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They say money can’t buy happiness, but it can definitely buy one thing that those who don’t have a lot of it can’t: convenience. Rich folks have it easy because their worries revolve around “How do I pay?” rather than “How much does it cost?”

In turn, having deep pockets offers luxuries that normal people don’t often see. Those came to light in a recent Reddit thread, where people talked about having the ability to do nothing, being exempt from paying restaurant tabs, and owning only customized clothing, among other things.

If you think there are things worth mentioning that are not included in this list, feel free to add them in the comment boxes below.

#1

43 Wealthy-People Luxuries That Don’t Look Expensive At First Quiet. Rich people live in places that are quiet (even if they are in the middle of a city, they are away from busy roads, have significant landscaping to dampen noise, etc.), have quiet appliances, sound proofing in their homes, exceptionally quiet cars. The only noises they hear are the ones that they want.

ThisMomentOn , Lumin Osity Report

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    #2

    43 Wealthy-People Luxuries That Don’t Look Expensive At First This is more of an "upper middle class and higher" than straight up rich, but "Not having to budget".

    I grew up (very) poor, and I'm reasonably well off now, and that has been one of the biggest differences.

    You go to a fancy steakhouse. There's a burger dinner plate on the menu for 25 bucks. There's a steak for 95 bucks. You feel like a steak today. You just order the steak.

    The friend who you invited along who isn't in the same socioeconomic class as you is looking at the burger plate wondering if they can get it cheaper if they order just the burger without the side, while sweating at how you're planning on splitting the bill.

    This is a contrast that people born well off don't realize, and that even every day people may not consider just how big of a deal it is in term of cognitive load.

    phoenixmatrix , Jakub Żerdzicki Report

    Petra Peitsch
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My guy, if you have some emphaty, you don't invite your less well off friend to a restaurant, where he/she must decide, if paying the bills this month worth the time spending with you at that "fancy steakhouse". You are a bragging arsehole.

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    #3

    A person in yellow gloves cleaning a large window, a silent luxury many rich people enjoy. I only recently became what could be considered 'rich'.

    My answer is time. I can just pay people to do things I don't want to do. I no longer clean my house, because it is easier for me to spend $250 every 2 weeks for my house keeper to do it. I spend my free time doing what I enjoy.

    thefouthblindmouse , Karolina Grabowska Report

    Lazy Panda 2
    Community Member
    20 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Time is definitely a richer luxery. Can't afford a washing machine? It takes time to go to the launderette. Can't afford a car or to run it? Public transport is slower to get from A to B. Work a minimum wages job? You have to take the overtime to meet bills. Time is the luxury of the well off.

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    #4

    43 Wealthy-People Luxuries That Don’t Look Expensive At First *The reason that the rich were so rich, Vimes reasoned, was because they managed to spend less money.*

    *Take boots, for example. He earned thirty-eight dollars a month plus allowances. A really good pair of leather boots cost fifty dollars. But an affordable pair of boots, which were sort of OK for a season or two and then leaked like hell when the cardboard gave out, cost about ten dollars. Those were the kind of boots Vimes always bought, and wore until the soles were so thin that he could tell where he was in Ankh-Morpork on a foggy night by the feel of the cobbles.*

    *But the thing was that good boots lasted for years and years. A man who could afford fifty dollars had a pair of boots that’d still be keeping his feet dry in ten years’ time, while the poor man who could only afford cheap boots would have spent a hundred dollars on boots in the same time and would still have wet feet.*

    *—Men at Arms*.

    Mah_Buddy_Keith , Glenn Carstens-Peters Report

    SheHulk
    Community Member
    Premium
    1 day ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I often think of that. This concept is a widely recognized metaphor for how economic systems disproportionately penalize the poor, highlighting that the cost of being poor is often higher than the cost of being wealthy.

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    #5

    43 Wealthy-People Luxuries That Don’t Look Expensive At First The gift of preventative maintenance.

    newg1954 , Kateryna Hliznitsova Report

    #6

    A woman with long curly hair and headphones sings into a studio microphone, representing silent luxuries. To chase their goals and still survive if it fails.

    backbone97 , Getty Images Report

    #7

    Two women in polka dot blouses at a table, one taking notes, discussing rich people's silent luxuries. Securing credit with reasonable interest rates. Being poor is expensive.

