Money Meets Medicine

Doctor Podcast Network, Jimmy Turner MD

On Money Meets Medicine, Dr. Jimmy Turner discusses all things career and finance for physicians. With expert guest discussions, Jimmy tackles the personal finance topics you wish you had learned in medical school. The MMM podcast will help you tackle your student loans, achieve financial independence, invest for retirement, and decrease your financial stress and burnout. To get help with free educational content or obtaining own-occupation disability insurance from a source you know you can trust, visit https://moneymeetsmedicine.com/disability Background: Dr. Turner is a practicing anesthesiologist at Wake Forest, author of The Physician Philosopher's Guide to Personal Finance, and Co-Founder of Money Meets Medicine Disability Insurance. For more information, visit moneymeetsmedicine.com

  1. HACE 9 H

    Why Doctors Work Longer Than They Need To (One More Year Syndrome)

    The biggest financial mistake high-earning physicians make isn't overspending — it's the exact opposite. In this episode of the Money Meets Medicine podcast, Dr. Jimmy Turner and Justin Harvey, CFP® dive into one of the most overlooked challenges in physician personal finance: the super saver trap. While most financial advice for doctors focuses on avoiding lifestyle inflation, living like a resident, and preventing the Diderot Effect, Jimmy and Justin tackle the other side of the coin — what happens when financially literate physicians save too much and can't flip the switch to actually enjoy their wealth. In this episode, you'll learn: Why the traditional "live like a resident" advice can backfire for financially literate physicians How the 10% Rule allows you to enjoy lifestyle upgrades without sabotaging your financial future The identity crisis that hits doctors when they realize they could go part-time, cut back to 3 days a week, or retire early Why "one more year syndrome" keeps physicians grinding long after they've reached financial independence How to balance saving, spending, and living a life you actually enjoy as a high-income earner The values-based decision-making framework Justin uses with clients facing major financial trade-offs (home upgrades, practice ownership, business launches) Why dying with too much money is a real risk for financially literate doctors — and how to avoid it How to use the Kinder questions to uncover what you actually want from financial independence Jimmy shares his personal journey of saving over a third of his income early in his attending career, then deliberately scaling back to take a lower-paying job 30 minutes from home so he could coach his kids' baseball team and be present for his family. Justin shares a real client story about a physician weighing a $2.7 million home purchase against time to retirement, work-life balance, and family values. Whether you're a resident, fellow, early-career attending, or established physician approaching financial independence, this episode will challenge you to ask the harder existential questions: What is enough? When can you flip the switch? And are you using money as a tool — or letting it use you? Resources mentioned in this episode: 🎓 Residents & Fellows: Get disability insurance before you finish training, including any Guaranteed Standard Issue (GSI) policies available at your program → moneymeetsmedicine.com/disability 📘 Free book: The Physician Philosopher's Guide to Personal Finance → moneymeetsmedicine.com/freebook 🎙️ Subscribe to Money Meets Medicine wherever you listen to podcasts! Topics covered: physician personal finance, financial independence for doctors, super saver syndrome, one more year syndrome, lifestyle inflation, the 10% Rule, Diderot Effect, physician burnout, going part-time as a physician, disability insurance for residents, GSI policies, financial planning for physicians, behavioral finance, retirement planning for doctors.   Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    29 min
  2. 1 ABR

    How to Negotiate Sign on Bonuses for Physicians

    In this episode of Money Meets Medicine, Dr. Jimmy Turner and physician contract attorney Michael Johnson break down the personal finance side of physician compensation. From negative accrual contracts that treat your salary like a loan, to sign-on bonus clawback traps that can lock you into a bad job for years, they cover the financial landmines most doctors never see coming. You'll learn why some doctors end up owing money back to their employer, how a collections-based pay model left one physician with a six-figure IRS bill, and the sneaky ways sign-on bonuses can limit your career flexibility. Michael also walks through retirement matching pitfalls (and how a change in 401k contributions can quietly cut your compensation by $15,000+), the hidden cost of maternity leave when bonus structures aren't prorated, and why so many physicians in production models stop taking vacations entirely. Plus, practical strategies for negotiating reduced FTEs, flexible schedules, and better clawback terms — whether you're finishing training or considering a job change. Topics covered: negative accrual contracts, physician sign-on bonus clawbacks, 401k/403b employer matching, maternity leave compensation, physician contract negotiation, reduced FTE scheduling, collections-based pay, estimated taxes for 1099 physicians, and disability insurance for residents. Episode Links and Resources Every doctor needs own-occupation disability insurance.  Get it from a source you can trust: https://moneymeetsmedicine.com/disability Want to get a $100 discount to work with Michael Johnson Legal (a physician contract legal team)? Use this link --> https://moneymeetsmedicien.com/negotiate Want a free copy of The Physician Philosopher’s Guide to Personal Finance?  Snag your copy here: https://moneymeetsmedicine.com/freebook   Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    41 min
  3. 25 MAR

