Miles Brucker articles

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My friend says paying cash at small businesses should always get you a discount. Is that expectation still realistic in 2026?

Your friend’s claim has a certain old-school charm. Hand over bills, skip the card machine, and surely the shop owner should knock a little off the price. In real life, though, whether that expectation is realistic depends on card fees, state rules, business costs, and the merchant’s own pricing strategy.
July 3, 2026 Miles Brucker
Career crossroads: College vs Influencer life

My daughter wants to quit college to become a full-time influencer after earning $8,000 in one month. Should I support her?

One big paycheck can make college look optional. If your daughter earned $8,000 in a single month as a creator, it is understandable that she is suddenly questioning lecture halls, tuition bills, and student debt. But a flashy month is not the same thing as a durable career, and the numbers behind influencer income tell a more complicated story.
July 2, 2026 Miles Brucker
disappointed woman with a man counting his sneaker collection

My husband emptied our vacation fund to buy limited-edition sneakers. He says these shoes are "better than stocks." Is this investing or a problem?

One day the travel money is sitting there, waiting for flights and hotel bookings. The next day it has been turned into a stack of limited-edition sneakers because your husband says they are “better than stocks.” That sounds dramatic, but it opens up a very real question about money, risk, and whether a collecting hobby has crossed into something more dangerous.
July 1, 2026 Miles Brucker
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My wife secretly put her parents on our family phone plan and never told me. Is this the kind of financial secrecy that ruins marriages?

Finding out that a spouse quietly added other people to a shared phone plan can feel small on paper and huge in real life. It is not just about the monthly bill. It is about secrecy, trust, and whether one partner made a financial decision that affected both people without consent.
July 1, 2026 Miles Brucker
My fiance says we should merge our bank accounts

My fiance says we should merge our bank accounts before we're married because "it's just easier." I'm nervous, is doing that a mistake?

“It’s just easier” is one of the most persuasive lines in any relationship, especially when wedding planning is already swallowing your time and money. A shared account can simplify bill paying, rent, and everyday spending. But before you hand over full access to your cash, it is worth asking whether “easier” today could become messier tomorrow.
July 1, 2026 Miles Brucker
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My wife secretly donated $20,000 to an online creator she follows. It won't ruin us, but could this fandom become a more serious problem?

A spouse discovering that $20,000 quietly went to an online creator sounds like the start of a breakup post, but it is also a real financial planning problem. Creator support can look harmless when it starts with a few subscriptions, tips, or livestream gifts. The trouble begins when admiration turns into hidden spending, debt, or damage to shared goals.
June 30, 2026 Miles Brucker
confused man in foreground; focused discussion in the background

My friend says retirement accounts are a scam because governments can change the rules whenever they want. Does he have a point?

Your friend is not completely making this up. Governments really can change retirement account rules, and Congress has done it many times. The more useful question is whether that makes retirement accounts a scam, or just a tool with political risk attached.
June 24, 2026 Miles Brucker
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My husband keeps buying expensive watches and calling them "hard assets." Is that really investing, or rationalizing spending?

Luxury watches have a seductive story attached to them. They are tangible, portable, beautifully made, and in some cases they do hold value better than many other consumer goods. But if your husband is calling every pricey watch purchase an investment, the real answer is more complicated than that sales pitch suggests.
June 22, 2026 Miles Brucker
gloomy man holding a brochure; another man and elder parents in the background

My parents want me to buy their house at full market value, but they sold my brother his house at a discount. Should I just do what they want?

It is hard to separate money from family, especially when the house in question comes with history. The sting gets sharper when one sibling got a discount and another is being asked to pay full market value. If that is your situation, the big question is not just whether it is fair. It is also whether the deal makes financial and tax sense for everyone involved.
June 22, 2026 Miles Brucker