Most millionaires didn't get rich by luck or a high salary — but through boring, repetitive habits anyone can adopt. We gathered the 7 habits that serious research links to building wealth, from #7 to #1. #1 is the simplest — and the most ignored.
There's a myth that getting rich depends on luck, a giant salary, or a genius play on the stock market. But research on millionaires tells a different story: most built wealth with consistent, boring habits — behaviors that don't depend on a high income and that anyone can start copying today.
Warren Buffett, worth more than $150 billion, has lived in the same modest house for decades. That's the spirit of the thing. Lasting wealth, in most cases, takes 20 to 30 years to build — and comes from discipline, not magic.
We gathered the 7 habits that serious financial research associates with building net worth, from #7 to #1. And #1 is the simplest of all — and exactly the one most people ignore.

#7 — Financial education: learning is the best investment
The first habit is to treat financial knowledge as an asset. Research shows that about 84% of high-net-worth individuals have an active interest in improving their financial skills — they never stop learning.
Why? Because every financial principle you master can save or earn you thousands over a lifetime. Understanding interest, taxes, and investments isn't a rich person's luxury — it's what helps you get rich. And the best part: it's the most accessible habit of all, because quality information is increasingly available.
The next habit is about who you spend time with. 👇

#6 — Surrounding yourself with the right people
The second habit: the rich surround themselves with people who pull them upward — whether a qualified network of contacts or a team of professionals (accountant, planner) working together on their behalf.
The logic is twofold. On one hand, good networking opens doors and opportunities. On the other, having coordinated professionals helps avoid costly mistakes and spot opportunities that someone acting alone would miss. You don't need to be rich to start: surrounding yourself with people who have good financial habits already changes the game.
The next one is about patience — and it's harder than it looks.

#5 — Thinking long-term (and delaying gratification)
Perhaps the most important difference: the rich make decisions thinking in decades, not months. Research points to the ability to delay gratification as one of the biggest predictors of financial success.
In practice: it's resisting the new car, this year's phone, the impulse buy — not because you can't, but because the money invested today is worth much more down the line. Building wealth takes time (remember: 20 to 30 years on average), and those who think long-term beat those who chase instant pleasure.