What You Need to Know About Lifestyle Creep
| Posted in Bank Blogs
How to avoid lifestyle inflation (creep).
Lifestyle inflation—often called lifestyle creep—can sneak up on anyone. It usually starts with good news: a raise, a bonus, or a new job. But without a plan, that extra income can quietly disappear into higher spending, leaving you no better off financially than before. But what is lifestyle creep?
Explaining Lifestyle Creep
Lifestyle creep happens when your spending increases along with your income. It often shows up in small, seemingly harmless upgrades:
- House. Buying a bigger, more expensive house after a raise at work.
- Car. Trading in your paid-off pickup truck for a new sports car with a higher monthly payment.
- Spending. Dining out more frequently, upgrading everyday purchases, buying more stuff with the “additional income.”
- Entertainment. Adding more subscriptions, going to more concerts, sporting events, and other entertainment.
Individually, these choices feel justified—but over time, the increase in spending can cancel out your income gains.
Easy Steps to Avoid Lifestyle Creep
The goal isn’t to avoid enjoying your money; you’ve earned it. But it is a way to be more intentional about where that money goes.
Track Spending
One way to avoid lifestyle inflation is to regularly check in on your budget. You can’t control what you don’t measure.
Easy Action Steps:
- Review your spending monthly.
- Compare income vs. expenses
- Watch for spending outliers, or increases in recurring costs, things like subscriptions, memberships, and other monthly bills.
Example. If your grocery spending jumps from $450 to $800 a month after a raise, that’s a clear sign of creep starting.
Pay Yourself First
To avoid lifestyle creep, plan and be proactive. Before adjusting your lifestyle, adjust your savings.
Easy Action Steps:
- Automatically increase your savings rate anytime your income goes up.
- Split your raise increases, intentionally, something like 50% to savings, 50% to lifestyle.
- Set up automatic transfers to savings or investments
Example. If you get a $500/month raise, send $250 directly to savings before you ever see it.
Avoid New Fixed Expenses
While spending more on groceries is one thing, increasing fixed expenses is often more difficult to reverse.
Easy Action Steps:
- Be cautious with spending increases that create long-term commitments.
- Think carefully before signing contracts that increase rent, car payments, or financing purchases.
Example. Upgrading to a luxury apartment or financing a new truck might make sense now—but those fixed expenses will continue even if your situation changes.
Prepare for Emergencies
Getting a pay raise and making more money is great. That extra income can help you be more prepared for the future by boosting your emergency fund.
Easy Action Steps:
- Try to save 3–6 months of your monthly household expenses.
- Add to your emergency fund each time you get a bonus or raise.
Be prepared for anything. Emergency savings help prevent future debt if unexpected expenses like a job loss, health issue, or natural disaster happen.
Wait Before Making Big Purchases
Lifestyle creep often happens through impulsive “I can afford it now” decisions.
Easy Action Steps:
- Use a 24–48 hour rule before making large purchases. Waiting helps you think more logically about a purchase. If you still need it after waiting, go get it. At least you’re not buying on impulse.
- Ask yourself Does this purchase help get me closer to my long-term goals?
Example. Before upgrading your phone, car, or clothes, consider whether that money would be better used toward a goal like a home, investing for the future, or saving for emergencies.
Remember Your Goals
It’s easier to avoid lifestyle creep when you keep your long-term goals in mind.
Focus on goals like:
- Buying a home
- Paying off debt
- Saving for college
- Financial independence or retirement
- Building investment income
When you connect your money to a bigger purpose, it becomes easier to say no to unnecessary spending. It’s okay to enjoy your income increases, but without a plan, those increases won’t translate into real financial progress.
Do One Thing: Increase your savings rate every time you get a pay increase.
Author: Chris O'Shea