Four financial lessons from your future self
16 MARCH 2026
If your 40-year-old self could sit down with your 20-year-old self, the conversation probably would not be about bold investment moves or overnight financial windfalls. It would be about the small, quiet habits that either slowly derail your finances or steadily build them.
Global Money Week, taking place from 16 to 22 March 2026, this year carries the theme 'Smart Money Talks'. The theme is a reminder that asking questions about money, sharing experiences and speaking openly about financial challenges is not a weakness but the very place where good financial habits begin. Melissa Walters, Finance Executive at RCS, says the theme resonates strongly. “Many young people find money conversations uncomfortable or even embarrassing. But financial confidence grows through honest conversations, not silence. The sooner you start asking the right questions and talking to the right people, the better positioned you are to make sound decisions.”
Walters adds that the habits which shape your financial future are often formed without you realising it. “What many people only understand later in life is that financial strain rarely comes from one dramatic mistake. It comes from small, repeated behaviours that gradually mould your financial profile. And because they feel minor at the time, they are easily overlooked.”
Here are four everyday financial lessons your future self would want you to know.
1. Protect your credit profile in the small moments
There are certain credit mistakes that are easily avoidable yet surprisingly common. More often than not, they come down to payment behaviour.
Paying something towards a credit or store account is not the same as paying what is owing. Skipping or paying less than the minimum instalment is recorded as a missed or late payment, regardless of intent. “Minimum repayments are not optional,” says Walters. “They are the contractual requirement needed to protect your credit profile.”
Timing matters just as much as the amount. Even a single payment made one day late can be recorded as a late payment and affect your credit standing. Your credit record reflects patterns, not intentions and a history of late payments signals risk to any future lender, regardless of the amounts involved.
The simplest way to protect yourself against these mistakes is to set up a debit order for at least the minimum instalment on each credit or store account. This ensures your payment goes off on time every month, without relying on memory or manual action.
A good starting point is knowing where you currently stand. RCS offers a free credit score check which is a straightforward way to understand your credit profile before any issues arise.
2. Understand what debt actually costs you
Compound interest is widely celebrated as a wealth-building tool. But when it applies to debt, it works in reverse. Interest compounds on outstanding balances, meaning the longer debt is carried, the more expensive it becomes. Small monthly repayment shortfalls can significantly increase the total amount repaid over time.
“Understanding the true long-term cost of borrowing helps consumers make better decisions about how quickly to repay and how much to borrow,” says Walters. “Responsible credit use means thinking beyond the monthly instalment and considering the total repayment over time. Choose realistic repayment terms and make sure instalments genuinely fit within your monthly budget.”
3. Budget like it matters - because it does
A budget is not a punishment; it is a plan. Most people in their twenties have never written one down, and many in their forties wish they had started sooner. A simple monthly budget (income minus fixed expenses) followed by a conscious decision about what is left - fundamentally changes your relationship with money. It tells you what you can genuinely afford before you spend it. It also makes lifestyle creep visible, so the gradual rise in expenses does not catch you off guard.
“If you do not know where your money is going, you cannot make it go where you want it to,” says Walters. “A budget does not have to be complicated. It just has to be honest. Start with your income, list your essential expenses, and decide deliberately what happens to the rest. That single habit creates the financial clarity that most people spend years trying to find.”
4. Automate your savings before you have a chance to spend them
The most reliable way to save is to remove the decision entirely. Setting up an automatic transfer to a savings account on payday, even a modest amount, means you save consistently without relying on willpower or good intentions at the end of the month. Over time, this builds a financial cushion that reduces dependence on emergency lending when unexpected expenses arise.
The earlier this habit starts, the more powerful it becomes. The same compounding effect that makes debt expensive over time works in your favour when applied to savings. “You do not have to save a large amount to start,” says Walters. “You just have to start. Even a small fixed amount transferred automatically each month builds the habit, the discipline and eventually the balance that gives you real financial options.”
As Global Money Week reminds young people around the world, financial resilience is built over time, but the habits that create it begin early. “Smart money talks,” concludes Walters. “And the smartest conversation you can have is an honest one with yourself, with people you trust, and with responsible financial partners like RCS. These four areas are a good place to start. Pay attention to them now, and your future self will have one less thing to worry about.”
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