By Sam Rivera — Not a millionaire. Not in debt. Just someone who tried a small experiment.
Last updated: April 2026
A few years ago, I decided to save $50 a month. Not for anything specific. Just to see if I could.
I set up an automatic transfer. $50 from checking to savings every payday. I did not think about it. I did not adjust my spending. I just let it run.
After one year, I had $600.
That is not life-changing money. It would not pay off my student loans. It would not buy a car. It would not cover a major emergency.
But something else changed. Not my bank account. My mindset.
What $600 Taught Me
Before this experiment, I thought I could not save. Every month, my bank account hit near zero. I assumed I was spending everything I needed to spend.
The $50 experiment proved me wrong. I saved $50 a month and did not even notice it was gone. That meant I had $50 of waste in my budget. Maybe more.
| Month | What I Thought | What Was True |
|---|---|---|
| Before | “I cannot save anything” | “I have not tried” |
| During | “I will miss this $50” | “I did not notice it was gone” |
| After | “I saved $600” | “I could have saved more” |
That was the real lesson. Not that $600 is a lot of money. It is not. But that I was capable of saving more than I thought.
What I Did Next
After that year, I increased the amount. $75 a month. Then $100. Then $150.
Each time, I did not notice the money missing. My spending just adjusted. A little less takeout. A few fewer impulse buys. Nothing dramatic.
After two years, I had over $2,000. Still not life-changing. But enough to cover a car repair. Enough to not panic when something unexpected came up.
That was the goal. Not early retirement. Just less panic.
What I Learned About Saving
Small amounts add up.
$50 a month is $600 a year. That is a plane ticket. That is a new phone. That is a few months of gym membership.
It is not nothing. It just feels like nothing while you are doing it.
Automatic is the only way.
If I had to decide every month to save $50, I would not have done it. Something would always come up. A dinner out. A sale. A “I will do it next month.”
The automatic transfer removed the decision. That is why it worked.
Saving is a skill you build.
You do not start by saving 50% of your income. You start with $50. Then you increase it. You get used to living on slightly less. Over time, that gets easier.
What I Am Not Saying
I am not saying $600 is enough for an emergency fund. It is not. You need more.
I am not saying everyone can save $50 a month. Some people truly have no extra money. If that is you, ignore this.
I am not saying saving alone will make you wealthy. It will not. You also need income.
I am just saying: if you think you cannot save anything, try a small amount. Smaller than you think. $20. Even $10. Automate it. See what happens.
You might surprise yourself.
How to Try This
Pick an amount that feels almost too small.
- $10 a month
- $5 a week
- $1 a day
Set up an automatic transfer. Do not think about it. Let it run for three months.
After three months, check the balance. It will not be a lot. But it will be more than zero.
Then ask yourself: did I miss that money? If the answer is no, increase the amount slightly. Repeat.
The Bottom Line
I saved $50 a month for a year. I ended with $600. That did not change my life.
But learning that I could save changed how I think about money. I stopped seeing myself as someone who cannot save. I started seeing myself as someone who can.
That shift was worth more than $600.
About the author: Sam Rivera writes about personal finance from an ordinary person’s perspective. He is not a financial advisor. He just tried a small experiment and learned something.
This article reflects personal experience. Everyone’s financial situation is different. What worked for one person may not work for another.





