Why You’re Richer Than You Think in Your 20s (Hint: It’s Not Money)

You might feel broke, but you’re richer than you think in your 20s. Explore the 4 currencies you have as a young adult, and how to use them.

The Hidden Wealth of Your 20s 

Time

Why Time Is The Ultimate Multiplier

Why Mistakes Are Cheap in Your 20s

A Perspective from Warren Buffett

Minimalist quote graphic featuring Warren Buffett’s words “I can buy anything I want, basically. But I can’t buy time,” symbolizing that time is the one thing money can’t buy.
Even billionaires can’t buy back time. Use yours like the precious resource it is.

How To Spend The Currency of Time: 

  1. Start investing early. With compound interest and being in your 20s, time is on your side. $1 invested in your 20s grow magnitudes of order more than $1 invested in your 40s.
  2. Learn skills. You have the time to learn valuable skills that can level up your life and career. And if you start learning them early, you have more years to master them, than say someone learning the same skill in their 40s. 
  3. Experiment with your life. Try careers, side hustles, travel and really figure out who you want to be. The mistakes from this searching phase are cheaper now and give you lessons that compound for decades. 
  4. Have fun. There’s a pressure in our 20s to figure it out, but also don’t forget that your 20s are meant for fun too.  The late nights, road trips, and crazy opportunities you can say yes to, because you have all the time in the world. 
Infographic showing how to spend the currency of time wisely in your 20s — focus on growth, health, and meaningful relationships instead of distractions and overcommitment.
Time is a nonrenewable currency. Once it’s gone you can never get it back and in your 20s, you have a ton of it. Spend it where it compounds like health, relationships, experiences and your work.

Health

You’re in Peak Condition, Use It

Health Is Wealth

Take Advantage of Your Health

How To Spend the Currency of Health 

  1. Take on physical challenges. Push your body (safely) whether it be through running a marathon, climbing a mountain, or doing a multi day trek. Your body will bounce back faster now than it will later. 
  2. Say yes to active adventures. Make use of the body you have and be active. Backpack, surf, dance late into the night. Things that require stamina and bodily resilience are easier to do now. 
  3. Travel cheaply. In your 20s, you don’t need the expensive direct flights or nice luxury hotel. Long flights, overnight buses, hostels, walking miles exploring new cities. This kind of travel is way easier for a healthy 25 year old body than for a 45 year old one.
  4. Build habits that lock in future health. Push and create your body now when it’s much easier to do so. Focus on stretching, lifting, cardio, nutrition and sleep to optimize your future health. When you’re older, you’ll be able to maintain instead of trying to rebuild from scratch.

Infographic titled ‘How to Spend the Currency of Health’ illustrating habits like exercise, sleep, nutrition, and rest as key investments for long-term energy and well-being.
Health is the foundation that powers every other part of your life. Spend it while it’s easier to build and take advantage of in your 20s.

Energy 

Energy Increases Output

We Waste Energy in Our 20s

How To Spend the Currency of Energy 

  1. Invest in sweat equity. Your drive and stamina now make you richer than you think in your 20s. Pour this supply of energy into learning skills, chasing career ambitions, entrepreneurship endeavors or any big dream you have. Based on just energy, the best time to work towards that goal is now. 
  2. Say yes to new experiences. Travel, play sports, late nights, networking and in general, opportunities that you won’t have the energy bandwidth for later.
  3. Take opportunities that require stamina. Seize opportunities that require a ton of energy. Like moving to a new city and knowing no one, dating around to discover what you want, or learning a language intensely. These life experiments take huge energy upfront, but they pay dividends forever. 
  4. Build lasting habits. Habits are much harder to develop later in life, partly because they require high amounts of energy to establish. This is why it’s important to build these habits in your 20s, so when you’re older, the habits are on autopilot. Things like health habits, work ethic, and relationships habits are all easier to form in your 20s. 
Infographic outlining how to spend the currency of energy — invest in meaningful work, relationships, and habits that give more energy back than they take.
Your energy fuels everything you do in your life. Being in your 20s, you have tons of it. Don’t waste it on what drains you. Invest it in people, projects, and habits that lead you to the life you want.

