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Where to Start with David Chilton: A Reading Guide

Where to start with David Chilton — how to approach The Wealthy Barber, his personal finance classic told as a parable about three young people receiving financial wisdom, with the pay-yourself-first principle at its core. A complete reading guide.

By Marcus Webb

David Chilton (born 1961 in Sarnia, Ontario) is a Canadian financial planner, businessman, author, and television personality best known for writing The Wealthy Barber (1989), which he self-published and sold door-to-door before it became one of the best-selling Canadian books of all time. He subsequently became a Dragons’ Den panellist (the Canadian equivalent of Shark Tank), wrote The Wealthy Barber Returns (2011), and has been a prominent voice in Canadian personal finance media. The Wealthy Barber is notable for demonstrating the commercial viability of self-published personal finance books well before the genre was as crowded as it subsequently became.


Where to Start: The Wealthy Barber (1989)

Chilton invented the finance narrative — investment advice delivered through a fictional barbershop — because he believed that most people who needed financial guidance would never read a conventional personal finance book, and that a story might reach them where a textbook wouldn’t. The Wealthy Barber works as well as it does because of a decision that seems simple but is actually shrewd: the financial wisdom is delivered through a story, which means it is encountered through character and relationship rather than as a list of rules.

The pay-yourself-first principle is the book’s central and most durable contribution. Roy the barber’s core advice is consistent across every conversation: before you pay any bill, before you spend on any discretionary purchase, before you calculate what you have left to save, take 10 percent of your gross income and put it somewhere it cannot easily be accessed. This is not the same as saving whatever remains at the end of the month — the pay-yourself-first habit treats savings as the first expense rather than the residual, which changes the arithmetic entirely. Most people who try to save what remains at month end save nothing or very little; people who automate a fixed percentage off the top reliably accumulate.

The compound interest explanation is presented in Roy’s characteristic manner — patient, concrete, with examples that make the mathematics visceral rather than abstract. Roy is fond of demonstrating what happens to a modest monthly contribution over thirty years, and the demonstration is effective not because it is original (the compound interest argument is in every personal finance book) but because the narrative format allows him to address the emotional resistance that most people feel when told to delay gratification.

The insurance and estate planning sections are the book’s most practically useful additions to the core savings argument. Roy’s advice on which insurance products are and are not worth buying — term versus whole life, the specific coverage worth having — is delivered with the same direct clarity as the savings principle, and represents genuine value for readers who have not yet navigated these decisions.


Reading David Chilton

The Wealthy Barber is Chilton’s essential book. The Wealthy Barber Returns (2011) is the updated companion — it covers the same principles with more contemporary examples and addresses the consumer credit and social media temptations that post-date the original.


For the full David Chilton bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the David Chilton author page on Editors Reads.


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Frequently Asked Questions

Where should I start with David Chilton?

The Wealthy Barber (1989) is Chilton's essential book — a Canadian personal finance classic that has sold over two million copies and introduced the pay-yourself-first principle to a generation of readers through a story format that makes financial advice unusually memorable. Three young people visit the wealthy barber Roy, who has accumulated significant assets on a barber's income, and receive financial wisdom across a series of monthly visits. The narrative format is not a gimmick but a deliberate pedagogical choice: embedding the principles in a story makes them easier to retain and apply than a list of rules.

What is The Wealthy Barber about?

The book delivers its core financial wisdom through Roy's conversations with the three visitors: save 10 percent of gross income before spending anything else (pay yourself first); invest those savings consistently in diversified, low-cost vehicles; understand the specific insurance products that are and are not worth buying; make a will and manage estate planning; understand the tax-advantaged accounts available to you. The pay-yourself-first principle is the book's central contribution — the insight that savings treated as the first expense rather than the last residual are the only savings that reliably accumulate. Everything else follows from getting that single habit right, and Roy delivers this message with the patience of someone who has watched people resist simple truths for decades.

Is The Wealthy Barber still relevant, given it was published in 1989?

The core principle — save 10 percent automatically before spending — is entirely timeless and is as valid now as in 1989. Chilton updated the book twice; the most recent significant update was The Wealthy Barber Returns (2011), which covers the same principles with more contemporary examples and addresses the specific temptations of consumer credit culture. Some investment product specifics in the original are dated, and the Canadian tax context limits the applicability of some account-specific advice for non-Canadian readers. Read it for the behavioural principle and the pay-yourself-first habit; treat the specific product recommendations as starting points for contemporary research.

What should I read after The Wealthy Barber?

After The Wealthy Barber, JL Collins's The Simple Path to Wealth covers the index fund investment implementation with more depth and clarity than Chilton. Vicki Robin and Joe Dominguez's Your Money or Your Life provides the philosophical framework for why the pay-yourself-first habit matters beyond its financial effects. David Bach's The Automatic Millionaire covers the automation of Chilton's principle — setting up systems so that saving happens without requiring ongoing willpower. For Canadian readers specifically, Preet Banerjee's Stop Over-Thinking Your Money covers the contemporary Canadian context that The Wealthy Barber's original edition predates.

Affiliate Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. This article contains affiliate links — if you purchase through them we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. Our editorial recommendations are independent of affiliate arrangements.

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