Skip to content
Refpropos.

Refpropos.

  • Home
  • Automobile
  • HVAC
  • Supercar
  • Volvo
  • Entrepreneur
  • Toggle search form
Your Raise Is a Trap: A Simple Trick to Finally Break the Paycheck-to-Paycheck Cycle

Your Raise Is a Trap: A Simple Trick to Finally Break the Paycheck-to-Paycheck Cycle

Posted on August 5, 2025 By rehan.rafique No Comments on Your Raise Is a Trap: A Simple Trick to Finally Break the Paycheck-to-Paycheck Cycle

You get the email. Or the call. Or maybe your boss pulls you aside for a quick chat. “We’re really happy with your work. We’re giving you a raise.”

It’s one of the best feelings in the world. You’ve earned it. Your first thought is to call your spouse, your parents, or your best friend to share the good news. Your second thought, if you’re anything like the old me, is to do something really, really dumb with the money.

My first big raise? I celebrated by trading in my perfectly good car for a new one with a sunroof. I bought what I wanted when I felt like it, and I felt like a king. 

For about six months, I was still living paycheck to paycheck, just on a grander scale. 

It’s what I call “lifestyle inflation,” and it’s a trap so many of us fall into. We work harder, earn more, and then just… spend more.

The Insight: The raise trap

The moment a raise hits your bank account, your brain starts making a to-do list for that extra cash. A better apartment. New furniture. A vacation. We instantly adjust to our new income level, and before we know it, we’re living paycheck to paycheck all over again. The cycle is a sneaky beast. It doesn’t feel like a bad habit; it feels like progress.

You feel like you’ve been “promoted” to a new class of consumer. And suddenly, your old phone, your old car, and your old habits feel inadequate. So you upgrade everything, and poof! That beautiful raise you worked so hard for is gone, leaving you with the same old financial worries, just with a nicer backdrop.

Don’t get me wrong, celebrating your success is important. But when the celebration becomes your new normal, you lose the golden opportunity that a raise truly represents.

The Perspective: A golden opportunity

A raise isn’t just more money. It’s a moment of financial leverage. It’s a clean slate. It’s a chance to break free from the cycle for good. Think of it less as a reason to upgrade your life and more as a superpower you’ve just been handed to secure your future.

This is your chance to change the game. Instead of letting your expenses creep up to meet your new income, you’re going to put some distance between them. You’re going to use this moment of financial momentum to create a buffer, a barrier, a cushion—whatever you want to call it—between your spending habits and your financial goals.

The Action: The “wedge”

So, how do you do this? With a technique so simple, it’s brilliant. I call it the “wedge.”

When you get a raise, you commit to driving a wedge between your old budget and your new one. You’re going to take that extra money and immediately split it in half.

  • Half of your raise goes to your future. This is your non-negotiable. You commit this half to savings or investments. Set it up on auto-pilot to be transferred to a separate account the moment your paycheck hits. If your employer offers a 401(k), this is the easiest place to start. Every extra dollar you put in your 401(k) is a dollar you will not miss. You’ve already lived without it!
  • The other half of your raise goes to your fun. This is where you can celebrate. Use this half to upgrade your lifestyle. Go on that nice dinner. Buy that new gadget. You’ve earned it. But only this half.

Let’s say you get a $400-a-month raise. You commit $200 of that straight to your 401(k) or a high-yield savings account. The other $200 is your spending money. This is the simple trick that lets you feel good about celebrating your raise while also building a foundation for financial independence. You get the fun, but you also get the freedom.

Don’t let your raise be a trap. Let it be a tool. It’s a golden opportunity to start building a future where you never have to worry about money again. Now that’s a real upgrade.

I’m wishing you a lifetime of financial independence. 

– Mike, author of The Money Habit

Preorder The Money Habit HERE!

Entrepreneur

Post navigation

Previous Post: Rebuild Challenge 2025: Bigger, Better, & Ready for Your Next Project
Next Post: Price hike for used diesels as new car supply dries up

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • AHRI to Lead Research of Lower-GWP Refrigerants
  • Chevy EVs Just Hit Two Huge Milestones And Elon Won’t Be Happy
  • Honda Australia says EVs are ‘not the goal’
  • What are Brain Aneurysms and Their Disability Benefits?
  • Design, History, and Z4 Chassis Explained

Categories

  • Automobile
  • Entrepreneur
  • HVAC
  • Supercar
  • Volvo

Copyright © 2025 Refpropos..

Powered by PressBook Blog WordPress theme