Read contracts. Cancel subscriptions. Spot scams. Protect your money and yourself.
A contract is a legally binding agreement. Once you sign, you're on the hook โ which means reading before signing is non-negotiable. Most people don't. That's how companies profit.
โ๏ธ Rule: If you don't understand a clause, don't sign. No legitimate company pressures you to sign immediately. "Sign right now or lose the deal" is a red flag, not a reason to hurry.
In many countries, verbal agreements are common and contracts are informal. In the US, verbal contracts are legally valid but nearly impossible to enforce without documentation. Always get agreements in writing โ even with family friends, landlords, or employers. "We shook on it" is not a contract that holds up in a US court.
The average American spends $219/month on subscriptions โ and most have no idea. Services are designed to be forgotten. That's the business model.
๐ก The mental math test: Before subscribing, ask "Is this $X/month worth $X ร 12 = $Y per year?" A $12/month service is $144/year. Most aren't worth it at that scale.
Insurance is how you protect against catastrophic financial losses you can't afford. The goal is not to make money from insurance โ it's to avoid being financially destroyed by a single event.
Most important. Without it, one ER visit = $1,000โ$50,000. Options: employer plan, parents' plan (until age 26), ACA marketplace (healthcare.gov), Medicaid if income-qualified.
Required by law in almost every state. At minimum: liability coverage. Add collision + comprehensive if your car is worth more than $5,000.
Protects your belongings in an apartment or rental. About $15โ$20/month. Required by many landlords and often covers theft, fire, and water damage.
Only needed if others depend on your income (children, elderly parents). Skip until you have dependents โ it's not an investment product despite what agents say.
Deductible
What you pay first before insurance covers the rest. $1,000 deductible + $3,000 bill = you pay $1,000, insurance pays $2,000.
Premium
Your monthly/annual cost for having the insurance. Higher deductible = lower premium. Choose based on your emergency fund size.
Scammers specifically target younger people because they're more active online and less suspicious. Knowing the patterns is your best defense.
Pay a small fee to claim it. The prize isn't real โ the fee is the scam.
"This is the IRS โ you owe taxes and will be arrested." The IRS contacts you by mail first, never phone.
They hire you, send a "too large" check, ask you to send some back. Check bounces. You owe the bank.
Online "friend" builds a relationship over weeks, then asks for money urgently.
"Invest $100, get $500 guaranteed." There are no guaranteed returns in crypto. Ever.
"Your computer has a virus, call us." Microsoft and Apple never cold-call you about viruses.
If someone asks you to pay with gift cards, cryptocurrency, wire transfer, Zelle, or Cash App โ it is a scam. 100% of the time. These payment methods are untraceable and unrecoverable. No legitimate company, government agency, or employer will ever demand payment this way. Report scams at FTC.gov/reportfraud.
Read each scenario. Decide: REAL or SCAM? Score 8/8 if you can.
5 questions โ answer one at a time. You need 4/5 to pass.