1 episode appearancesAcross 1 podcast
Home/Guests/Pete Adeney, better known as Mr. Money Mustache,

Pete Adeney, better known as Mr. Money Mustache,

1 episodes Β· Page 1/1

β€œI would way rather spend my Saturday renovating a kitchen or building a house or building a deck than being on a golf course or going to the five Michelin star restaurants. I just love hard work, solving problems, preferably outdoors.”

β€” Pete Adeney
APR 8, 2026Farnoosh Torabi

1967: Mr. Money Mustache Is Back. Ten Years Later. Life After Early Retirement

  • β€’

    Guest: Pete Adeney, creator of the influential Mr. Money Mustache blog and FIRE movement pioneer.

    β€œIt’s an honor... I remember I had a little kindergarten boy back then who is now a 20-year-old. And you guys were one of the first interviewers that stopped by when the Mr. Money Mustache blog was first starting.”

    β€” Pete Adeney
  • β€’

    The 'Productive Leisure' Fallacy: Early retirement isn't about a life of luxury or idleness; it's about choosing hard, manual work and problem-solving over passive consumption.

    β€œI would way rather spend my Saturday renovating a kitchen or building a house or building a deck than being on a golf course or going to the five Michelin star restaurants. I just love hard work, solving problems, preferably outdoors.”

    β€” Pete Adeney
  • β€’

    The US Arbitrage: Despite common complaints about inflation, the United States remains the easiest place in the world to build wealth due to the extreme ratio of high salaries to the cost of necessities.

    β€œThe United States is probably the easiest place to earn money and then retire early because our salaries are so high here and everything is so cheap, despite what Americans like to think.”

    β€” Pete Adeney
  • β€’

    The Internet Retirement Police: Financial independence isn't a vow of unemployment; it is the mathematical freedom to work on your own terms without needing the paycheck.

    β€œThe internet retirement police, as I call them... really, it's just there's a very simple formula called the 4% rule, where if you have this much savings, then you technically don't have to work.”

    β€” Pete Adeney
  • β€’

    The 1% Rule of Criticism: Content creators often suffer from negativity bias, forgetting that less than 1% of the audience ever leaves a comment, and the loudest voices are rarely the majority.

    β€œIt’s actually even less than 1% of people who ever read... who ever leave a comment. And then, of course, a lot of haters and grumpy people would read that website.”

    β€” Pete Adeney