    Should Physicians Buy or Rent? How Much Should A Doctor Spend Buying a Home?

    In this episode, Jimmy and Justin break down the real numbers behind the buy vs. rent decision at every stage of the physician journey — from fourth-year med students who just matched, to residents weighing whether homeownership makes sense during a 3-4 year program, to new attendings figuring out how much house they can actually afford. They cover Zillow's break-even data (hint: it takes about 4-5 years on average for buying to beat renting), why that number swings wildly by city (Cleveland is ~2 years, San Francisco is 15), the dangers of the "2-3x gross income" rule of thumb in a 6%+ rate environment, and why keeping your mortgage under a third of take-home pay is a better guardrail. Plus: why renting your first year as an attending might be the smartest financial move you make, the risks of physician home loans with no money down, and what self-employed doctors need to know before applying for a mortgage. Whether you just matched, you're finishing residency, or you're eyeing a job change, this episode gives you the framework to make a housing decision that doesn't wreck your path to financial independence. Every doctor needs own-occupation disability insurance.  Get it from a source you can trust: https://moneymeetsmedicine.com/disability    Resources:Zillow White Paper: Buy Versus Rent Want a free copy of The Physician Philosopher’s Guide to Personal Finance?  Snag your copy here: https://moneymeetsmedicine.com/freebook Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    34 min
  4. 18 MAR

    How to Turn Credit Card Points into Free Travel (With Points by J)

    Dr. Jimmy Turner sits down with Jess Bohorquez, creator of Points by J and wife of an OB-GYN physician, to talk about how medical families can use credit card points to travel more without spending more. Jess left a corporate tech career to build a business helping people maximize credit card rewards, and she's grown her Instagram following to over 200,000 in the process. In this episode, Jimmy and Jess cover why transferring points out of your credit card's travel portal gets you dramatically more value, how to audit your existing cards to make sure you're actually using the perks you're paying for, and why opening multiple credit cards doesn't destroy your credit score (as long as you're responsible). Jess also shares how she and her husband redeemed 209,000 points for a $13,000 stay at Miraval Arizona, and how they enjoyed over $35,000 in free travel to Hawaii and Japan in a single year. They also discuss the current credit card landscape, including record-high signup bonuses, recent Hyatt point devaluations, and why now is a particularly important time to stay plugged into your points strategy. P.S. Are you a physician? Then you need disability insurance. Get a quote from a company you can trust built by doctors, for doctors: https://moneymeetsmedicine.com/disability  Key topics: choosing a general travel card vs. co-branded cards, the credit card audit spreadsheet method, downgrading vs. canceling cards, booking 11 months out for peak travel dates, the "Plan B refundable fare" hack, and free point search tools like PointsYeah.com, Roame.travel, and MaxMyPoint.com. Links mentioned: Points by J on Instagram: @pointsbyj Website: pointsbyj.com Email: jess@pointsbyj.com Free point search tools: PointsYeah.com, Roame.travel, MaxMyPoint.com Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    37 min

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On Money Meets Medicine, Dr. Jimmy Turner discusses all things career and finance for physicians. With expert guest discussions, Jimmy tackles the personal finance topics you wish you had learned in medical school. The MMM podcast will help you tackle your student loans, achieve financial independence, invest for retirement, and decrease your financial stress and burnout. To get help with free educational content or obtaining own-occupation disability insurance from a source you know you can trust, visit https://moneymeetsmedicine.com/disability Background: Dr. Turner is a practicing anesthesiologist at Wake Forest, author of The Physician Philosopher's Guide to Personal Finance, and Co-Founder of Money Meets Medicine Disability Insurance. For more information, visit moneymeetsmedicine.com

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