Billionaire Mark Cuban Says If You Want to Get Rich, Give Up Things — Drink Water Instead of Coffee, Eat Mac & Cheese, Not McDonald’s, ‘Save Every Penny’

Back when Mark Cuban broke and sleeping on a beer-stained floor with five roommates, he probably didn’t look like the guy who would one day own the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks, sell his startup to Yahoo for $5.7 billion, and become a household name for telling people to stop drinking lattes. But in his eyes, that unpleasant version of himself was already on the right track.

Cuban rolled into Dallas three weeks before his 24th birthday in a battered Fiat X1/9 with oil leaks, a hole in the floor and little more than a sleeping bag and a dream.

It was 1982. And although he wasn’t rich, he wasn’t afraid to walk away from anything. In fact, he said it helped. “I had nothing to lose,” he told the Dallas Morning News in 2011. “It was all about going for it.”

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So how did he get rich? According to Cuban, it wasn’t magic. It was sacrifice, discipline and lots of Mac & Cheese.

On his Blog Maverick website since 2008, Cuban laid out exactly what he believed it took to get rich. First: Cut the shortcuts. “There are no shortcuts. NONE,” he wrote. He warned that if someone offers you a “guaranteed” refund, they’re probably getting rich off of you, not with you. “If a deal is a big deal, they won’t share it with you.”

His advice? Start with the basics: “Save your money. Save as much money as possible. Every penny you can.”

Skip the coffee. Drink water. Skip McDonald’s. Eat Mac & Cheese. Cut up your credit cards, because if you’re pulling to buy things you can’t afford, he says you’re not serious about wealth.

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“The first step to getting rich requires discipline,” he wrote. “If you really want to be rich, you have to find the discipline, right?” That’s where most people fail, according to Cuban. But for those who find that discipline, he said the payoff starts immediately.

“The highest rate of return you will earn is on your own personal spending.” Cuban believes that being a smart shopper is the true “first step” to building wealth. And for those who stay with her? He recommends stacking cash in short-term savings — not stocks. “Buy and hold is a fool’s game for you,” he wrote at the time, pointing out that those who don’t have cash can’t take advantage of opportunities when the market slips.

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