    DEATHCATSmeow , Gabrielle Henderson Report

    SheHulk
    Community Member
    Premium
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    There are credit cards with reasonable interest rates? Best advice my father ever gave me was never have a credit card, I only have a debit card and have had to save to buy stuff. Only debt is mortgage. When I found out that my son had taken several "small" short loans (rates around 20 %), he got the lecture. We are in Sweden where we don't exactly have credit scores, though. We have debit history.

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    #8

    43 Wealthy-People Luxuries That Don’t Look Expensive At First Being able to buy silence, privacy, and distance from other people. Rich people can pay to avoid noise, crowds, waiting, interruptions, unwanted attention, even unnecessary social interaction. Bigger homes, quieter neighborhoods, private transport, exclusive spaces where fewer people have access to them. At a certain level, luxury stops being about expensive things and starts being about control over your environment and your peace of mind. Being able to buy comfort without thinking twice. Quiet spaces, good mattresses, clean and safe neighborhoods, air conditioning running all day without worrying about the bill, food delivery whenever you’re tired, healthy high-quality food..

    CraftyBrilliant9485 , Getty Images Report

    howdylee
    Community Member
    23 hours ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    A house a few miles from mine went up for sale, way out in a rural area, mostly farms and podunk no-traffic-light village. House listed around $2M (insanely expensive compared to the neighboring area.) One of the listing points was that it was only a 15 minute HELICOPTER commute to the nearest major city. Most people's yearly income is close to this house's property tax, and they're boasting about helicopter access.

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    #9

    Hands putting a dollar bill into a brown wallet, hinting at rich people's silent luxuries. Depends how rich we're talking about. I knew a billionaire once. He didn't carry a wallet. Nobody ever presented him with a bill for anything. It was all just taken care of by his people without a word. But if you were at the restaurant sitting at the next table over you wouldn't notice a thing.

    Also all of his clothes, even the casual clothes, was custom made for him. Never had any branding on it.

    limbodog Report

    #10

    43 Wealthy-People Luxuries That Don’t Look Expensive At First I work with bay area rich people and they have community that deeply extends their opportunities.

    If you wanted to pick up Burning Man tomorrow you can use your mate’s RV without charge. Want to make exhibits? Come to your colleague’s airplane hangar which he owns and runs as a metallurgy workshop. Never created a propane fueled dragon sculpture before? Your friend’s husband is bringing his team to make it for you.

    Hated your dragon installation because you were in a dark med induced hole and couldn’t communicate to the craftsman your vision? Your mate’s wife is the on the board of a commercial office association and they will buy it as public art giving you money and them a tax write off.

    EdgeMe_Elmo , Getty Images Report

    Linda Lee
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This sounds like a deeply personal example.

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    #11

    Woman in a robe enjoying silent luxuries, meditating by a window with a serene mountain and lake view. Time without constant pressure.

    Not just free time, but the ability to make decisions without every choice being tied to survival, bills, or exhaustion. Being able to rest without guilt, turn down bad opportunities, solve problems quickly with money, or disappear for a while without your life collapsing.

    A lot of wealthy people also buy convenience in ways most people barely notice. Things getting handled before they become stressful. Good healthcare fast. Quiet spaces. Reliable transportation. Access through connections instead of waiting.

    From the outside it can look like “they just seem calmer,” but a big part of that calm comes from having buffers between themselves and everyday stress.

    Safe-Equivalent-1099 , Sam Carter Report

    Ye Olde Dirty Grumpy
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    What? I only know ONE rich person like that. Most are hustling to make even more money

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    #12

    A small wooden fishing boat cuts through the ocean with mountains in the distance, a silent luxury many enjoy. Passive income. No need to worry about making sure you're being productive in order to afford dad's new fishing boat. The money comes whether you need it or not.

    gksozae , Vidar Nordli-Mathisen Report

    Petra Peitsch
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Yeah, that's nice. But for it, daddy or most likely grand- and great-grand daddy had a hell-out-of-freaking-much work, like 90-120 years ago. Flexing with it, is just disgusting. Even between the "richies".

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    #13

    43 Wealthy-People Luxuries That Don’t Look Expensive At First I've always said that the level of rich I want to be, is to be able to choose the most convenient flight to my location. Not to check various days for the best price, or take a red eye because it's £50 cheaper than the one at a respectable time. I'd like to just book the flight I ACTUALLY want to take.

    disgruntledshadow , Getty Images Report

    Sandwich Saturdays
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Or book a flight at all... I have never been able to afford a ticket before, so the fact that you can even fly at all, you are blessed.

