My honest advice to someone who wants financial freedom

Date:

Share post:



To get free fractional shares worth up to £100, use the promo code TILBURY or visit Terms apply. *This is an affiliate link.

Get a FREE weekly email from me filled with money tips, and access to my personal inbox:

Get a FREE AI-built Shopify store in less than 2 minutes:

This is my honest advice for anyone who wants financial freedom, and it comes from years of personal experience. – Enjoy!

00:00 Intro
01:02 Step 1: Find Your Freedom Figure
06:58 Step 2: Hack Your Life
13:33 Step 3: Get A Credit Card
14:32 Step 4: Create Additional Income Streams
16:13 Step 5: Use Money For Its TRUE Function
________________________________________________
Disclaimers:

This video does not represent financial advice, and I am not a financial advisor. When investing, your capital is at risk. Investments can rise and fall and you may get back less than you invested. Past performance doesn’t guarantee future results. Images used throughout the video are for illustrative and educational purposes only, not indicative of past or future performance.

Pies & AutoInvest is an execution-only service. Not investment advice or portfolio management. Automatic investing refers to executing scheduled deposits. You are responsible for all investment and rebalancing decisions.

212 Cards are issued by Paynetics which provide all payment services. T212 provides customer support and user interface.

*Trading 212’s terms and fees apply –

Some of the links in this description are affiliate links that I get a commission from.
________________________________________________
GET IN TOUCH:
For business inquires only, please use this email: mark@marktilbury.com

source

24 COMMENTS

  1. @Marktilbury, great video and I especially loved the part about the freedom figure. I've seen/read about this concept from a few other people as well. One part that always trips me up is this – probably the biggest part of my "freedom figure" is my housing. I have a certain home in mind that I want to live in. I know within reason what kind of a price tag such a home would command. I'm never sure how to approach figuring that into my numbers. The kind of home I am looking to live in doesn't align with my current income, so is it better to: a) calculate my numbers as though I plan on earning the money to pay for the home outright? b) calculate the downpayment required, the resulting mortgage payment and then use that monthly figure? As with any home purchase, it'd cost a lot less to just buy with cash, but I don't know which is the better approach for getting this freedom figure nailed down. I guess I could always just crunch the numbers both ways.

Leave a Reply to @GranBucks23 Cancel reply

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Related articles

Gallery: Milk & Honey and Reservoir’s pre-GRAMMY ‘Award Season’ party 2026

Milk & Honey and Reservoir held their annual ‘Award Season’ party in Los Angeles last Thursday (January...

We may be looking at the housing affordability crisis all wrong. Higher earners are driving home prices, not lack of supply, researchers say

Economists, lawmakers, and Wall Street have long preached the need to increase housing supply to improve affordability,...

Check Out the Best Credit Card Offers of the Month (January, 2026)

Check Out the Best Credit Card Offers of the Month If you’re wondering what are the best credit...

Remembering Christine Buemann, a quiet force in Canada’s mortgage industry

Friends and colleagues reflect on the life, leadership and lasting influence of a broker, advocate and mentor...