Flexibility 

Your 20s Are the Most Flexible Decade of Your Life  

Freedom Is Worth More Than Stability in Your 20s 

How To Spend the Currency of Flexibility 

  1. Experiment with careers.  Explore different paths while the stakes are low. Resetting careers at 25 is way easier than at 45. Don’t wake up at 40 and hate the career path you’re on, just because you stayed for the stability in your 20s. This is the time to experiment and really find what career will make you happy. 
  2. Take risks while you’re young. The risks in your 20s are cheap. If you fail, you can dust yourself back up easily and hop to the next thing. Start that business, launch a passion project, or just travel with a little bit of the savings you have. Failure in your 20s is really just experience, which is so valuable for your life.
  3. Live abroad or travel deeply. Not everyone has this privilege, but immersing yourself in new cultures is the greatest teacher you can ever have. My solo backpacking trip in Europe changed me in ways I can’t even describe through writing. The perspective you gain will shape every area of your life. 
  4. Keep commitments light. Avoid the fancy cars, high rise apartments and expenses that trap you. The lower life overhead you have, the more opportunities you can pursue. In my first job, I got a signing bonus that I would’ve had to partially repay if I quit early. I left it in a savings account, which gave me the flexibility to quit early when a better opportunity came. If I had spent it, I would’ve been stuck in that job.
Infographic showing how to spend the currency of flexibility in your 20s — experiment with your career, take risks, travel, and keep commitments light to stay free and adaptable.
Flexibility is your biggest advantage in your 20s. Don’t ruin it by taking on unnecessary responsibilities. Keeping your options open allows you to move cities, change paths, and say yes to experiences. You have years of stability in your future, but your 20s is a small window where your life is the most flexible.

Conclusion

💸 Summary

  1. ⏳ Time: The most valuable currency you’ll ever have. Invest it in skills, relationships, and experiences that compound over decades.

  2. 💪 Health: Your body is at its peak. Build habits now that keep it strong for life. Exercise, rest, and nutrition are your long-term insurance.

  3. ⚡ Energy: You have more stamina and drive now than you ever will again. Direct it toward meaningful goals, not endless distractions.

  4. 🌍 Freedom: Few responsibilities mean maximum flexibility. Take risks, explore, and design the life you actually want while you still can.

Article FAQ

Why do older people say they’d trade money to be young again?

Because no amount of money can buy back youth, time, or health. Many people only realize the value of these currencies once they’ve lost them, which is why your 20s are so uniquely rich, and why this article aims to show you how to make the most of it.

Why do I feel broke in my 20s even though I’m doing everything right?

Because money isn’t the only measure of wealth. You’re still building financial capital, but you already have the rare currencies of time, health, energy, and freedom. Things most older adults would trade for in a heartbeat. Also it’s important to be patient. Being wealthy in your 20s is extremely rare. That takes time. But you can use your other built in currencies to elevate that wealth and life creation.

How do I know if I’m spending these currencies well?

Ask yourself: Am I using my time intentionally? Am I protecting my health? Am I directing my energy toward things that matter? Am I using my freedom to explore and grow or to stay comfortable? A good way to look at it is to do things in your 20s that are much harder to do later. You can always work a job you don’t like in your 30s and 40s, but you can’t always backpack the world at a later age like that.

How do these currencies relate to financial success later on?

They’re the foundation of it. Time allows you to compound skills and investments. Health fuels your consistency. Energy drives ambition. Freedom gives you room to take risks. Money grows faster when these are intact.

What’s the biggest lesson about wealth this article teaches?

That as a young adult, being “rich” is more about having options than having money. Your 20s are your richest decade because your options are wide open. How you use them defines the rest of your life.

What’s one thing I should do differently after reading this?

Start treating your time, health, energy, and freedom like a portfolio. Spend them on what multiplies over decades, not what disappears by next weekend.

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