The daughter of Iranian immigrants who became one of America's most-listened-to personal finance voices. Farnoosh Torabi has hosted "So Money" for over 1,500 episodes, written books that actually tackle the awkward stuff — like what happens when a wife earns more than her husband — and built a career proving that money advice doesn't have to be boring, generic, or aimed exclusively at men in khakis.
Net Worth
$3 million
Nationality
American
Time Horizon
Long-Term
Risk Appetite
5 / 10
CAREER & BACKGROUND
Farnoosh Torabi was born in Worcester, Massachusetts, to Iranian immigrant parents who came to the US with almost nothing. Her parents worked multiple jobs — her mother cleaned houses, her father worked in tech.
Money was tight but education was non-negotiable. She grew up watching her parents navigate the American financial system without a manual.
She went to Penn State, then got a master's from Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism. She started her career as a financial journalist, writing for Money Magazine, TheStreet.com, and the New York Times.
She covered personal finance from the journalism side — not as an advisor, but as a reporter who could translate complicated money topics into stories people actually wanted to read.
Her first book, "You're So Money," came out in 2008 — right when the financial crisis was making everyone panic about money. The timing was either terrible or perfect depending on how you look at it.
The book was aimed at twenty-somethings trying to be financially savvy without giving up their lives.
Her breakout book was "When She Makes More" in 2014. It tackled the taboo topic of relationships where the woman is the primary breadwinner — the financial, emotional, and relationship dynamics that nobody in personal finance was talking about.
It got massive press attention because it said the quiet part out loud: traditional gender expectations around money are still wrecking relationships, even among progressive couples.
In 2015, she launched the "So Money" podcast. It's now past 1,500 episodes, featuring interviews with everyone from billionaires to regular people sharing their financial wins and disasters.
It consistently ranks in the top personal finance podcasts. The show's strength is range — one episode might feature a CEO, the next a single mom who paid off $100,000 in debt.
COMPANIES & ROLES
So Money Media is her primary business — the podcast, newsletter, and associated content. The podcast has featured over 1,500 guests and has a dedicated audience.
She's a contributor to CNET and has written for or appeared on virtually every major financial media outlet — CNBC, CNN, NBC, Forbes, O Magazine, and more. Corporate speaking is a significant revenue stream.
She doesn't manage money or run a fund. Her business model is content, education, and corporate partnerships.
She's done branded content with major financial companies — always disclosed, and she's careful about maintaining editorial independence.
INVESTING STYLE & PHILOSOPHY
Torabi is a practical, diversified, automation-focused investor. She believes in maxing out tax-advantaged accounts first (401k, Roth IRA), investing in low-cost index funds, and automating everything so investing isn't a decision you make each month.
She's not a stock picker and doesn't pretend to be. Her approach: the market will go up over time, so get in early, stay in, keep costs low, and don't try to time anything.
She's in the Bogle camp philosophically.
What makes her perspective different is her focus on the earning side. Most personal finance advice is about spending less and saving more.
Torabi argues that growing your income — through negotiation, side hustles, career moves — is a more powerful lever than cutting expenses. You can only cut so much.
There's no ceiling on what you can earn.
THE PLAYBOOK
Risk Approach
Moderate. She believes in taking appropriate risk for your age and goals — more aggressive when young, more conservative as you approach needing the money.
She's not afraid of the stock market but doesn't advocate for concentrated bets or speculative investments.
She stresses the importance of an emergency fund and having "go-to-hell money" — enough cash saved that you can walk away from a bad job, a bad relationship, or a bad situation without financial panic. She frames this as a safety net and a power tool.
Money Habits
Torabi is thoughtful about spending. She talks about "spending audits" — periodically reviewing every subscription, recurring charge, and discretionary spend to make sure it still aligns with what you actually value.
She and her husband split finances in a way she's been open about: joint accounts for shared expenses (mortgage, kids, household), separate accounts for individual spending. No permission needed for personal purchases under a certain threshold.
She frames this as both financial and relationship advice.
She lives in the New York area with her family. She's not flashy about spending but she's also not a frugality absolutist — she believes in spending on things that bring genuine joy while cutting things that don't.
BIGGEST WIN
The So Money podcast is the biggest professional win. Over 1,500 episodes, consistently in the top personal finance charts, and it's given her a platform that reaches millions.
The podcast opened doors to corporate speaking, books, and media opportunities.
"When She Makes More" was a cultural win — it started a national conversation about breadwinner women and money dynamics in relationships. She was on every major talk show discussing it, and it positioned her as someone willing to tackle the uncomfortable money topics that other advisors avoid.
BIGGEST MISTAKE
Torabi has been honest about her biggest regret: not negotiating her salary aggressively enough early in her career. As a journalist, she accepted what was offered because she felt grateful to have the job.
She later calculated how much that cost her over a decade of compounding raises and says the number is "depressing."
She uses this story constantly in her teaching — it's her most practical lesson. One conversation about your salary in your 20s can be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars over a career.
She now coaches women specifically on salary negotiation because she knows the cost of not doing it.
FINANCIAL PHILOSOPHY
Torabi's philosophy has three pillars. First: earn more.
She believes income growth is the most underrated financial strategy. Cutting lattes saves you $5 a day.
A salary negotiation can be worth $10,000 a year — compounding forever.
Second: automate and simplify. She doesn't want people thinking about money every day.
Set up the systems — automatic savings, automatic investing, automatic bill pay — and then spend your mental energy on earning more and living well.
Third: talk about money openly. She thinks financial secrecy — between partners, between friends, between parents and kids — is the biggest barrier to financial health.
Her podcast is built on this idea: hearing how real people handle money normalizes the conversation and makes everyone smarter.
Her most resonant principle: financial independence isn't about being rich. It's about having enough that no person, no job, and no situation has power over you.
FAMILY & PERSONAL LIFE
Torabi is married to Tim, who she's been open about on the podcast. They have two children.
Their financial dynamic — how they split expenses, handle income differences, and make money decisions as a couple — is something she discusses publicly and uses as teaching material.
Her parents' immigrant story is central to her identity. She grew up watching them sacrifice and hustle, and she credits that experience with giving her both her work ethic and her understanding that financial security is never guaranteed — it has to be actively built and protected.
EDUCATION
Torabi has a bachelor's degree from Penn State and a master's in journalism from Columbia University. The journalism background is her edge — she approaches personal finance as a storyteller and investigator, not as a financial advisor.
She can take complex topics and make them compelling, which is why her podcast works where others don't.
BOOKS & RESOURCES
For people who want a practical, no-BS money system
A critical look at the personal finance industry itself
As an Amazon Associate, Netfigo earns from qualifying purchases. Book links above may be affiliate links.
QUOTES (6)
Financial independence isn't about being rich. It's about having enough that no person, no job, and no situation has power over you.
You can only cut so much. There's no ceiling on what you can earn.
Talking about money isn't rude. Financial secrecy is what's actually hurting people.
The most important financial conversation you'll ever have is the one about your salary. Don't skip it.
Automate your finances so you can spend your mental energy on the things that actually matter.
NETFIGO SCORE
Proprietary 5-dimension investor rating
Risk Appetite
Contrarian Index
Track Record
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Time Horizon
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