The “Money Hacks” That Actually Hurt You — and What to Do Instead
There’s a difference between a hack and a trap.
Online, everyone swears they’ve found the secret to saving more, paying less, or “outsmarting” the system — but some of those viral shortcuts are quietly draining your wallet.
Financial expert Rachel Cruze recently called out six popular “money hacks” that sound clever but actually hold you back. Let’s break them down, add a little common sense, and find out what works instead — the American Pockets way.
Buy Now, Pay Later — a cute slogan for long-term debt
You see it on every checkout screen: “Split your payment into four easy installments.”
It feels painless. But that “hack” trains your brain to spend money you don’t yet have.
BNPL plans often come with late fees, missed-payment penalties, and the sneaky illusion that you can afford more than you actually can. By the time you finish paying for one item, you’ve already financed the next.
Better way: Treat BNPL like credit — because it is. If you can’t pay it in full today, you probably shouldn’t buy it. Build a “Want Fund” in your savings app: move $25 a week toward things you love, guilt-free. When you finally tap purchase, it’s already paid for.
That’s what we call shopping with peace of mind, not with installments.
Store Credit Card Discounts — short-term thrill, long-term bill
We’ve all heard it at the register: “Want to save 25% today?”
The cashier isn’t your enemy, but that question is designed to tempt you into high-interest debt. Most store cards carry APRs north of 25%, which means that “instant discount” disappears the moment you roll a balance.
Better way: Use one solid, low-interest card that gives you cash-back on everyday categories, or just stick with your debit card for planned purchases. If you love rewards, chase reliable perks, not one-time discounts.
You don’t need 10 store cards to prove loyalty — just a good budget that actually rewards you back.
Leasing a Car — the illusion of “cheaper”
Leasing feels smart: smaller monthly payments, shiny new ride every few years.
But in reality, you’re paying for temporary use, not ownership. Add mileage fees, wear-and-tear penalties, and insurance costs, and you’ll see why most people never build equity.
Better way: Buy a gently used car that’s two to three years old, pay it off, and then keep driving it for several years without payments. That’s the real “luxury” — no monthly bills.
If you can, keep a separate Car Fund where you stash $100–$200 a month. When it’s time for repairs or an upgrade, you already have the cash ready.













