Mental Accounting

Investing Concepts
Updated Apr 2026

The behavioral tendency to treat money differently based on its source or intended use, leading to irrational financial decisions.

What is Mental Accounting?

Mental accounting, a concept developed by economist Richard Thaler, describes how people categorize money into separate mental 'buckets' — salary, bonus, inheritance, casino winnings — and apply different spending and risk rules to each, even though all dollars are fungible. Investors might take aggressive risks with 'house money' (recent investment gains) while being ultra-conservative with their 'core savings,' despite the economic irrationality of this distinction. Mental accounting leads to suboptimal portfolio construction, irrational spending patterns, and failure to optimize taxes across accounts.

Example

Example

A person receives a $5,000 tax refund and treats it as 'found money,' spending it on a vacation they would never have funded from regular income — even though the refund represents their own overpaid taxes. Similarly, investors often hold a losing stock in one mental account and a winning stock in another rather than evaluating the overall portfolio holistically.

Source: Richard Thaler — Mental Accounting Matters (1999)