Doctor Says He Sacrificed His 20s To Build Wealth — Now He’s Asking Other ‘Rich’ Men If Marriage Is Worth the Risk When She Makes Less Money

If you’ve ever spent your 20s pulling all-nighters, racking up student debt, and delaying every ounce of fun in the name of “the grind,” you’ll probably relate to one doctor’s dilemma.

After years of sacrifice, delayed gratification, and living on hospital coffee, he finally made it. He’s wealthy. He owns a home just outside a high-cost-of-living area. He drives the same car he had in residency. And now, he’s thinking about getting married. But there’s a catch.

As he explained in a post on the Rich subreddit, he spent “the best years of his life in medical training,” and now he’s wondering if tying the knot is financially wise—especially since, statistically, his future wife will likely earn less than he does. If things don’t work out, he asked, what would that mean for his wealth? Could everything he built during his youth—while his peers were partying and traveling—end up divided?

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“Statistically, my future wife would make less income,” he wrote, “so if it doesn’t work out, what’s my outlook financially?”

The responses poured in, and they weren’t just from armchair philosophers. Many had the net worth—and experience—to back up their opinions.

One Redditor, also wealthy and in his thirties, put it simply: “Marriage only really works if you’re both all in… the best protection you can have in marriage isn’t a prenup, it’s choosing a wife that values you and making sure you always value your wife.”

Another added that fears of “giving half your money away” are missing the full picture. “If your spouse makes sacrifices in their life to ensure that you reach your earning potential… they are adding immense value to your life.” He noted his own experience as a stay-at-home partner while his spouse advanced professionally, calling it a mutually beneficial trade-off, not a financial liability.

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Some responses were more blunt. “People who don’t get married for fear of losing money are straight up pathetic,” one user wrote. Another pointed out, “Most wealthy people are married. They have all this money, and they make it work. Only the poor and the middle class talk about marriage like it is financial doom.”

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