To upgrade or not: How a $1,000 iPhone could cost you $17,000 in savings
Let’s talk about buying an iPhone for $1,000.
Tim Cook, Apple’s chief executive, once compared this eye-popping price tag to
buying a cup of coffee a day over a year. No big deal, right?
But financial advisers see this differently. By some estimates, an
investment of $1,000 in a retirement account today would balloon to about
$17,000 in 30 years.
In other words, $700 to $1,000 — the price range of modern smartphones — is a
big purchase. Fewer than half of American adults have enough savings set aside
to cover three months of emergency expenses, according to the Pew Research
Center. Yet one in five people surveyed by the financial website WalletHub
thought a new phone was worth going into debt for.
Tech companies fairly argue that our smartphones are our
most powerful tools for work and play and thus worth every penny. But they also
play numbers games to downplay the costs of a new phone. Samsung, for example,
has said the price of its new Galaxy phone is $200 — but that’s only if you
trade in a year-old phone for credit toward the new one. The true price is
$800.
So it’s worth looking at phone upgrades in a different light to
weigh their financial impact. That can help us make well-considered decisions
so that the move isn’t automatic.
The irony of Mr. Cook’s coffee analogy isn’t lost on Suze Orman,
the financial adviser who once famously equated people’s coffee habits to
“peeing $1 million down the drain.” The seemingly small amount of money that
people mindlessly spend on java — and now phone upgrades — could be a path to
poverty, she said.
“Do you need a new one every single year?” asked Ms. Orman, who
hosts the “Women and Money” podcast. “Absolutely not. It’s just a ridiculous
waste of money.”
Apple and
Samsung didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.
So what’s the true cost of a phone upgrade? Let’s look at the
math.
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