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    #14

    43 Wealthy-People Luxuries That Don’t Look Expensive At First Not worrying about basic bills.

    SubtleStripe , Cphotos Report

    Geoffrey Scott
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Wife and I have always paid basic needs first. If we had 'wants' money great, if we didn't, we either worked OT or went without.

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    #15

    A woman with curly hair, wearing a black leather jacket, shopping for groceries. She exemplifies silent luxuries. A college friend who went grocery shopping with a famous person's daughter said it was remarkably fast because the girl just threw into her shopping cart whatever caught her eye, whatever she felt like she wanted. No looking at the ads. No price checking, no price comparisons.

    I don't know why but I can't seem to forget that.

    Tired_not_Retired_12 , Boxed Water Is Better Report

    Petra Peitsch
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I don't say, that I'm not looking at the prices, because, that would be a lie. And sometimes, I'm buying things, just because, they are on sale (for example ham, what I have still a 250 gr. pack of it, but now it's on sale, with 1,30 euro less. so, I'm buying another pack. I don't really need it, but I'm buying another pack, because .. you know .. sale). But mainly, I would say, if I really want something, I can afford to buy it, not really looking at the price. Anyway, what gives me away, that I'm not rich, if there is a possibility, that I can have the same item cheaper, sure as hell, I'll take it!

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    #16

    43 Wealthy-People Luxuries That Don’t Look Expensive At First The one thing they all have in common is places to rest/relax.

    They literally have nothing to worry about so they are able to switch their minds off completely.

    Nearly all of them have their version of a backyard oasis, man cave, or whatever it is they need to just turn their brain off.

    They also have not one but several places to go for vacations that they own.

    (I did construction/home reno for A LOT of top one percent clients. Nearly every job was an oasis of some sort).

    glebo123 , Thiago Neves Report

    #17

    43 Wealthy-People Luxuries That Don’t Look Expensive At First Peace of mind. Not spending money by choice is not same as not spending because you are broke.

    v1035RoadTrip , Getty Images Report

    Michael Largey
    Community Member
    19 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    "Peace of mind" is so often really just "absence of conscience".

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    #18

    43 Wealthy-People Luxuries That Don’t Look Expensive At First Financial peace of mind is extremely underrated when it comes to mental health. The ability to not worry how you're going to handle car problems, or groceries, or unforeseen bills that show up out of nowhere really gives space to relax and provide a lot of inner peace.

    Ishouldtrythat Report

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    #19

    A smiling, bearded man in a suit talking on a cell phone, sitting on concrete stairs, embodying silent luxuries. A gargantuan amount of social capital. And I'm not talking upper middle class, but really rich people. Their entire "work"-day consist of managing connections. Because if you need something in a world where everyone has functionally infinite money you need something else than money to get what you want.


    This grants them a safety net that others don't have, because even if they go bankrupt they'll always have a friend with a third vacation home where they can stay until all the decade long lawsuits have been settled.


    In my opinion this is where the line between working class(upper middle class if you want) and rich really is. No exact dollar amount, but at a safety net that exists outside of money.

    lieuwestra , Vitaly Gariev Report

    JAZ_P
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Unless those friends abandon you Schitts Creek style

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    #20

    A woman in scrubs and yellow-green gloves brushes a plaid shirt at a dry cleaner. Rich people's silent luxuries. Laundry service. I remember when I was a kid my mom paid some lady that hung out at the Laundromat to do our laundry for us. I mentioned that to a teacher or something and they assumed we were rich. We weren't, not even close. It was literally some trailer park lady that set up shop and did people's laundry for like $5. But looking back as an adult that's definitely rich people behavior, especially if it includes pick-up and drop off.

    Fuginshet , Getty Images Report

    Petra Peitsch
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    No matter how my financies are, I want to handle my undies myself ....

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    #21

    43 Wealthy-People Luxuries That Don’t Look Expensive At First Medical Appointment on call as a concierge service.

    Example: If you pay a medical clinic a membership fee, you are bumped to the first of the line and there will always be a doctor on call.

    Readditlovesbans , Getty Images Report

    Linda Lee
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    America's pay the membership fee. We call it insurance and none of us are happy about it.

