Budgeting and money management are important skills to learn, and many people who learn them early in life follow the same financial habits as they grow up, even if they become fairly wealthy.
Here are 16 celebs who grew up with little and remain careful with their money now:
1. THEN: Shania Twain grew up as one of five kids, and she sometimes went to school hungry. She told “Nightline,” “It’s very hard to concentrate when your stomach’s rumbling.”
CBS Photo Archive / CBS via Getty Images
NOW: Penning an advice letter to her 26-year-old self for Refinery29, she wrote, “Be frugal. Save for a rainy day.”
Samir Hussein / WireImage / Getty Images
2. THEN: Cardi B told Global Grind, “I have real good parents; they [are] poor. They have regular, poor jobs and whatnot.”
Shareif Ziyadat / Getty Images
NOW: She told Sway’s Universe, “I’m very cheap, I don’t care. Sometimes ya might see me with the jewelry, but I’m always looking at my account.”
Arturo Holmes / Getty Images for the Met Museum/Vogue
3. THEN: Eva Longoria told BuzzFeed News, “We didn’t have any money growing up. I grew up at the Boys & Girls Club, I grew up at the Salvation Army folding coats for their winter, I grew up at soup kitchens every Thanksgiving. That was just the way it was.”
Axelle / FilmMagic / Getty Images
NOW: Even as her star rose, she prioritized her financial well-being over a flashy lifestyle. She told BuzzFeed News, “I was saving my money from the [‘Desperate Housewives’] pilot because I didn’t think it would get picked up. … It was a great pilot, but I started to look for my next gig.”
Jon Furniss / WireImage / Getty Images
4. THEN: Born to parents who were only 18 and 20, Tobey Maguire bounced around different relatives’ homes as a kid. He told Parade magazine, “The truth of the matter is, I realized at a young age that I was responsible for myself. … Growing up the way I did, I had a very serious ambition to make some money, to have some security and comfort in my life.”
Jc Olivera / 2023 Getty Images and Penske Media
NOW: He told Parade, “When I first started being successful at this, financially speaking, I was very conservative with my money. That was definitely a product of where I came from. You know those Lotto winners who win big and then blow through all the money? That would never happen to me.”
Phillip Faraone / Getty Images for Paramount Pictures
5. THEN: Jessica Alba told Glamour UK, “I grew up in survival mode. It was almost sort of what I was born into. My parents didn’t have a safety net; they were living paycheck to paycheck. And so the mentality of ‘tomorrow’s not guaranteed’… For me, I was like, ‘I got to do everything I can to keep my head above water.'”
Karwai Tang / WireImage / Getty Images
NOW: As a parent herself, she teaches her three children about saving and sustainability. She told SheKnows, “Honor grows out of clothes, and then it gets passed down to Haven instead of Haven buying brand-new stuff every time. And Hayes even inherited some of Honor and Haven’s clothes.”
Lionel Hahn / Getty Images
6. THEN: Cameron Diaz told Stella magazine, “I had amazing parents; they were awesome. We weren’t privileged — very much the opposite. My family would collect cans to turn in for extra money, because $20 meant something to us.”
Jb Lacroix / WireImage / Getty Images
Diaz also told Stella magazine, “I come from a frugal upbringing, so I’m not just going to throw my money away.”
Earl Gibson Iii / Getty Images
7. THEN: Jessica Chastain told the Irish Times, “I did grow up with a single mother who worked very hard to put food on our table. We did not have money. There were many nights when we had to go to sleep without eating. It was a very difficult upbringing.”
Bruce Glikas / Getty Images
NOW: She told Marie Claire, “I used to have a lot of anxiety about how I was going to stay afloat, because as soon as I graduated, I never asked my parents for money. I always supported myself through acting and would make money last a long time. I understand the value of money, and I’m not an impulsive buyer.”
Frazer Harrison / Getty Images
8. THEN: Mila Kunis was 7 when she and her parents moved from Ukraine to the US. She told Cover Mag, “We came to this country with literally nothing, and so any level of success is important to us. They never wanted me to become an actress because it’s such an unstable and unpredictable profession.”
Gregg Deguire / WireImage / Getty Images
NOW: On the “Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend” podcast, she said, “Because I am an immigrant, I think that creates a different perspective on what the value of a dollar is and what hard work is … I’m a big supporter of Groupon. I have walked into restaurants with a Groupon; I use it all the time.”
