7 Money Rules: Personal Finance Decisions Made Simple

Let’s be honest: personal finance doesn’t need to be complicated, but it does need to be intentional.

You don’t need a finance degree, a six-figure salary, or a spreadsheet obsession to master the art of managing your money effectively.

However, what you do need are some clear rules that remove emotion from decisions and put you in full control.

For me, the seven money rules I offer you here are simple, practical, and powerful.

Follow them consistently, and your financial life will start to feel lighter, calmer, and perhaps even a little bit exciting.

Make Money

This is the golden rule of money management.

Before bills. Before subscriptions. Before random spending. You come first.

Paying yourself first means automatically setting aside money for savings or investments as soon as your income hits your account. Even if it’s small at first, the habit matters more than the amount.

Think of it this way: if you don’t prioritize your future, no one else will. It’s that simple.

So, start treating savings like a non-negotiable bill, because the future you is counting on it.


Saving is great. Investing is better.

Money sitting in a bank account is safe, but the interest rate at any given time is unlikely to compensate you for inflation. So, that’s not the way to grow capital.

Investing your money over time is what will provide you with the potential for capital growth.

Committing to investing at least 10% of your income every month puts time and compound growth on your side.

Start where you are now.

The earlier you invest, the harder your money works. And you need it to work hard while you sleep, while you work your day job, and even when you are binge-watching your favourite shows.


This is a simple rule with a life-changing impact.

If you consistently spend more than you earn, no strategy in the world can save you financially. You will be doomed.

If you spend less than you earn—even by a little—you create breathing room, choices, and freedom.

This isn’t about deprivation. It’s about intentional spending.

Spend generously on what matters to you and ruthlessly cut everything that doesn’t.


This one’s tough because comparison is everywhere.

The cars, the clothes, the vacations, the “effortless” lifestyles on social media? Most of it is funded by debt and stress. And that’s a price you don’t want to pay.

True confidence comes from living within your means—not pretending you’re richer than you are.

Build a lifestyle that supports your goals, not one that sabotages them.


If it doesn’t last—and doesn’t earn—you shouldn’t borrow for it.

Vacations, gadgets, designer items, nights out… these are wants, not needs.

Using debt to pay for them means enjoying the moment while the future you pays the bill (with substantial interest).

If you can’t pay cash for discretionary spending, it’s a sign to pause—not swipe.

Live without it until you’ve got the cash to pay for it.


Not all debt is evil—but it must be strategic.

Debt should be used to acquire assets that either appreciate in value or generate income.

Property is a classic example when done wisely.

The key question to ask is:

If the answer is no, rethink it.


Impulse spending is the silent killer of good financial intentions.

Here’s the fix:

Most of the time, the urge fades.

And when it doesn’t? You’ll buy with clarity instead of emotion.

This single rule can save you thousands over a lifetime, without making you feel restricted.


Managing your money well isn’t about being perfect. It’s about being consistent.

These seven rules create structure, confidence, and momentum. They will help you stop reacting to money and start directing it.

You don’t need to do everything at once.

Start with one rule. Then another. Over time, small decisions stack up into big results.

Your money should support the life you want—not control it.

And the best time to take control? Right now.

You’re smarter than you think. You’ve got this!

Phil Sutton

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