Finally Cut Cable To Prepare For Harder Times Ahead

After three consecutive years of double-digit returns in the S&P 500 since 2023, I decided to cut cable.

The reason was simple: I’m conditioning myself to prepare for hard times by not only reducing expenses, but also freeing up time to focus.

Yeah, I know. Here in America, when you make a lot of money, you’re supposed to spend more money and YOLO. But I didn’t get to FIRE by splurging my money away. I got there by saving and investing until it hurt for 13 consecutive years after college.

The pain makes me feel more alive!

Besides, when times are good, there’s less need to spend more to feel great. You’re already marveling at your stock portfolio going up and feeling good after another neighborhood mega-bid closes.

Instead, the time to spend more is when conditions are difficult. Not only can you buy more things on sale, you also get to ease your financial suffering with new things and experiences.

The Key To A Better Life Is Forecasting Your Misery

It’s important to think in two timeframes when it comes to building wealth and maintaining happiness.

There’s the current you, who has made a fortune in stocks and real estate since the pandemic. But then there’s the future you, who must contend with the decisions you make today. Eventually, you will be miserable. And when that time comes, you need to have options.

Given nothing good or bad lasts forever, it’s only logical to assume the good feeling of making so much from your investments won’t last forever either. After the 2000 bubble burst, we went through more than 10 years of zero stock market gains.

We know that when future stock returns are plotted against valuations, the higher valuations go, the lower expected returns tend to be.

Consequently, we should prepare for hard times before they actually arrive. If we do, we’ll stand a much better chance of surviving and maybe even thriving.

Stock market valuations and forward returns since 1985
Sources: Clearnomics, LSEG, Standard & Poor, Integrity

Why Cutting Cable Finally Started To Make Sense

Our cable plus internet bill was $180 a month with Xfinity. Given I’m not the one in charge of paying this bill, I didn’t think much of it until I asked my wife how much it cost.

When I found out, it just didn’t sit right with me.

Yes, we definitely need the internet for me to write, record, and publish on Financial Samurai. We also need internet for watching shows and for the kids’ homework.

But cable? Not for $120/month out of the $180.

The only times I watched cable were when the Golden State Warriors played or when there was some great sports game on ESPN. But about a year ago, being able to watch the Warriors on Channel 720 somehow disappeared, which only left me with ESPN.

So I asked my wife to cancel cable, which she did.

The funny thing was, initially, I couldn’t believe she actually did it! I thought the cable salesperson would put up a fight, slash our bill in half, and turn back on Channel 720 for my Warriors.

But nope. My wife got no such offer, and we ended up going to the store to return the cable box the next week.

Average time spent watching TV, phone, or tablet a day
Spending 4 – 6 hours a day watching TV and shows on your smartphone seems excessive

The Withdrawal Symptoms Were Real At First

I’ve had cable for over 23 years. So when I turned on the TV and got nothing, I felt a little lost. I tried scanning for channels with what I thought was a built-in antenna, but none were found because my older TV didn’t have one.

Oops.

Before cutting cable, I thought I’d easily be able to get the main channels to at least watch football on FOX, CBS, or NBC. So we went to Target to get a $30 antenna, and it worked for a bit.

It felt good being able to watch some sports and the news, even though I hardly do. The antenna was like an insurance policy, just like how all responsible parents get life insurance after having kids.

But then I realized that without my cable box, I could no longer record shows and games and watch them at my convenience while fast-forwarding through commercials.

I began to miss this luxury, which took about two weeks to get over.

Then, after Daddy Day Camp with the kids on Sunday, I came home expecting to watch the Super Bowl upstairs in my office. But my wife mentioned the antenna couldn’t pick up NBC.

What?

This was the main show I was happily going to watch for free without cable. I wanted to get my $30 worth from the mid-quality Philipps antenna we bought at Target. Supposedly there is a $90 version, which my wife skipped because the sales clerk said the $30 was good enough.

