I'm a neuroscientist. Here's all you need to know about money to be truly happy

We all need enough funds to cover our basic needs, but beyond that the connection between wealth and wellness is less clear


"Money can’t buy you happiness" is either a widely accepted insight or a tired cliché. Is it right, though? Scientifically speaking, the answer is… mixed.

A study carried out at the University of Bath has once again looked at the relationship between income and happiness.

It seems that, up to a point and within a specific set of circumstances, money can buy happiness. But beyond that, the relationship between money and happiness becomes much looser and uncertain.

What makes us happy?

At the most immediate and fundamental levels, the things that make us happy, or at least provoke a positive, reward response in our brains, are those that satisfy our basic biological needs.

Put simply, we humans need many things to ensure our survival, such as food, water, air, sleep, and security. Our brain recognises these things as being ‘biologically significant’, so if we obtain them, we experience a sense of reward.

Because the human brain can make intuitive and abstract leaps, it can easily recognise that receiving money means we can now more easily obtain food/water/shelter etc.

This, as a study carried out by the Wellcome Trust in 2007 found, can be both rewarding and motivational, two things that could fall under the umbrella of happiness.

However, this doesn’t mean ‘more money’ automatically means ‘more happiness’. Money may be recognised by our brains as biologically significant, but there’s an upper limit on how rewarding even biologically significant things can be.

Happy man sitting on cents.
Photo credit: Getty

For example, eating is pleasurable – up to a point. Once you’re full, more food stops feeling good and starts to feel uncomfortable. The same goes for drinking. Even things like shelter and security can tip too far: build too many barriers around yourself, and comfort can turn into isolation.

There’s also the phenomenon of habituation, where the fundamental parts of our brains learn not to react to things that occur predictably and reliably. As evidenced in a 2011 study carried out by Dr Ruth Krebs at Ghent University, this is why things that are novel, as in surprising and unexpected, are often more rewarding than familiar things.

In many cases, the same thing happens with money. Receiving your regular pay is reassuring, but receiving unexpected money, even if it’s much less, often makes you much happier.

Also, when we actively and tangibly need it for our survival, obtaining money is very rewarding. But when we go beyond that point, when we’re ‘financially secure’ as they say, money can still be rewarding, but its power to make you happy is significantly reduced, a study carried out at San Francisco State University found.

More psychological, experience-based stimuli (e.g. travelling, forging new relationships, helping others etc) have a greater ability to make you happy.

Granted, in the modern world, you usually need money to do all those things too, but this ultimately means money’s link to happiness is more indirect, as a means to an end, rather than directly rewarding in its own right.

Is there a threshold amount of money that can make us happy?

The idea that there’s a tipping point – a level of income beyond which more money stops making us happier – carries huge implications, especially in the present day.

With much talk of wage stagnation, rising prices, and trials of universal basic income becoming increasingly common, the question of how much money people need to be happy is an increasingly salient one.

Unfortunately, there can be no easy answer, at least not one that applies to all people equally, because the factors that determine how much money is ‘enough’ for security and happiness are highly subjective, and vary considerably from person to person.

Photo credit: Getty

Some people believe a relatively modest sum would keep them happy for life; others suspect they’d never feel they had ‘enough’.

Studies carried out by researchers at the University of Bath have also found that these significant variations are even more apparent when you compare people from different cultures, suggesting the link between money and happiness is at least as much learned as it is ‘innate’.

Even within the same capitalist culture, people’s sense of financial security can vary wildly. Those with plenty of money are sometimes less happy than those with far less – in part because they often have more to worry about.

Can too much money make us unhappy?

This introduces another factor; money can make you unhappy. Or reduce happiness in other ways. Studies have shown that being paid to do something you enjoy can make you less motivated to do it, suggesting it actively reduces potential happiness. This would explain why people are often reluctant to turn a hobby into a job, or actively regret doing so.

Also, in our modern world, money is not static. If we have more money than we strictly need, we don’t hoard a big pile of gold coins in our spare room like modern-day dragons. Money is fluid, often intangible, and typically ends up being tied up with things like investments, stocks, properties, savings accounts, and more.

All these things are subject to the whims of politico-economical factors and more, meaning the person whose money it is has less control over it and less certainty than if they’d gone for the ‘big pile of gold’ option. Loss of control and uncertainty are two reliable sources of stress and unhappiness for the human brain.

Ultimately, rather than “money can’t buy you happiness”, it might be better to say “money can buy you safety and security”, and these things make it easier for us to be happy.

But there’s no direct one-to-one relation between money and happiness, and how it affects us ultimately depends on who we are and how we’ve been raised.

Read more about happiness:

© Getty Images

Footer banner
This website is owned and published by Our Media Ltd. www.ourmedia.co.uk
© Our Media 2026