Michael Kovac / Getty Images for Acura
9. THEN: According to the Beatles’ biographer Bob Spitz, Paul McCartney grew up in poverty, as did his bandmates Ringo Starr and George Harrison.
Joe Maher / Getty Images
NOW: He taught his children to save money and value their possessions. His daughter Stella McCartney told Net-a-Porter, “I’ve grown up in a family that doesn’t chuck stuff away. And it sounds silly, but I didn’t have a huge amount of money as a kid. My mum and dad were really clever; I went to a comprehensive [school] and I wasn’t given a load of cash, so I would go to vintage and secondhand shops and markets to buy clothes.”
Bertrand Rindoff Petroff / Getty Images
10. THEN: Tiffany Haddish entered foster care at 13. Two years later, she and her siblings were put in their grandparents’ custody, but they stayed in the system because the subsidies helped the family’s financial situation. After striking out on her own, she experienced homelessness three times.
John Sciulli / Getty Images for the Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA)
NOW: Her priorities are taking care of her family and saving for retirement. She told Insider, “I’m trying to create something so when I turn 55 or 60, I don’t have to work no more. I’m not about to spend it all up right now.”
Taylor Hill / Getty Images
11. THEN: Dave Grohl grew up in an impoverished, single-parent family in Virginia. He told the Guardian, “I never needed much, and I never thought I’d get more than what I had.”
Jon Kopaloff / WireImage / Getty Images
NOW: He told the Red Bulletin, “[All my money] goes straight into my bank account, where it turns all moldy and smelly.”
Theo Wargo / Getty Images for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
12. THEN: While working as a child actor, Sarah Michelle Gellar attended a private school in Manhattan on a scholarship that covered half of her expenses. She told the Independent, “I can remember this kid having an engraved Tiffany money clip when I barely had enough money for my bus pass.”
Dominique Charriau / WireImage / Getty Images
NOW: She told CNBC Make It, “I saved [my first ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ paycheck]. I think I was very well aware already … you heard all those stories about actors that make money and people run off with it. And I remember thinking, If I ever had money like that, I would know where it was at all times.”
Stephane Cardinale — Corbis / Corbis via Getty Images
13. THEN: Tyler Perry grew up in an impoverished family in New Orleans, and he was unhoused for a time.
Stefanie Keenan / Getty Images for Baby2Baby
NOW: Michael Jai White, who starred in Perry’s show “For Better or Worse,” told Vlad TV, “I make movies on a shoestring budget. I look at it kinda like Tyler Perry does … Tyler is frugal … Tyler will not waste stuff.”
Prince Williams / WireImage / Getty Images
,
Valerie Macon / AFP via Getty Images
14. THEN: When Halle Berry first moved to New York City to pursue acting, she ran out of money within three months and temporarily lived in a homeless shelter. She told “The Jess Cagle Interview,” “I called my mother and asked her to send me some money, and she said no, and that subsequently led to a year of not speaking to her because I was so upset that she wouldn’t help me.”
Jerod Harris / Getty Images
NOW: She told the Daily Record, “I am pretty frugal. I save a lot because I am always worried about when this trip is going to end.”
Jeff Kravitz / FilmMagic / Getty Images
15. THEN: When Hilary Swank was 6, her family moved into a trailer park. Nine years later, her parents separated, and she and her mother relocated to LA, where they lived in their car until they could afford an apartment.
Phillip Faraone / Getty Images for Stella Artois
NOW: Appearing on “Live With Regis and Kelly” after her first Oscar win, she said, “I am [a coupon clipper]. You know, when you open up the paper and you see those coupons, it looks like dollar bills staring you in the face.”
Steve Granitz / WireImage / Getty Images
16. And finally, THEN: Sarah Jessica Parker, who grew up as one of eight siblings, told the New York Times, “We were on welfare. I knew I was different from the kids who pay for lunch or bring their lunch from home. It was a stigma thing. I was not the only person receiving a free lunch, but you are aware.”
Bruce Glikas / Bruce Glikas / WireImage / Getty Images
NOW: She told the Times, “That is why I have such a weird relationship with money. And it is why I can be profligate and super frugal. And I think it is rather warped, since it comes from this desire to save, save, save.”
Francois G. Durand / WireImage / Getty Images
Support Free Journalism
Already contributed? Log in to hide these messages.