Mental Accounting

The tendency to categorize money into separate mental "accounts" and treat each differently.

Behavioral Finance

Definition

Mental accounting leads people to treat money differently depending on its source or intended purpose, violating the economic principle of fungibility (a dollar is a dollar). Examples include treating tax refunds as "bonus money" to spend freely, maintaining a savings account earning 1% while carrying credit card debt at 20%, or risking "house money" (recent gains) more freely than original capital.

lightbulb Example

A trader who is up $5,000 for the month takes riskier bets because they're playing with "house money." But the $5,000 in gains is real money—the risk of losing it is identical whether it came from this month's gains or original capital.

verified_user Key Points

  • Treats money differently based on source or purpose
  • Violates economic principle of fungibility
  • "House money effect" increases risk-taking with gains
  • Leads to suboptimal financial decisions

menu_book Browse Glossary

Explore 1000+ financial terms with definitions, formulas, and examples.

search Browse All Terms

Put Your Knowledge to Work

Open a free demo account and apply what you've learned with $50,000 in virtual capital.

Open Account