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    #22

    Dentist working on a woman's teeth, a silent luxury for rich people that normal people might not consider. Dental problems are a small inconvience of time and not financial.

    Balazi , Getty Images Report

    Tom Hardeveld
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    the real rich just let somebody else get their teeth drilled for them so they don't have to go...

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    #23

    43 Wealthy-People Luxuries That Don’t Look Expensive At First Never feeling existentional threat.

    You come to life, you live, you learn, you get a girl, home, and do whatever you want.

    Now imagine normal person who gets into adulthood, and realizes to own a home, he needs earnings of 2 people, and worse, everybody is bent on not needing anyone else. Jobs are harder to get, food gets expensive, and you might not have kids, because you are afraid you'd bring them into same struggle you had your entire life.

    Altruistic_Exit7947 , Meg Aghamyan Report

    Tobi Ornot
    Community Member
    23 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Kids in rich families get broken at first to have no compassion to others.

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    #24

    A woman in an orange sweater, eyes closed, enjoying a sunny view of a city and mountains. #SilentLuxuries #RichPeople Being able to do nothing on trips because you don’t have to make the most of every vacation day and you’ll probably be back to Italy again soon anyway.

    yourlittlebirdie , Dario Moscato Report

    Jihana
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    That's a weird way of thinking about vacations. I regularly do nothing on trips, the whole point of going on vacation is to relax and charge your batteries. And no, I am not rich.

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    #25

    A rich man buys a car. He can either afford to buy it outright, or because he has excellent credit he gets a brand new car with a full warranty. He has lower insurance premiums because of his credit, and the fact he has a new car with modern safety features. The car rarely has issues, but if it does it's covered by a warranty and he gets a courtesy car to drive whilst it's being fixed. Worse case scenario, his insurance will cover a rental.

    A poor man buys a car. They can only afford something used. They have bad credit so their monthly payment is higher and their insurance premiums are higher because of their credit, and it's an older and less reliable car. The car is frequently in the shop because it's old and breaks down. When this happens, they either have to take public transport, get lifts, or walk to work. Or, miss time and then lose even more money. There is no courtesy car, and their insurance isn't good enough for rental, and a rental company probably wouldn't rent to them anyway.

    This is how poor people remain poor.

    zerbey Report

    David
    Community Member
    11 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    even non-rich people can buy cars outright, if they save, or buy it with an auto load. I know someone who got a Camry Hybrid for 30k (with some extra features) off the lot for 30k, person wasnt rich, but saved up for a few years every month, to get a new car to drive to work (drives an hour each way, mostly highway, so the Hybrid was to save gas)

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    #26

    A smiling nurse in blue scrubs and white gloves chats with a woman on a couch. This image highlights luxuries. Elizabeth Currid-Halkett wrote a book called The Sum of Small Things: A Theory of the Aspirational Class. She suggested that Inconspicuous Consumption (as opposed to conspicuous consumption we all learned about in school) is the biggest one.

    Money spent on stuff like education, personal services, health and longevity activities. And as others have said, a lot of money affords the possibility of reducing or removing friction related to decisions, time, and outside pressures.

    jagaang , A. C. Report

    Sandwich Saturdays
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The sarcasm in these comments leaves quite a bitter taste doesn't it?

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    #27

    Friends enjoying an outdoor dinner under string lights, with an oud and wine. A silent luxury experience. Family gatherings are awesome. No one is keeping track of who is footing the bill or how much different people are spending. We pretty much are all just contributing to the gathering without thinking and no one is ever thinking about money.

    GenericHam , Considerate Agency Report

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    #28

    A smiling female customer receives a shopping bag from a cheerful male store employee, showcasing everyday silent luxuries. Our household income is in the top...3% it looks like? I think that's "rich" but I'm sure some people here will think only helicopters, private islands, have a live-in staff, etc are "rich."

    As a person that was housing & food insecure as a kid, whose eaten both government cheese and dumpster dived for food, my overwhelming response is:

    The single thing that makes me feel "rich" is keeping my costs and expecatations low enough (avoiding most lifestyle creep) so that I not only don't look at prices for everyday living, I have no idea how much things realistically cost.

    Of course I do if I'm buying some piece of electronics, or planning a vacation,e tc. And I was pretty shocked when I filled my car the other day and it was over $6 a gallon here in CA. But in my general day to day I don't know or check prices on food, snacks, milk, dry cleaning, etc. I don't really think about or look at them if I go to somewhere like Home Depot, etc.

