Key Takeaways

  • Even high earners can live paycheck to paycheck if fixed costs eat up too much income.
  • The biggest mistake, according to Moore, is not knowing where your money is going.
  • Awareness, planning, and a clear savings system are key to breaking the cycle.

When most people think of living paycheck to paycheck, they picture families struggling to cover basic expenses on modest incomes. But financial planners say the problem increasingly spans high earners, too.

Chloe Moore, certified financial planner (CFP) and founder of Financial Staples, works with clients making between $200,000 and $1 million a year who often come to her without a clue about how much they’re spending or saving. “Some are loosely tracking their spending or are saving but with no system or plan,” she says. “Others are surprisingly living paycheck to paycheck.”

Moore explains that high fixed expenses—including debt payments—are often to blame for this surprising trend. But thankfully, some careful planning goes a long way to help ease financial strain.

The Hidden Risk of High Incomes

Earning a large salary doesn’t automatically translate into financial security. Moore says the biggest mistake she sees is “not knowing where their money is going.” Many high earners loosely track their spending—or save without a plan—until rising fixed costs take over.

The problem is that these high fixed costs—like mortgages, car payments, or tuition—leave little flexibility if income drops. That’s why Moore emphasizes starting with a clear picture of cash flow, understanding which expenses are flexible and which are nonnegotiable, and ultimately aligning expenses with long-term goals.

Why Awareness Is the Turning Point

Getting clarity requires a thoughtful review of your expenses. To do this, Moore downloads six to 12 months of a client’s bank and credit card transactions, categorizes them, and then carefully reviews the spending to get an understanding of how exactly the client’s income was spent. “With the newfound awareness, we discuss what spending categories stand out, where they wish they spent more money or less money, and their nonnegotiables,” she says.

That review can be eye-opening—especially for high earners who assume their income covers everything. Seeing exactly where money goes helps shift priorities, whether that’s cutting discretionary spending or putting more toward savings and experiences.

Turning Awareness Into a System That Works

Once clients see the full picture, Moore helps them review their savings rate as a percentage of gross income across accounts like 401(k)s, Roth individual retirement accounts (Roth IRAs), Health Savings Accounts (HSAs), and taxable brokerage accounts. From there, they set savings and investment goals aligned with their long-term vision. “For most clients, once we go through this process and set up the system, it’s easy to adjust as their income increases,” she says.

The goal is a repeatable structure that scales with income—so bonuses or raises grow savings instead of fueling lifestyle creep.

The Bottom Line

Living paycheck to paycheck isn’t always about income—it’s often about a lack of clarity and poor planning. Moore says even people earning $200,000 or more fall into the same trap if they don’t know where their money is going. But by tracking spending, reviewing fixed costs, and building a savings system that grows with income, high earners can avoid the hidden strain of living paycheck to paycheck.