Interesting Things to Know
The Midwestern Millionaire: The Guy Next Door Plans His Moves
You probably know someone like this.
He is not flashy. He packs a lunch. He waits for fruit to go on sale. When the kids ask to stop for fast food, the answer is, “We have food at home.”
And quietly, steadily, he may be building a fortune.
Financial advisor Joe Schmitz, author of Midwestern Millionaire, describes this as the saver’s mindset. It is the idea that long-term wealth is often built less by big moments and more by small, steady choices. The people who retire with seven-figure nest eggs are not always the ones who earned the most. Often, they are the ones who waste the least.
The math behind frugality is simple, but easy to overlook.
Skipping a $6 coffee every workday can save more than $1,500 a year. Bringing lunch from home instead of buying it can save $50 or more a week. Buying a used car instead of a new one, keeping a phone until it actually stops working, using the library instead of buying every book — none of these choices may feel like wealth-building moves at the time.
Over 30 years, they can be.
That is because money saved is not just money kept. It is money that can pay down debt, build an emergency fund, go into a retirement account or grow through investments. Small amounts, repeated over time, can become meaningful.
There is another side to this that does not get discussed as often: financial instability and life instability often travel together.
Frequent moves can mean deposits, truck rentals, storage fees, and setup costs. A broken or lost phone can turn into an unplanned $800 bill. Carrying loans means paying interest, which is simply paying extra for things already purchased. Each expense may seem separate, but together they drain money that could have been quietly growing somewhere else.
The frugal future millionaire is not necessarily living a joyless life. In fact, the opposite may be true. During their working years, careful savers often have enough money to take vacations, help their children, handle car repairs, and sleep at night. They may still travel, but they do not need the most expensive hotel. They may enjoy a dinner out, but not every night. They may buy nice things, but they do not buy every nice thing.
That difference matters.
A stable financial life is often built on habits that seem boring from the outside. Paying bills on time. Avoiding impulse purchases. Keeping vehicles longer. Cooking at home. Saving before spending. Staying out of high-interest debt. Building a cushion before trouble arrives.
None of it looks dramatic. That is the point.
The Midwestern millionaire next door is not trying to impress strangers. He is planning ahead. He knows that every dollar has a job, and he is careful about sending too many of them away for convenience, interest, or appearances.
You do not need a mansion, a luxury car, or a huge salary to build financial security. You need steady habits, a stable life, and the discipline to let small savings add up.
The guy next door figured that out a long time ago.