    Overall, this is what I idealized "rich" would be like when I was young.

    Displaced_in_Space , Getty Images Report

    Sandwich Saturdays
    Community Member
    1 day ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    So you're rich. She basically said "I just found out I'm in the top %3 but... I don't own a helicopter? I mean, sure, I don't look at price tags when I shop, worry about basic necessities, and can take vacations (though I did see it's $6 for gas now? Wow), but I used to be poor so I'm pretty sure I know what rich looks like. So yeah, I guess I am, yay me!"

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    #29

    Outsourcing all the mundane jobs. Cooking, cleaning, gardening, house maintenance etc.

    SteamboatFatty Report

    Shoshanna
    Community Member
    22 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    But if you are lucky enough, time used on those things can be used for things you care about, whether it's your children, volunteering, enjoying a hobby, etc. But yeah, my mother hated having those who helped us with "mundane" tasks being there, obviously not because of them, but she wanted to do the things herself. She played tennis instead, despite being able to be a present mother, but that's a whole 10-20 years of psychiatry to itself. And my father loves to cook and garden, but had no time. His time is now though and he can do it more now, although he can't completely let go of working :-)

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    #30

    Committing crime knowing you'll be caught and then happily paying fines.

    I know a guy who lived about a quarter mile from the beach, but there was a strip of trees on county property between his new house and the water. He asked how much the fine for illegally cutting trees was ($2500 each), and then decided it was worth it. He happily paid several million in fines to get what her wanted even though it was a crime.

    Mister_Magnus42 Report

    Calane E. Vanya
    Community Member
    23 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    all fines should be percentage of wealth/income, not specific amounts

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    #31

    Overhead shot of a person in blue pants and socks, with a brown oxford shoe next to their foot. Rich people luxuries. I remember seeing an interview with George Hamilton where he said he only wore brand new socks. He would wear them one time and get rid of them. No one would ever notice that.

    funky_grandma , Getty Images Report

    Loosey Goosey
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    All that money and he doesn't own a washing machine?

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    #32

    Being able to make mistakes without their life falling apart.

    A bad month, a failed business idea, quitting a job suddenly, moving cities, taking time off most rich people have enough cushioning that those decisions don’t become disasters.

    For normal people, one mistake can spiral into debt, stress, or years of recovery. For wealthy people, problems are often expensive inconveniences instead of life-changing events.

    That safety net is a luxury most people don’t even think about because it’s invisible until you don’t have it.

    One-Cod5348 Report

    David Paterson
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Don't be too sure of that. Rich people can be just as close to bankruptcy as poor people. A single mistake, or a single successful enemy, is all it takes.

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    #33

    Not knowing specifically how much money they make or have in the bank.

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    Nicola Roberts
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I have a cashflow forecast that let's me know, for the next couple of years, how much money I don't have.

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    #34

    Joyful woman smiling outdoors, showcasing a moment of silent luxury. Sometimes I think that rich people operate at 90s speed. No rush. Able to talk to strangers without fear. “You can do anything and be whatever you want to be- so just do it!” Mentality .

    highapplepie , Brooke Cagle Report

    Petra Peitsch
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It's called social-democracy in real 1st world countries. But nevermind ...

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    #35

    One of the interesting things I've seen with money, and with people that have a lot of it, is just how much they get for free or at reduced costs. It feels like every budget friendly or cost conscious good or service opens up an opportunity to be nickel and dimed after the point of initial spend. With travel for example - cheap flights and hotels come with a laundry list of add-on fees. Bag fees, early check-in/late check-out, and on and on and on. Meanwhile a premium flight or hotel come with free bags, daily food/experience credits, food, drinks, and so much more.

    I don't consider myself rich, but some would. I have a couple high cost credit cards that make travel so cheap in so many ways. My last trip was to a four star hotel - all covered in points, free upgrade to a suite, flight covered in points, free upgrade, no bag fees, free lounge access with food/drinks,etc. 75% off on the rental car, upgrade to a large SUV for free. $75/day meal credit, access to the mountain right out the back of the hotel so no transportation fees, it was great.

    And it's not just with luxuries with travel. When you have money you can capitalize. Paying up front for discounts, avoiding costs of loans/credit. Life is incredibly expensive when you don't have money.

