4 Money Resolutions You Should Skip This Year

Avoid these common New Year's financial pitfalls that sound good but can harm your long-term wealth and stability.

By Sneha Tete, Integrated MA, Certified Relationship Coach
Created on

There’s nothing wrong with making New Year’s money resolutions — the fresh start effect can jump start good habits and intentions. However, some popular financial pledges do more harm than good, setting you up for frustration, unnecessary costs, or missed opportunities. This article explores four common money resolutions you should skip this year, explaining why they’re problematic and offering smarter alternatives to build lasting wealth.

1. Buying a Brand New Car

New year, new you. It’s tempting to celebrate the fresh start by driving off in a shiny new vehicle, especially with enticing dealer promotions and zero-down offers. But purchasing a brand new car as a resolution is one of the worst financial moves you can make.

New cars depreciate rapidly — losing up to 20% of their value the moment you drive them off the lot, and around 60% within the first five years, according to data from government and industry sources. This steep drop means you’re financing a loss from day one. Monthly payments on a new car average over $700, tying up cash that could go toward investments or debt reduction.

  • High depreciation: New vehicles lose value fastest in years 1-3.
  • Premium insurance and maintenance: Costs are higher before warranties fully kick in.
  • Opportunity cost: Payments divert funds from high-yield savings or retirement accounts.

Instead, consider a reliable used car that’s 2-3 years old. These have already absorbed the biggest depreciation hit while retaining modern safety features and warranties. Research from the U.S. Department of Transportation shows certified pre-owned vehicles often outperform new ones in reliability metrics. Test drive thoroughly, get a vehicle history report, and negotiate like you would for new.

AspectNew CarUsed Car (2-3 Years Old)
Depreciation (First Year)20-30%5-10%
Average Monthly Payment$700+$400-500
ReliabilityGoodExcellent (post-break-in)

By skipping the new car resolution, you’ll save thousands upfront and keep more money working for your future.

2. Withholding (Too Much) Taxes

A common resolution is to “withhold more from your paycheck to avoid owing taxes.” This stems from the pain of a big tax bill, but over-withholding is essentially giving the government an interest-free loan. In 2024, the IRS reported over $4.5 billion in overpayments refunded, with average refunds around $2,800 — money that sat unused all year.

Excessive withholding reduces your take-home pay, tempting impulse spending or limiting savings contributions. It also means missing compound interest: $2,800 at 5% APY earns about $140 annually in a high-yield savings account.

  • Lost earnings: No interest on over-withheld funds.
  • Cash flow squeeze: Less monthly money for bills or goals.
  • Behavioral trap: Refunds feel like ‘bonuses,’ leading to splurges.

Adjust your W-4 form accurately using the IRS Tax Withholding Estimator tool. Aim to withhold just enough to cover your liability, then direct the extra to automated savings. This builds discipline without sacrificing liquidity. Track quarterly and adjust mid-year if life changes occur, like marriage or job shifts.

3. Saving “More”

“I’m going to save more this year” sounds noble but fails spectacularly because it’s vague. Without specifics, this resolution fizzles by February, as life’s expenses crowd it out. Financial experts from the Federal Reserve note that only 40% of Americans can cover a $400 emergency, often due to undefined goals.

Vague intentions ignore behavioral finance principles: people need measurable targets for motivation. A Truliant FCU analysis emphasizes writing specific goals like “$5,000 emergency fund by December” to track progress effectively.

Replace it with SMART goals (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound):

  • Specific: Build $1,000 starter emergency fund.
  • Measurable: $83/month auto-transfer.
  • Achievable: Cut one streaming service ($15/mo) and dining out ($68/mo).
  • Relevant: Covers unexpected repairs per Bankrate stats.
  • Time-bound: 12 months.

Use apps like YNAB or Mint for tracking. Celebrate milestones to sustain momentum, boosting adherence by 2x per habit studies.

4. Borrowing From Your Retirement Accounts

Resolving to borrow from your 401(k) for debt payoff, home improvements, or emergencies seems practical but erodes your nest egg. Loans reduce compounding: borrowing $10,000 at age 40 means $50,000+ less at retirement, per Treasury Department projections assuming 7% returns.

Job loss triggers immediate repayment, often at 9.2% imputed interest, plus taxes/penalties on unpaid balances. The CFPB warns this creates a debt spiral, with 40% of borrowers defaulting.

  • Opportunity loss: Halts growth on borrowed amount.
  • Risk exposure: Full balance due in 60-90 days if unemployed.
  • Double taxation: Repayments with after-tax dollars.

Alternatives: High-yield savings for emergencies (aim 3-6 months expenses), 0% balance transfers, or side hustles. Negotiate bills or use community aid programs first.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Q: Why is a new car such a bad financial decision?

A: New cars depreciate 20-30% immediately, locking you into high payments that steal from savings and investments.

Q: How do I fix over-withholding without owing taxes?

A: Use the IRS Withholding Estimator, update W-4, and split ‘extra’ into Roth IRA or HYSA for earnings.

Q: What’s a realistic savings goal for beginners?

A: Start with $1,000 emergency fund, then 3-6 months expenses. Automate $50-100/paycheck.

Q: Can I ever borrow from retirement safely?

A: Rarely. Only if no alternatives and you stay employed; otherwise, fees and lost growth outweigh benefits.

Q: How do I make resolutions stick?

A: Use SMART goals, track weekly, celebrate small wins, and review quarterly.

Skip these resolutions for sustainable financial health. Focus on specific, low-risk habits that compound over time.

References

  1. Consumer Expenditure Survey: Vehicle Depreciation Data — U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. 2024-10-15. https://www.bls.gov/cex/
  2. Edmunds Car Payment Report — Edmunds.com. 2025-01-10. https://www.edmunds.com/car-buying/average-car-payment.html
  3. IRS Taxpayer Refund Statistics — Internal Revenue Service. 2025-03-01. https://www.irs.gov/statistics/soi-tax-stats-aggregate-statistics
  4. High-Yield Savings Rates — Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. 2025-12-01. https://www.fdic.gov/resources/bankers/interest-rates/
  5. Report on Economic Well-Being — Federal Reserve Board. 2024-05-20. https://www.federalreserve.gov/publications/2024-economic-well-being-of-us-households-in-2023-executive-summary.htm
  6. Financial Resolutions Guide — Truliant Federal Credit Union. 2023-12-15. https://www.truliantfcu.org/learn/saving-and-budgeting/nine-ways-to-keep-new-years-financial-resolutions
  7. Retirement Savings Rollovers Assistance — U.S. Department of the Treasury. 2024-07-12. https://www.treasurydirect.gov/indiv/retirement/401k.htm
Sneha Tete
Sneha TeteBeauty & Lifestyle Writer
Sneha is a relationships and lifestyle writer with a strong foundation in applied linguistics and certified training in relationship coaching. She brings over five years of writing experience to fundfoundary,  crafting thoughtful, research-driven content that empowers readers to build healthier relationships, boost emotional well-being, and embrace holistic living.

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