away from a stable paycheck to chase entrepreneurship—and both credit the same shift in mindset. These are the wins listeners of ChooseFI shared from 2024, showcasing transformations that span debt elimination, travel hacking breakthroughs, and families building multi-generational wealth. The common thread: FI princ
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