Money can actually buy you happiness. Here’s how to get it. (2024)

Money can actually buy you happiness. Here’s how to get it. (1)

Part of The Happiness Issue of The Highlight, our home for ambitious stories that explain our world.

It was early February in Los Angeles, and Andra Izgarian, 29, had reached a career high point: As the director of media operations at Condé Nast, she had scored an invitation to the 2019 Grammys.

In the company’s VIP box, executives in tuxedos and floor-length dresses sipped champagne from the open bar as artists including Lady Gaga and Alicia Keys performed. “It was a great chance for me to network,” Izgarian says. “These were some of the smartest people that I’d encountered at that point, really amazing people to look up to.” But as she surveyed the scene, all she could think was: “I can’t do this for the next 30, 40 years.”

Izgarian felt like a cog in a machine. Restless, she’d taken an interview with Outpost, a network of coliving and coworking locations in Southeast Asia, to run media relations for its new location in Bali. On Grammys night, she made up her mind: If Outpost offered her the job, she’d accept.

Less than two months later, she’d sold most of her stuff and moved to humid, chaotic, staggeringly beautiful Bali. The decision meant putting more than 8,000 miles between herself and her family, taking a pay cut, and focusing on her lifestyle rather than chasing traditional professional success.

Overall, she says, she’s happier: No longer weighed down with an hour-long commute and rigid routine, she has an easier time living in the day-to-day. “If I didn’t take a chance and leave corporate America to see what else was out there and really get out into the world …” she says, trailing off. “That’s what I would regret.”

Many of us can relate to Izgarian’s feelings of dissatisfaction and stagnation, the stubborn sense that the path in front of us is neither enjoyable nor leading to lasting well-being. (Having the luxury of worrying about this, of course, is a considerable privilege.)

Moving to Bali seems to have worked for Izgarian, but it isn’t the only antidote. A growing body of research shows we can reliably boost well-being by reframing the way we think about money and making financial decisions that lead to long-term gains in life satisfaction.

Researchers divide happiness into two general categories: the level of positive emotions, such as pride, joy, contentment, and curiosity, which we experience on a day-to-day basis, versus an overarching sense of contentment and fulfillment. “It’s being happy in your life versus being happy with your life,” says Sonja Lyubomirsky, a psychology professor at the University of California Riverside and the author of The How of Happiness: A Scientific Approach to Getting the Life You Want.

Both components are typically measured through self-reported questionnaires. Longer-term life-satisfaction “tends to be pretty sticky,” says Michael Norton, a professor of business administration at the Harvard Business School and the co-author of Happy Money: The Science of Happier Spending. Meaning: If you’re asked to rate your happiness on a 10-point scale, he says, “If you are a seven kind of person, you often stay around seven.” How happy you are on an immediate basis is far more variable, capable of fluctuating widely by the day or even hour.

Broadly speaking, there is a linear pattern between money and life satisfaction. “You think your life is better the more of it you have,” says Ashley Whillans, an assistant professor at Harvard Business School whose research focuses on trade-offs between time and money. Up until a point, that is, after which the correlation flattens and then decreases slightly, perhaps because previously unfathomable comparisons emerge when you’re keeping up with the one percent. (This threshold is squishy and dependent on a range of variables, such as the cost of living in your region, whether you live in a democratic society, and how rich your neighbors are.)

Money is a powerful predictor of well-being in large part because it protects against stressful, negative experiences, from the fundamental (financial insecurity, a lack of basic necessities, such as food and shelter) to the secondary (layovers, having to go grocery shopping in bad weather). When used strategically, it’s also good at fostering fulfilling experiences, relationships, and a sense of community — all reliable ways of boosting well-being.

With that in mind, here’s what experts have to say about the spending decisions that can increase happiness — along with those that can’t. While many of these strategies work for people across income levels, as you can imagine, the less money you have, the harder some of these tips are to adopt, or adopt regularly.

At the same time, “Just having money doesn’t necessarily translate into greater happiness,” Whillans says. “But using it well can.”

Buy time

Much of Whillans’s work has focused on the benefits of outsourcing unpleasant or disliked tasks on well-being. She’s co-authored a number of studies on the topic; in one of the most widely reported, participants who were asked to spend $40 on time-saving purchases were in a better mood and less stressed at the end of the day than when they were instructed to buy something material. In another, couples who reported making the same sorts of purchases together were happier in their relationships.

Outsourcing’s impact on happiness seems obvious. Who wouldn’t be happier if the unpleasant or tedious, time-sucking tasks in our lives (cleaning, laundry, public transportation) were taken care of for us, and we were magically gifted hours that could be diverted toward more meaningful and enjoyable activities, such as visiting friends or going to a movie?

