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Be a Finance Squirrel

Get in the habit of "hiding" savings so you always have some if you need it.
Be a Finance Squirrel
Credit: fizkes - Shutterstock

When it comes to tricking yourself into saving more money, think like a squirrel. Just like squirrels bury nuts to prepare for winter, we can squirrel money in order to prepare for economic dry spells. And while we’re taking money lessons from squirrels, they crucially don’t store all their bounty in one place.

How squirreling away money helps you save more

The concept of being a financial squirrel comes down to minimizing the risk of keeping all your savings in one place, and maximizing the rewards of building several different accounts. Especially if you aren’t interested in investing your money in long-term vehicles, it’s useful to trick yourself by shrinking the amount of savings you can see at one time.

Personally, I like to think of it like “hiding” my own savings from myself—it makes me far less likely to dip into it. An easy way to do this is to create an extra savings account is for the sole purpose of forgetting it exists (until you absolutely need to tap into it).

Squirrel away your money to stay on top of your goals

The squirrel mentality is also useful for visualizing different savings goals. For instance, you can start naming different accounts based on what they’re for. You might have your standard rainy day fund and Roth IRA, but you might also have a summer travel fund, a back-up rent fund, a new car fund, and so on. It’s much easier to track your savings progress when these funds are divided into different accounts. Here’s our guide to creating a high-yield savings account.

There are plenty of reasons you might choose saving over investing, one of the biggest being if you have short-term goals for your money. So if you mentally struggle to set aside savings, consider “hiding” it from yourself in multiple places—like a squirrel and their precious nuts.

Meredith Dietz
Meredith Dietz
Senior Finance Writer

Meredith Dietz is Lifehacker’s Senior Finance Writer. She earned her bachelor’s degree in English and Communications from Northeastern University, where she graduated as valedictorian of her college. She grew up waitressing in her family restaurant in Wilmington, DE and worked at Hasbro Games, where she wrote rules for new games. Previously, she worked in the non-profit space as a Leadership Resident with the Harpswell Foundation in Phnom Penh, Cambodia; later, she was a travel coordinator for a study abroad program that traced the rise of fascist propaganda across Western Europe.

Since then, Meredith has been driven to make personal finance accessible and address taboos of talking openly about money, including debt, investing, and saving for retirement. Outside of finance writing, Meredith is a marathon runner and stand-up comedian who has been a regular contributor to The Onion and Reductress. Meredith lives in Brooklyn, NY.

Read Meredith's full bio