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    Home » Why Earning More Doesn’t Always Mean Getting Richer
    FINANCE

    Why Earning More Doesn’t Always Mean Getting Richer

    June 11, 2026
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    Anri Armer, Financial Adviser at Momentum Financial Planning
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    Landing your first job and watching that initial salary clear into your bank account is a satisfying milestone. After years of studying, budgeting on a shoestring, and relying on family, your first paycheque represents ultimate freedom.

    It is entirely natural to want to celebrate. You might want to upgrade your wardrobe, treat your family, or finally buy that car you’ve been eyeing. But this point is where many young South African professionals fall into a subtle, wealth eroding trap known as lifestyle creep.

    Lifestyle creep also referred to as “lifestyle inflation” is the habit of gradually increasing your spending as your income grows. When you get a promotion or a raise, your baseline for what you consider a necessity shifts. The shared flat becomes a luxury bachelor pad; the second-hand hatchback becomes a more expensive car; and streaming subscriptions start to multiply. Before you know it, although you are earning significantly more, you are living paycheque to paycheque.

    This Youth Month, it’s time to reframe how you view your earnings. Your first paycheque is more than just money to be spent; it’s the single most powerful seed you will ever have for long-term wealth creation.

    The power of starting early

    When it comes to building wealth, time is your greatest asset. Thanks to the magic of compound interest where the interest you earn goes on to earn interest itself saving a small amount in your 20s can yield a far larger nest egg than saving double that amount in your 30s or 40s. 

    If you can learn to live below your means from day one, you effectively future-proof your finances. The goal isn’t about depriving yourself, but rather to practice intentional spending. By automating your savings the day your salary hits your account, you ensure that your future self is paid first, leaving the rest for guilt-free lifestyle enjoyment.

    Three actionable steps to master your money

    To set a rock-solid foundation from your very first salary, focus on these three practical moves:

    • Implement the ‘pause protocol’ on upgrades: When you get your first salary or a future raise, commit to keeping your current living expenses exactly the same for at least three to six months. Bank the difference immediately. This prevents impulsive lifestyle upgrades before you’ve had time to think.
    • Establish an emergency fund: Before diving into aggressive investing, protect yourself. Aim to save three to six months’ worth of basic living expenses in a high-yield savings account. This ensures a temporary setback or unexpected car repair won’t force you into expensive debt.
    • Protect your income: Your ability to wake up every day and earn a salary is your biggest financial asset. Putting basic income protection in place early ensures that an unexpected illness or injury won’t derail your entire financial future before it even starts.

    Why you don’t have to walk alone

    Navigating financial independence can feel overwhelming, and you shouldn’t have to figure it out through trial and error. This is where partnering with a financial adviser makes all the difference.

    A financial adviser does not just tell you how to budget; they help you build a personalised, goal-driven roadmap. They can help you structure your salary efficiently, optimise your tax, select the right investment vehicles, and keep you accountable when the temptation of lifestyle creep knocks on your door.

    Financial security begins with that very first paycheque. By making small, intentional decisions today, you can turn your hard-earned income into a lifetime of financial freedom. Getting it right from the beginning changes everything.

    By Anri Armer, Financial Adviser at Momentum Financial Planning

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