Unfortunately, we’re not great at valuing time over money, Whillans says. There are powerful societal forces pushing us towards this mental trade-off, including the tendency to equate busyness with status, and the expectation that success requires managing every area of our lives without assistance. On a small scale, this can make taking a taxi to the airport or ordering takeout — services that save time — feel more extravagant than purchases that result in something tangible, like a new coat or couch. On a larger scale, it can lead to a series of escalating decisions that preserve our money at the expense of our time.

For women, these societal currents can be particularly strong. Whillans has spoken to professional women over the course of her research who still view outsourcing child care, laundry, or cooking as a personal failing. In addition to a demanding, full-time job, Lyubomirsky, 52, of the University of California Riverside, has four kids. When the youngest two were small, she hired a night nanny.

“It was so worth it,” she says, buying her time and, perhaps more important, sleep. Still, she had to justify the decision to herself in the way she rarely did for expensive material purchases. She also fielded questions from other people who, she sensed, were implicitly judging her for outsourcing any aspect of motherhood.

To change spending habits, it helps to think about — and value — time more like money, Whillans says. This can apply to small purchases, such as going out to eat rather than cooking in order to spend quality time with a partner. It can also impact significant decisions, such as seeking out a job for its flexibility rather than the salary and prestige, as Izgarian did, or a house for its proximity to work rather than the square footage.

Spend money on experiences

If you have the choice between going to dinner with a friend and buying a new TV, the latter might seem like a wiser investment. Unlike the impermanence of a meal, TVs stick around.

Physically, that is. Psychologically, the effect of buying stuff is less substantial, says Tom Gilovich, a psychology professor at Cornell University. Humans are tragically skilled at hedonic adaptation, the process by which we adjust to upgrades so thoroughly that they cease to exist in our consciousness, eliminating any lasting gains in happiness.

Experiences are often the better investment. “Even though, in a material sense, they come and go, they live on in the stories we tell, the relationships we cement, and ultimately in the sense of who we are,” Gilovich says. Experiences are also great at filling a primal need: meaningful relationships with other people. Even low-key activities have the potential to shape our sense of identity through new memories and connections. “In an important respect, we are the total sum of our experiences,” Gilovich says.

And unlike disappointing purchases, experiences can be recast as something we wouldn’t change. “It’s hard to romanticize a bad material thing,” Gilovich says. “It’s pretty easy to romanticize bad experiences.”

For Izgarian, moving across the globe confirmed her suspicion that she’d fallen into the privileged trap of owning too much. Before leaving LA, she donated or sold more than 90 percent of her possessions. Today, everything she owns fits in two suitcases. There are tradeoffs, of course: convenience, comfort, roots. And yet the ability to pack up and move at a moment’s notice is an “inexplicable feeling,” she says. “There is nothing weighing me down.”

A life decentered from stuff has realigned her days around experiences. Some of her favorite memories in Bali are simply getting from point A to point B. “You’re with your friends in a little scooter gang driving through all these lush green fields,” she says. “It’s just as fun as the destination itself.”

Give money away

An associate philosophy professor at the University of Oxford, William MacAskill helped found the effective altruism movement. The majority of his time and annual income (anything above $34,000) goes toward using his scarce resources to do the most good and getting other people to do the same.

MacAskill credits effective altruism with helping him emerge from a sustained bout of depression. He initially sought out treatment because his productivity had flat-lined, and he felt a moral responsibility to continue working toward a purpose larger than himself. “I don’t know if I would have had the same motivation otherwise,” he says.

The act of spending money on other people could be beneficial in itself. Harvard’s Norton contributed to a series of experiments that found people are happier after spending money on others versus on themselves. He’s also co-authored a survey that showed a correlation between life satisfaction and spending (as a percentage of annual income) on other people. The same effect does not exist when people spent more money on themselves.

This has yet to turn us into a nation of donors. In the US, people give, on average, between 2 percent and 5 percent of their income to charity each year, which remains fairly consistent across income levels, Norton says.

As anyone who has booked a vacation or experienced the heady dopamine rush of unboxing a new purchase can attest, “it’s not that spending money on yourself doesn’t feel good,” he says. “The issue is that it doesn’t seem to last for very long.”

Since discovering Norton’s research, Gilovich, the Cornell psychology professor, has made a deliberate effort to donate more to charity and be generous with people in his own life. Recently, he and his wife sent a food delivery to a friend going through a particularly hard time. Clicking the button to place the order gave Gilovich more pleasure than he’d ever experienced ordering food for himself, he says.

“It’s hard to find a more charming finding than that by giving away money, you not only make someone else happier, you make yourself happier.”

Laura Entis is a writer and editor focusing on health, business, and science. Her work has appeared in Fortune, Fast Company, Time Health, GQ, Consumer Reports, and Outside Magazine. She previously covered the monetization of human connection for Vox’s The Highlight.