Our Very Janky Super Bowl Antenna Setup

No matter how many channels we scanned or how we positioned the antenna on our upstairs TV, we couldn’t get NBC to come in. I guess the antenna was facing the wrong direction relative to the broadcast tower.

So instead, we took the antenna downstairs to our family room TV, which never had cable to begin with, and hooked it up there.

It also had a difficult time finding NBC, even though we could literally see the broadcast tower a mile out our window.

My wife or I had to hold the antenna at a certain angle and not move, otherwise the picture would completely blur.

Holding the antenna with our arm up high to maybe get five seconds of Super Bowl action at a time was obviously inefficient. So I got an idea.

cut cable, used antenna
Taping the Philipps antenna to the lamp pole, and initially it wouldn't work

We unscrewed the lampshade from our torch lamp and clipped and taped the antenna onto it. Then we carefully moved it around to see if the NBC signal could be picked up.

Of course, the only place that worked at that height was right in front of the TV.

But hey. Not bad for a $30 antenna and saving $120 a month on cable.

It was a funny experience for the kids, and a chance for them to see Mom and Dad working together to solve a new problem. And when we finally settled on putting the antenna right in front of the TV, we laughed and told the kiddos, “That’s just life sometimes.”

cut cable, used antenna

After A Couple Weeks, I Stopped Missing Cable

After the Super Bowl, we ended up watching maybe a total of 30 minutes of the Winter Olympics, also hosted on NBC. But that was it.

Since then, we haven’t watched a single minute of live TV. In fact, as I was writing this post, I realized my upstairs TV didn’t have the antenna anymore.

After 20-plus years of cable, there was an initial two-week adjustment period to not having cable anymore. But it was easy to adapt thanks to the antenna and all the other streaming services available.

We pay for Netflix, Apple TV, and Amazon Prime. And part of my reason for cutting cable was that I learned from my dad during our winter holiday trip to Honolulu that Prime hosts NBA games every Thursday.

I had no idea.

And the irony was, my dad was using our Prime account!

So without cable, I just found other means of visual entertainment from packages we were already paying for. And although my Warriors won’t always be shown on Thursday evenings, they will be every once in a while on Prime.

This Was More About Mindset Than The Money

At the end of the day, I’ll save $120 X 12 = $1,440, minus $30 for the antenna, for a total of $1,410 saved this year on my cable bill.

It’s not a huge sum of money, but it is significant enough to feel good about saving it.

Not only do I feel good about saving $120 a month, but I also feel good knowing I no longer have as much temptation to watch TV. This is the year I want to finish the first draft of my latest book, Your Children Will Be OK.

Not only does saving money and having fewer distractions feel good, I also feel great knowing I’ll better utilize my existing streaming services. I downloaded the Prime Video app and set a reminder to check what NBA games are on Thursdays.

And I don’t feel bad being an Amazon Prime member given we get great value from free grocery delivery alone, along with same-day or next-day delivery of any other goods we buy.

This service was especially handy during the pandemic when our kids were babies and toddlers, i.e. getting wipes and diapers.

Preparing For When Money Becomes More Scarce

So there you have it. I’ve cut cable and don’t plan to go back.

I’d rather use the money to buy healthier food or higher-quality athletic equipment than spend more time in front of a screen. But more importantly, I feel lighter.

With more free time, I’m able to better focus on creating. The FIRE movement is so back due to AI disruption. It’s forced me to lock down expenses and pay better attention to what’s ahead while times are good. Just look at Block's recent mass layoff of 40% of staff.

Given I can no longer save 50% or more of my salary – one of the key FIRE principles I recommend – the next best thing is to cut costs and get used to living lean.

With the action I took to cut cable, now you know why there was simply no way I could pony up $60,000–$120,000 to replace my almost 11-year-old vehicle after all those electrical issues. In preparation for lean times, the most responsible financial move was to try and fix the car, which I have.

The next cost I’m considering cutting is my second sports club membership at $205/month. But I'm not sure I can do it since I take my kids there to teach them how to swim and play tennis every week.

