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5 Happy Spending Principles Every Dentist Should Practice

by Wes Read, CPA, CFP® | September 25, 2025
Two smiling dental professionals in blue scrubs and gloves make OK signs, standing in a dental office, conveying a reassuring and positive atmosphere.

As a dental practice owner, you work hard for your income. Long days, packed schedules, staff management, compliance headaches—it all adds up. But here’s a question that rarely gets asked: Is your spending making you happier, or just busier?

Research shows the connection between money and happiness is less straightforward than it seems. Yes, income can boost well-being—up to a point. But after basic needs and financial security are covered, the way you spend matters far more than how much you earn.

That’s where the landmark study Happy Money: The Science of Happier Spending by Elizabeth Dunn and Michael Norton comes in. It identifies five spending principles that reliably lead to greater happiness. And they apply directly to dentists balancing income, practice overhead, and personal goals.

Let’s walk through each principle and see how you can put them into practice.


1. Buy Experiences, Not Things

The thrill of a new car? It fades. The shine of a new gadget? Gone in months. But the memory of a family trip, a dental mission abroad, or a weekend hiking with friends? Those stick.

Experiences bring joy in three ways:

  • Anticipation: Excitement before the event
  • Enjoyment: Being present in the moment
  • Memory: Reliving it again and again

For dentists, this could mean prioritizing continuing education retreats, family adventures, or team-building events. Instead of upgrading your vehicle every two years, invest in experiences that create stories you’ll tell for decades.


2. Make It a Treat

Scarcity increases appreciation. When indulgences become routine, they lose their sparkle—and your wallet feels the drain.

The study suggests saving luxuries for occasional enjoyment. For example:

  • Instead of expensive dinners every week, make them a monthly celebration
  • If you love golf or spa weekends, space them out so they feel special

This principle helps dentists avoid lifestyle creep—the quiet habit of spending more as income rises. By treating luxuries as treats, you keep both your finances and your sense of joy healthier.


3. Buy Time

Time is the one resource no dentist can generate more of. Yet money can be used to reclaim it.

In your practice:

  • Hiring an experienced office manager may cost more, but it frees you to focus on dentistry
  • Outsourcing bookkeeping or payroll lets you avoid late-night admin headaches

In your personal life:

  • Hiring help for yard work, home cleaning, or errands may feel like a splurge—but what’s your Saturday worth if you could spend it with family instead?

Buying time reduces stress, improves health, and makes you a better leader at work and at home.


4. Pay Now, Consume Later

Credit cards and Buy Now, Pay Later schemes are tempting, but they often backfire. Debt creates anxiety.

The study found that people are happier when they pay up front and enjoy later. Why? Because anticipation adds to the happiness of the purchase, and you avoid the stress of future bills.

For dentists, this might look like:

  • Saving for that European vacation months in advance
  • Budgeting for a home upgrade rather than financing it on credit
  • Planning continuing education costs well before the event

Of course, some large purchases (like buying a practice) require debt. But for consumer spending, flipping the script—pay now, enjoy later—makes life calmer and more satisfying.


5. Invest in Others

Generosity is a proven happiness booster. Helping others creates lasting connection, meaning, and fulfillment.

For practice owners, that might mean:

  • Investing in your team with higher pay, training, or growth opportunities
  • Supporting local charities or sponsoring community events
  • Helping a colleague or mentoring a younger dentist

When you spend on others, the return isn’t financial—it’s emotional. And often, those investments ripple back into your practice through loyalty, culture, and reputation.


Bringing It All Together

The five principles—buy experiences, make it a treat, buy time, pay now/consume later, and invest in others—are simple but powerful. They shift the focus from “more income” to “better use of income.”

As dentists, you already juggle high responsibility with the rewards of your profession. These principles help ensure that the dollars you earn translate into peace of mind, stronger relationships, and a richer life.

In the end, happiness isn’t about owning more—it’s about owning your time, values, and choices.


Want to dive deeper?

Listen to Episode 126 of The Dental Boardroom Podcast and explore these principles in a real-world context.

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