The Best Personal Finance Podcasts in 2026
A good money podcast does something a book can't: it keeps the subject alive in your week. Twenty minutes on a commute, twice a week, and money stops being the thing you avoid thinking about. Here's our shortlist, organized by what you're working on, not by chart position. We have no sponsorship relationship with any of them.
New to podcasts? They're free. Open Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube, search the show name, and tap follow. New episodes arrive on their own, and every back catalog is free from episode one.
If you're just getting started
How to Money
The friendliest on-ramp in the category: practical topics, listener questions, and a Friday news roundup, all without jargon or judgment. If you only subscribe to one show on this page, make it this one.
Money Rehab
One bite-size topic per episode, perfect for short attention spans and short commutes. Good for building the daily habit of thinking about money without homework.
NerdWallet's Smart Money
Measured, well-researched answers to listener questions, with actual credentials behind the microphone. The least hot-take show in personal finance, in the best way.
The Stacking Benjamins Show
A roundtable from a basement that takes the material seriously without taking itself seriously. If finance content usually bores you, this is the antidote.
If you're paying off debt or fixing spending
The Ramsey Show
The biggest show in the category, built on call-ins from people in real debt trouble. Strict, behavior-first, and absolutist about debt; that absolutism is exactly what some listeners need and exactly what others bounce off. Take the intensity, leave what doesn't fit.
Frugal Friends
Values-based spending rather than deprivation: figure out what you actually love, cut everything else without guilt. Especially good for chronic over-spenders who hate being lectured.
The Clark Howard Podcast
Decades of consumer-protection instincts: how to avoid getting ripped off, scammed, or overcharged. The episodes pay for themselves the first time you renew car insurance.
If you're ready to build wealth
The Money Guy Show
The most credentialed mainstream show, with a clear step-by-step wealth-building framework. The natural next show once budgeting is boring and investing questions start.
Afford Anything
"You can afford anything, but not everything" is the thesis, and every episode is really about tradeoffs and decision-making. Smart without being academic.
Planet Money and The Indicator
Not advice shows; they make you economically literate through storytelling, which quietly improves every money decision you make. The Indicator's 10-minute format is a painless daily habit.
If money is a relationship subject
Money for Couples
Real couples, real numbers, and the psychology underneath the arguments. The rare show that improves conversations at your kitchen table, not just your spreadsheet. (Renamed from the I Will Teach You To Be Rich podcast in 2025.)
So Money
Interviews and listener questions with a career and family lens, particularly strong on women and money. More than 1,400 episodes deep for a reason.
If you're chasing financial independence, early or late
ChooseFI
The community hub of the financial independence movement, back at full strength since Jonathan returned as co-host in early 2026. Start with the back-catalog foundations episodes.
Catching Up to FI
Financial independence for people starting in their 40s, 50s, and 60s, hosted by people who did exactly that. The encouragement-to-math ratio is calibrated for late starters.
Optimal Finance Daily
Curated readings of the best personal finance blog posts ever written, ten minutes at a time. A painless way to absorb the canon.
Voices and communities
Journey to Launch
The path from debt to investing to independence, with a strong Black community focus and zero gatekeeping. Consistently practical.
Brown Ambition
Career and wealth-building for women of color, where salary negotiation gets equal billing with investing. (Co-founder Tiffany Aliche stepped back from regular hosting; the show goes on strong.)
Networth and Chill
The strongest of the newer Gen Z-flavored shows: a former Wall Street trader translating finance for people who learned about money from TikTok, with more rigor than the algorithm usually serves.
A listening note from your coaches
Podcasts educate; they can't see your numbers. When a host says "never do X" or "always do Y," they're speaking to a million people at once, and you are not the average of a million people. Use shows for fluency and motivation, then make decisions against your own budget and goals. That last step is the whole game, and it's the part we do with clients. Our Money 101 crash course also covers how to spot the difference between education and a sales funnel.
Common questions
Want the personalized version of what these shows do? Book a free Financial Freedom Assessment and bring your actual numbers.