More from The Happiness Issue

Money can actually buy you happiness. Here’s how to get it. (2) Jordan Kay for Vox
  • American happiness is plummeting. Could a few words change that?
  • Happiness psychology is a booming industry. But is it science, religion, or something else?
  • The other gender gap

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Money can actually buy you happiness. Here’s how to get it. (3)

Money can actually buy you happiness. Here’s how to get it. (2024)

FAQs

Money can actually buy you happiness. Here’s how to get it.? ›

Why Money Increases Happiness. There are obvious advantages to having more money. You can live in a nicer house and drive a nicer car, take better vacations, provide quality education for your kids, gain improved access to medical care, and have a more comfortable retirement.

What is a famous quote about money and happiness? ›

1. “Life isn't about money, it's about moments.” 2. “Money can't buy happiness but neither can poverty.”

Does money buy happiness at least up to $500000? ›

Kahneman and Killingworth reanalyzed that work and found the correlation between money and happiness extended to people with salaries up to at least $500,000 a year.

Does it turn out money can buy happiness? ›

Despite the old expression stating otherwise, it turns out that money actually can buy happiness – with a new study revealing that extremely high net worth individuals are “substantially and statistically significantly happier” than even those with incomes in excess of $500,000 a year.

Can money buy you happiness why? ›

True happiness comes not from material wealth, but from cultivating meaningful experiences, connections, and security. And surprisingly, money can help with all of those if used wisely. Let's look at each one. As mentioned, just accumulating more possessions and clutter is unlikely to bring any lasting fulfillment.

What is the original quote money can buy happiness? ›

“Money buys everything, except morality and citizens” a quote by Rousseau wrote in 1750, (Vanover, 2021)could be taken as the origin for the very commonly used saying “Money can't buy Happiness”, it explains the limitation money has upon emotional needs.

What did Einstein say about money? ›

I am absolutely convinced that no wealth in the world can help humanity forward, even in the hands of the most devoted worker in this cause. The example of great and pure characters is the only thing that can produce fine ideas and noble deeds.

At what income does money stop buying happiness? ›

The $75,000 Study

This belief is supported by a widely publicized 2010 study led by Daniel Kahneman and his Princeton colleague, Angus Deaton — both winners of the Nobel Prize in Economics — which concluded that happiness only increases with income up to $75,000.

What salary makes you happy? ›

Participants' reported wellbeing did, in fact, increase along with income, up to and well beyond earning $75,000 a year. What's more, the researchers found that happiness really only plateaus as income increases — above roughly $100,000 a year — for people who were already somewhat unhappy to begin with.

How much money a person needs to be happy? ›

That means the sweet spot in India could be about R24 lakh per annum or R2 lakh a month. That could go up every year with inflation. You cannot use all of the money for living life and spending. Even when you get to that stage, you must continue investing to counter inflation.

Are richer people happier? ›

“In the simplest terms, this suggests that for most people larger incomes are associated with greater happiness,” says Killingsworth, a senior fellow at Penn's Wharton School and lead paper author. “The exception is people who are financially well-off but unhappy.

Is money can't buy happiness true? ›

Some studies have found that more money is always related to greater happiness. Others report that money does make you happier, but only up to a certain amount, and then once you have enough to live comfortably, more money doesn't necessarily make you happier.

Can money buy true love? ›

If you wonder if can money buy love, then you need to understand that money may give temporary joy but it can never buy love. Some things can make you question is money important in a relationship, as survival is impossible without money, leaving the fact of two people staying together.

Can too much money make you unhappy? ›

Indeed, some wealthy individuals are even said to suffer from “affluenza,” a social condition among those who are excessively focused on material possessions and consumerism, to the point where their personal values and behaviors are negatively impacted.

Can money bring happiness or misery? ›

The researchers say that in truth, the idea that money can be enough to make someone happy is unfounded. They found, in fact, the emotional impact of more money was small compared to something as simple as the weekend.

Can we be happy without money? ›

While financial security can certainly contribute to a sense of well-being, studies have shown that once our basic needs are met, additional wealth does not necessarily increase our happiness. Furthermore, research has found that experiences, rather than material possessions, bring more lasting joy.

What did Mark Twain say about money? ›

Quote by Mark Twain: “The lack of money is the root of all evil.

What is a special quote about money? ›

Ayn Rand: “Money is only a tool. It will take you wherever you wish, but it will not replace you as the driver. It will give you the means for the satisfaction of your desires, but it will not provide you with desires.” Epictetus: “Wealth consists not in having great possessions, but in having few wants.”

What is the famous quote follow the money? ›

"Follow the money" is a catchphrase popularized by the 1976 docudrama film All the President's Men, which suggests political corruption can be brought to light by examining money transfers between parties.

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