With rising oil prices due to the Iran war, let’s see how far I can take this cost-cutting initiative!

Suggestions

A great way to review all your expenses is to link them all up with a wealth management tool like Empower or Boldin. You’ll get a clear, real-time overview of what you’re spending so you can more easily cut the excess.

If you’d like to get a signed copy of my USA Today bestseller, Millionaire Milestones, check out my free Empower financial review for instructions. Getting a professional to review your investments for any blindspots or areas of improvements is helpful in building greater risk-appropriate wealth over time.

Don't forget to get my posts in your inbox as soon as they are published by signing up here, and subscribing to my free weekly newsletter here. I've been writing about personal finance since 2009, and everything is based off firsthand experience and expertise.

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David
David
19 days ago

Do you really think a crash/correction is coming? I have this gut feeling that they are going to inflate us into oblivion while they smile and say everything is great as average people lose everything. Janet Yellen foreshadowed it.

Charles
Charles
1 month ago

Cancelled sling, saving $50/ month…. not going back!

matt
matt
1 month ago

Nice save. BTW the Superbowl was broadcast on YouTube for free :) that’s how we watched it.

Melly
Melly
1 month ago

When I moved out of my parents’ place 20 years ago, I did not get a TV on purpose. It was (and still is) hard to be young and poor. I spent all day at work and might be learning stuff on my own during the evening. The utility of a TV wasn’t appealing. It kind of sound like a bold move.

Most importantly, I envisioned that internet would overtake TV cable as home entertainment. Given the lack of innovation on TV cable, I’m kind of surprised that cable TV is still around for this long.

Slacker
Slacker
1 month ago
Reply to  Melly

Same. I’ve never owned a TV. It never even occurred to me to have cable. We never had cable when I was a kid . I watch a lot of youtube though LOL.

Bill
Bill
1 month ago

About 16 years ago, i hired an antenna company for $400 that performs classified work for the DOD at the local Space Force base to install a TV antenna in my attic. I get 107 channels. Get after it.

Tom
Tom
1 month ago

Saved on my cell phone bill by switching from T-Mobile to Tello ($90 a month to $27). Currently subscribed to SuperGrok ($30/mo), YouTube Premium ($14/mo) and Apple Music ($109/yr). There is some overlap between YouTube Premium and Apple Music since YTP comes with YouTube Music. However I don’t like the playlists on YouTube Music as much. Now that YouTube Premium Lite is priced at $8/month I might downgrade to that, but there is no background play which I like to use especially while driving.

I get a lot of value from SuperGrok, $30/month is cheap to have someone to consult with for various problems, research, or get news updates.

Loach
Loach
1 month ago

I’m convinced that the cable companies don’t actually want to be in the TV business anymore. I subscribed to basic cable for 35+ years. The last 15 years of that I reduced my cost by buying Tivos with lifetime subscriptions, which saved all the cable co. equipment cost except a minor fee for a couple cable card rentals. Every year or two I had to do the kabuki dance with my cable provider (Cox): 1. Get notice of rate increase. 2. call up and tell them I would cancel 3. They cave and “find” a better deal to keep me in the fold. Well about 2 years ago they just absolutely wouldn’t budge – they didn’t seem to care at all about losing a TV customer. I notice that in my area, I haven’t seen them advertise their cable TV service in about a decade. All they advertise is their gigabit internet service and their mobile phone service. They don’t care about losing customers on their $50/month 100mb internet service either. They are happy to keep their gradually eroding TV customer base of older subscribers who aren’t tech savvy enough to switch to something else and will just keep grudgingly paying $200+ a month. But if you’re not willing to pay their bloated rack rates, they don’t want you anymore.

