Getting older means getting smarter about where your money goes. These purchases waste money, space, and energy — and most people over 50 already know it.
Your Relationship With Stuff Changes After 50
Something shifts when you hit your fifties. The accumulation phase of life — buying furniture, filling closets, acquiring gadgets — starts to feel less satisfying. Many people in this life stage describe a growing desire to simplify, to own less, to stop spending money on things that don’t genuinely improve their lives.
This list isn’t about deprivation. It’s about redirecting money and energy toward what actually matters at this stage — experiences, health, relationships, and financial security.
1. Extended Warranties on Electronics
Consumer electronics have dramatically improved in reliability, and most reputable brands’ products will outlast the extended warranty period without issue. Studies consistently show that extended warranties are one of the worst value propositions in retail — they’re pure profit for the seller.
Your existing credit card may already provide extended warranty coverage as a cardholder benefit. Check your card’s terms before paying extra for redundant coverage.
2. Gym Equipment You’ll Use Twice
The treadmill in the basement is one of the most universally regretted purchases of middle age. Exercise equipment bought impulsively tends to become an expensive clothes rack within weeks.
Instead, invest in a gym membership or fitness classes where the social accountability and variety will keep you engaged. Or invest in good walking shoes and use the trails and parks that are free. The equipment isn’t the barrier — finding movement you genuinely enjoy is.
3. Fast Fashion and Trend-Driven Clothing
By your fifties, you know what suits you and what you’ll actually wear. Fast fashion items bought on impulse rarely make it into regular rotation. The math doesn’t work: a $15 shirt you wear twice costs more per wear than a $90 shirt you wear forty times.
Build a smaller wardrobe of quality pieces in neutral colours that work together. You’ll spend less overall, look better, and eliminate the daily stress of a closet full of things that don’t fit well or make you feel good.
4. Timeshares
If you don’t own one, never buy one. Timeshares have one of the worst resale markets of any asset in existence — the resale value is often zero, and many owners end up paying hundreds of dollars to give theirs away.
The maintenance fees, which increase annually and must be paid regardless of whether you use the property, can continue for decades. The same travel budget invested in hotels or vacation rentals provides infinitely more flexibility and better value.
5. The Latest Smartphone Every Year
Modern smartphones have reached a point where year-over-year improvements are marginal for most users. A two or three-year-old flagship from Apple or Samsung performs nearly identically to the current model for everything most people do — calling, texting, email, photos, and browsing.
Keep your phone until it genuinely struggles with daily tasks or stops receiving software security updates. You’ll save $800 to $1,200 every extra year you keep it.
6. Lottery Tickets as a Regular Habit
The occasional lottery ticket bought for fun is harmless. Buying tickets regularly as a financial strategy is a guaranteed money-losing proposition. The expected return on every lottery dollar spent is less than 50 cents.
The same $20 per week invested in a basic index fund over 15 years would grow to over $25,000. The lottery will never match that — and the odds of winning the jackpot are roughly equivalent to being struck by lightning twice.
7. Expensive Coffee Machines With Proprietary Pods
Pod coffee machines lock you into buying proprietary pods that cost $0.70 to $1.50 per cup — roughly 10 to 30 times the cost of ground coffee that tastes just as good. A simple French press or drip coffee maker makes excellent coffee for a fraction of the ongoing cost.
Over five years, the pod machine habit can cost $2,000 to $3,000 more than alternatives. That’s a meaningful number in retirement planning.
8. Furniture That Only Looks Good in the Store
Many people over 50 have at least one piece of furniture that was beautiful in the showroom and disappointing at home. At this stage of life, it makes more sense to be selective and patient — buying less furniture of genuinely higher quality — than to fill space quickly with pieces that won’t last or wear well.
Before any significant furniture purchase, measure carefully, consider the light in the room, and if possible, see the piece in someone’s home rather than under showroom lighting.
9. Unrealistic Health Supplements
The supplement industry generates billions selling products with little to no clinical evidence behind them. Most people over 50 benefit from a small number of evidence-based supplements — vitamin D (especially in Canada’s northern climate), vitamin B12, omega-3 fatty acids, and perhaps magnesium — but the elaborate anti-aging stacks and detox regimens sold online are largely unproven.
Spend your supplement budget on what the evidence actually supports and get the rest from a nutritious diet. Discuss any new supplements with your doctor, as some can interact with medications.
10. Guilt-Driven Purchases
Perhaps the most expensive category of all. These are the purchases made because you feel you “should” — the gift you bought out of obligation, the donation made to stop the caller, the upgrade you agreed to so as not to seem difficult.
By 50, you’ve earned the right to spend your money on what actually matters to you. Saying a polite but firm “no thank you” to purchases that don’t serve your values is one of the most financially sound habits you can develop.
