Why the Millionaire Next Door Drives a Used Carand What That Teaches About Real Wealth

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Income alone doesn’t create wealth. The key is the gap between what you earn and what you spend. Morakod1977/ShutterstockThe wealthiest person I know personally drives a 2018 Toyota Camry. He owns three rental properties, has over $2 million in investment accounts, and could buy any car on any lot without blinking. He chooses not to, and his explanation is both simple and profound: “A car is a tool that takes you from one place to another. Everything beyond that is a payment for other people’s perception of you.”That conversation rearranged how I think about money, status, and the difference between looking wealthy and actually being wealthy. And the more I studied the habits of genuinely rich people—not the Instagram version of rich, but the people with real, substantial, enduring wealth—the more I found that his approach was the rule, not the exception. The Wealth IllusionWe live in a culture that equates visible consumption with financial success. A nice car, a big house, designer clothes, expensive vacations—these are the signals we use to judge who has money and who does not. The problem is that those signals are almost perfectly inverted from reality.

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