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Chris Adam
Sat, Apr 5, 2025, 5:01 AM 3 min read
In his popular book “Rich Dad Poor Dad,” author Robert Kiyosaki talked about financial planning and building wealth. Many readers have since put his advice to work to help improve their money situations.
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However, as with nearly any advice, there are a number of critics who’ve said his advice doesn’t work for all situations. Michael Gregory of Dad is FIRE, for instance, noted that one reason the advice doesn’t work for everyone is that Kiyosaki’s push for constant wealth accumulation and no clear point at which to stop may put some financial futures in jeopardy.
GOBankingRates talked to more financial experts for their thoughts on advice Kiyosaki may have gotten wrong about building wealth (and what you can do instead).
Christopher Stroup, founder and president at Silicon Beach Financial, took issue with Kiyosaki’s approach to real estate.
“Kiyosaki promotes real estate as the ultimate wealth-building tool, but the reality is more nuanced than that,” Stroup said. “Passive income from real estate isn’t always passive because it requires capital, time and expertise. A well-diversified portfolio that includes real estate, equities and tax-efficient strategies can lead to more sustainable long-term wealth.”
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Per Stroup, Kiyosaki’s enthusiasm for Bitcoin overlooks its fundamental risks.
“Unlike stocks or real estate, Bitcoin doesn’t generate dividends, rent or earnings,” he said. “It relies purely on speculation. Extreme volatility makes it unsuitable as a core retirement asset, and its price fluctuations can erase gains in an instant.”
Kiyosaki encourages using debt to acquire assets, but not all debt is productive. According to Stroup, borrowing only works when the underlying asset appreciates and generates enough income to cover your liabilities.
“Many investors over-leverage, assuming values will always rise,” he said. “All you need to do is look back to 2008 to be proven otherwise. Smart leverage isn’t about aggressive expansion. It’s about aligning risk with liquidity and your long-term financial goals.”
While Kiyosaki emphasizes mindset over technical knowledge, wealth isn’t built on mindset alone, Stroup noted.
“Tax planning, estate strategies and diversified investments require real expertise,” he explained. “A ‘just think rich’ approach can lead to overconfidence and poor financial decisions.
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