I finally cancelled and switched to YouTube TV and TMobile 5g internet, which saves me about $65 a month combined even though I wasn’t paying for any cable boxes. I still like having live TV with DVR mainly for sports (primarily college and NFL football). I also have a small TV in my home office that I like to have on Fox Business Channel (muted with captions) when I’m working in there. I miss my Tivos, but I’ve gotten used to the YTTV interface and it’s fine. Recently, I even finally got my octogenerian parents, who have subscribed to cable since 1980, to do the same thing I did. It took me several trips over to their house to get everything working for them and get them trained on the different interface, but it was well worth it – I’m sure they’re saving over $100 a month and they have far less disposable income than I do.

TW
TW
1 month ago

We cut the cable cord when Michael Jordan retired for the 2nd time in 1999. Any type of viewing options were sparse back then. Streaming didn’t exist. We would rent a VHS movie from the local video store. Eventually we upgraded to DVDs! We started streaming a few shows as early as 2005 or so, but it was primitive and prone to freezing and buffering. Over 25 years, I think we saved roughly $25,000 in cable bills.

Flash forward to 2026, we recently bought a new TCL flat panel TV at Costco for about $399 (the last one I bought was a Panasonic Plasma in 2005 for $1500!). One thing I didn’t realize these days is the amount of free channels and apps available. We setup Google Free TV, Pluto, and Tubi. There are also quite a few random live channels with news and sports. To be fair, we do have Netflix bundled with our T-Mobile account and we have Amazon Prime as well. But, there are a ton of options that do not require a full cable subscription at outrageous prices. For the Superbowl (GoHawks!) I bought a month to month subscription to Peacock for $10.95 and then decided to cancel. Don’t judge me!

Moom
1 month ago

Never had cable TV. Subscribe to Netflix and sometimes watch something on it on a laptop. We do have a TV but barely anyone watches it anymore. I cut my subscription to the NYT when I found I could get the WSJ for free. Can’t think of anything else I cut recently. We have a 2004 model car…

Loach
Loach
1 month ago
Reply to  Moom

I’m intrigued. How are you getting WSJ for free? Is it bundled with something else?

JIm
JIm
1 month ago
Reply to  Loach

I have paid for wsj of years. After reading this comment was able to see that my library offers it for free.

Steve
Steve
1 month ago

I think cable tv is cheap entertainment. I watch sports on tv all the time. College and pro football and basketball, College and NBA basketball, PGA golf, Tennis tournaments. Try buying tickets and go to these events live and that will really cost you.

Vaughn
Vaughn
1 month ago

Thanks Sam. I had a different experience. I missed it cable terribly and barely saved any money. After cutting the cable, I did not want to give up any of my usual shows, and had to subscribe to many apps that I had never used in order to watch my usual shows. Even worse, I couldn’t watch many in real-time without the cable box.

I actually came back from the Xfinity store about an hour ago with a new cable box.

The dollar amount of the bill bothers me every time I pay it ($161 per month). Perhaps it won’t bother me as much in the future, since I realized what I was missing by not having cable. Perhaps I’ll try again in a year or two.

As a side note, I’m home a lot (retired) and genuinely enjoy the programing I watch

Jean
Jean
1 month ago

Um…I never subscribed to cable TV. Even after university, I never had a TV and this is before the Internet-streaming. So it’s been 40 yrs. Granted, my late partner had cable but he retired early. He was happy to pay while I went to bed to get up early for full-time job next day.

I did get rid of my phone line early last yr. Took me awhile since I didn’t even have a cellphone until 3 yrs. ago. Yup. And I had a job that was 80% using corporate enterprise complex software and teaching employees on it.

Useful topic. I started online subscription to national news. So glad I did 3 yrs. ago. So my savings went to more useful info. media.

kat1809
kat1809
1 month ago

re: “The next cost I’m considering cutting is my second sports club membership at $205/month. But I’m not sure I can do it since I take my kids there to teach them how to swim and play tennis every week.”

Perhaps you need to look at that $205 per month this way?

  1. $205 per month divided by 4 weeks per month = $51.25 per week.
  2. $51.25 per week divided by 2 sports per week = $25.63 per sport per week.
  3. $25.63 per sport per week divided by 3 people = $8.54 per person per sport per week.