    ItFappens Report

    nottheactualphoto
    Community Member
    11 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    If my rental car were changed to a "large SUV," that would be a downgrade. I want a CAR.

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    #36

    Using summer as a verb.

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    #37

    Easy access to jobs in the arts and humanities. Rich people can freelance, work part-time, pick and choose their employer based on what they want to do and not based on salary. So a rich kid fresh out of college can work part-time at a low paying museum job, because they love museums, and they don't need a side hustle or a second job. Meanwhile, another kid who wants to be an actor has to abandon it pretty quickly because they're not getting consistent work, and waitressing is not paying enough to address their student debt and living expenses.

    What this looks like on a societal level is that careers in "high passion, low income" fields like the nonprofit arts and humanities are increasingly for the wealthy, first because the wealthy have the resources to give their children an advantage from a very young age (music lessons, elite private arts high school), second because the wealthy can leverage their connections in the industry, and third because the wealthy are the only group who doesn't need to care about paycheck size or health insurance copays. So actors, artists, museum workers, musicians, dancers, singers, writers, are more often from upper income families as it's getting harder and harder to scrape by as a struggling young artist unless you've got financial backing from family.

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    nottheactualphoto
    Community Member
    11 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I've never had any desire to be an actor, or to work in the arts or humanities. Leave me alone and let me design electronic gadgets.

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    #38

    My husband and I travel internationally using reward points on credit cards and now only fly business class to do it. We only do this when we’ve saved up enough points for the flights/hotels to be free, but it’s an incredible luxury that I didn’t know existed. I grew up incredibly poor and the idea of that didn’t even make sense to me, but now that I’ve done it I never want to go back.

    Traveling is no longer a stressful hassle. We show up, go to a lounge and get to snack on free food, then get to board whenever we like on the plane. They give you all the food and drinks you want, and most importantly, you get lay flat seats so you can actually arrive to where you’re going rested and ready. I still remember the first time I went out of the country in my twenties and how uncomfortable the flight was, how long it felt, how I was constantly worried about eating too much of my snack so I wouldn’t be starving later, how my body was so stiff and sore, etc. None of those things are even concerns with the upgrade. I get off the exact same flight as the people in coach, but our experiences could not have been more different.

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    nottheactualphoto
    Community Member
    11 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I got bumped to first class once. The upstairs of a 747 is really nice.

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    #39

    Time

    They buy their time in ways I could never.

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    Petra Peitsch
    Community Member
    1 day ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    I really don't know ... Sometimes, I manage to have 72-96 hours a week for just myself. No complaining, I can enjoy it, even if, I'm just napping ... but to not do anything or just some bare minimum, because you can pay others to do it for you.... So, yeah, that seems to me so a boring life. (Just a quick question Sir/!Madam: Can you still wipe?)

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    #40

    We didn’t have much growing up. I remember my Dad telling me you’re rich when you can grocery shop without looking at every price tag.

    I now feel “rich” because I can buy whatever I fancy when I’m grocery shopping.

    Ibyx Report

    nottheactualphoto
    Community Member
    11 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My dad told me I was rich, because I found a quarter on the sidewalk.

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    #42

    A man in a suit talking on the phone, holding a bag, standing on an airport tarmac near a private jet, representing rich people's silent luxuries. Global transportation that works on their schedule, not TSA's.

    saucy_otters , Getty Images Report

    David
    Community Member
    11 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    or get TSA Pre-check (now $100, but was cheaper when I got it), sign up for contactless to use biometrics, and average time through TSA is 3-4 min for me. If you travel for business, its worth the expense (or get your work to pay for it, like I did).

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    #43

    Lack of Auto problems. Buying new cars even every 3-4 years eliminates all the hassle of finding rides, swapping cars and getting mechanical things handled even if you can afford it.. that next level of just always driving a vehicle that doesn’t break down is an amazing perk that even I did t notice in my own life until my kids started driving and I bought them like 5 year old cars. No big trouble or hassle but occasional brakes or AC or a check engine life that needs to be dealt with that I just haven’t had in my own life in 20 years.

    jimmycorn24 Report

    Petra Peitsch
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I know the guy, who is ranked the top 5 wealthy man in Stuttgart, Germany. We are speaking about billions. He uses public transport in town, and has just 3 cars, from what 1 is a hobby-veteran one. An average USA-family has more cars, than him.

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