7 Must-Read Finance Books

It doesn’t matter whether you work with a fee-only financial planner , feel confident in DIYing your own money management, or are somewhere in between and just trying to figure it all out — these 7 books belong on your reading list.

When You’re Just Starting Out

Get a Good Grasp of the Fundamentals with Work Your Wealth: 9 Steps to Making Smarter Choices With Your Money

Okay, so maybe I’m a little biased on this title. But if you need some objective third-party opinions, check out that 4.8 out of 5-star rating and the customer reviews on my debut book.

Work Your Wealth covers 9 important foundational pieces of your financial life, and explains how to approach each to set yourself up for long-term success.

If you want to cut through the clutter, skip the fancy technical jargon, and just get to the point of what it takes to do the right things with your money, start here.

Dip Your Toes into the Investing Waters with The Random Walk Guide To Investing: Ten Rules for Financial Success

Burton Malkiel made the famous claim that a “blindfolded monkey throwing darts at a newspaper’s financial pages could select a portfolio that would do just as well as one carefully selected by experts.”

His point? There’s endless research that shows active investment management (like stock-picking) fails to outperform passive management (like investing your money into an index) over time. One of his best-known books, A Random Walk Down Wall Street, is a great read for when you want to build your own investment portfolio to build long-term wealth.

But it’s also extremely in-depth and adds more complication than you need when you’re in learning and information-gathering mode. So pick up The Random Walk Guide to Investing: Ten Rules for Financial Success instead for a simpler, condensed, and extremely readable book.

You’ll get the dos and don’ts of getting started with investments so you can take the first step with confidence.

Related: With Interest Rates Rising, Is Buying a House a Good Idea?

When You Want to Make the Complex Simple

Focus on What’s Important to You and Just Get Started with The One Page Financial Plan: A Simple Way to Be Smart About Your Money

Most people feel completely overwhelmed at the thought of tackling financial planning. It’s hard enough to know what you’ll want in 5 years. How are you supposed to know what you’ll want in 30 years — much less how to actually get there?

Carl Richards believes most financial plans are way too complicated and cause people to overthink their money and goals to the point of analysis paralysis.

His book, The One Page Financial Plan , explains that instead of trying to create this complex plan that details what you’ll do from now until retirement, you should focus on understanding what’s important to you. From there, you can write down meaningful goals that are based on what you value — not on how much money you think you should have in the bank by age 65.

And then, says Richards, you make your best guess about how to get there. Because no one knows what will happen tomorrow, the best any of us can do is align our money with our values and make the best decision we can right now, with what we know and understand today.

Reconnect with Timeless Wisdom with The Richest Man in Babylon

Originally published in the 1920s, George Samuel Clason’s The Richest Man in Babylon dispenses simple — yet powerful — pieces of financial wisdom in parable format.

He tells stories of characters who face challenges and choices to make in both business and personal finances, and those tales remain as relevant today as they were a hundred years ago (or even in ancient Babylon).

Take this snippet from one of the stories:

Thou do not all earn the same, [yet each man claims to have a lean purse or no money]. Some earn much more than others. Some have much larger families to support. Yet, all purses are equally lean. Now I will tell them an unusual truth about men and the sons of men. It is this: That what each of us calls our necessary expenses’ will always grow to equal our incomes unless we protest to the contrary.

Sound familiar? It should: today, we’d call this lifestyle inflation or lifestyle creep and we’d talk about the importance of keeping our expenses in check (even when we start earning more).

It’s a good reminder that personal finance is simple and straightforward. That doesn’t mean reaching financial success is easy. But we don’t have to make it harder on ourselves by adding in complication, either.

When You Are (or Want to Be) a Business Owner

Keep Your Business Finances Efficient with Profit First: A Simple System to Transform Any Business from a Cash-Eating Monster to a Money-Making Machine

Entrepreneurship adds a layer of complexity to any financial situation. Unfortunately, being good at “business” doesn’t automatically make you good at money management — for yourself or for the company you run.

Don’t try to fly by the seat of your pants, or wing it with informal, messy bookkeeping and sloppy money moves. Get Mike Michalowicz’s Profit First so you can learn a system for accounting that explains what to do with the earnings that your business generates.

The important thing to note here is to be sure to consult with your CPA on the tax percentages you’re setting aside. Michalowicz’s gives a great framework, but percentages (especially taxes) should be tailored to your specific situation.

Create a System for Saving with I WIll Teach You to Be Rich

Ramit Sethi’s style can be polarizing. But there’s no denying he’s a successful businessperson — in large part because he focused on nailing the personal finance side of his life from the get-go.

I Will Teach You to Be Rich explains how anyone can set up systems and processes to increase savings and consistently grow wealth.

This is a critical read for entrepreneurs because it’s so easy to justify spending more when you have a business. You can easily burn through far too much of your earnings in an attempt to “invest” in your business.

Yes, growing and scaling up may require some capital. But making sure you have a system for personal financial success in place first will help you better manage and allocate the money coming in through your business.

Learn to Work Your Wealth — as an Entrepreneur

Wishing you had the same kind of fundamental guide for finances as I wrote with Work Your Wealth , but specifically written for entrepreneurs?

If you’ve ever wondered about things like:

  • the logistics of creating a startup and operating budget
  • how much to pay yourself as an entrepreneur
  • what your pricing should be
  • how you should handle your own retirement planning as a business owner
  • ..then you’ll want to stay tuned.