Doesn’t $8.54 sound just a bit better than $205?
And that doesn’t even include the ROI regarding kids having fun with Dad learning new / improving upon skills while getting exercise to stay healthy. :)

IndianMama
IndianMama
1 month ago

my cable bill was $300, so my family convinced me to get rid of it. I got Live U Tube TV, which is expensive but not as much as cable. As an older person, I’m still traumatized.

Patrick Stewart
Patrick Stewart
1 month ago

It’s a bit like turning the lights out when I leave the room and turning down or up the thermostat when not at home. It just doesn’t feel right to not do it even when you can afford it. I think frugality is a healthy attitude and spending wildly even though you can just isn’t good for the psyche. Besides that, it just loads down your life with stuff. As you can see, I’m a bit for a Henry David Thoreau fan. :-)

Katherine Reid
Katherine Reid
1 month ago

Sam, I cut cable at least 10 years ago. When Netflix and Disney+ started becoming political, they were cancelled.I sold their stock too! Not paying to support that garbage. If you are a Walmart Plus member, sign up for their free streaming service. They offer Paramount or Hulu, and you can switch every 90 days. I have wondered about Star Link. Does anyone use it? What are your thoughts?

CMAC
CMAC
1 month ago

12+ months? It has underperformed the equal weighted S&P over the past 5 years!

David
David
1 month ago

Just an FYI about a DVR solution with antenna. Silicondust HD Homerun and a decent OTA antenna pointing directionally to your closest broadcast towers is your friend. I’ve been using that solution for over 15 years and have saved thousands of dollars not paying for cable television. I cringe every time I hear people paying $130 plus monthly for cable television or satellite television services.

Tom
Tom
1 month ago

I love you sharing your tv setup for the Super Bowl! The things we’ll do to save money.

Excited to hear more about your new book “Your Children Will Be OK.”

WSinTX
WSinTX
1 month ago

I cut the cord about 5 years ago. I have since experienced some lifestyle creep back in – we now pay for youtubetv which gives us what cable did for about $87 per month. I really did it to get college football games. We get 2GB internet included with our HOA dues, so I view this $87 as somewhat of a deal. We get prime tv with the prime membership, so those are our two subscriptions. We cut off netflix when we added youtubetv.

Prior to this creep, I was an antenna guy for 5 years, and it worked very well when we lived in the central core of the city.

Also, if you get the itch, while not live sports, youtube on a streaming tv is not bad and it’s free since you have internet.

Jamie
Jamie
1 month ago

Nice work cutting cable and expenses! I used to watch tons of cable but haven’t in a really long time. It’s definitely one of those expenses that’s easy to just keep paying for on auto pilot when you’re actually not getting much use out of it. I need to figure out what’s going on with my mother’s cable bill as she’s definitely not paying attention to the charges and it seems to me she’s overpaying by a lot. Anyway, I know it’s often not easy to find ways to cut costs so that’s great you were able to slash cable. I’m sure that feels great!

The Alchemist
The Alchemist
1 month ago

For a real laugh, ask an AI why Xfinity sucks so badly. :D

The Alchemist
The Alchemist
1 month ago

Ha! My cable bill (with three boxes) is $210 per month. B***tards jack the price almost monthly, it seems. How is it that it’s cheaper for you in The City? I swear they just ream customers in SM county because they can.

ASH01
ASH01
1 month ago

I’m close too Sam. With FIOS we pay $280 a month, cable plus internet – 3 cable boxes is $75 a month alone! The real kicker for me was the Olympics. We get Peacock and they were all over that! Having cable was pretty redundant. I will miss sports, esp NFL viewing and fear I’ll get sucked into some other packaging that will cut the savings from cutting cable. So we have/pay for Peacock, Netflix, Amazon Prime, Hulu, AppleTV, Britbox, – about another $90 a month (and rising) in subscriptions.