How a Professional Triathlete Manages His Money

This post originally appeared on TheBillfold.com.

Ben Collins, 30, is a professional triathlete who graduated from Columbia in 2005, where he was on the swim team. After living at the Olympic Training Center in Colorado for three years, Ben moved to Chicago and started an MBA at University of Chicago this past winter—while still racing.

How much did you make and how did you make it in your best year of triathlon?

Last year I made almost $80,000 in prize money alone. With non-disclosures I can’t say what I made through sponsorship, but it was a pretty good year. I know some of my competitors made quite a bit more. The way the prize money works out second place is usually only worth about half of a win, and I had five second-place finishes but only one win in 2012.

When did you start doing triathlon?

I started when I got to Honolulu right after college in 2006. Actually, the summer before I did a race in Washington for shits and giggles. But, it wasn’t until May 2006 that I started training regularly. And, then I won my first race I did after that, an Olympic [distance race] in Honolulu.

But it wasn’t until the end of 2007 that I applied for my professional license and started training and racing full-time.

You worked full-time out of college, right? Where was that? How much did you make there?

I worked for an engineering startup based in Honolulu, specializing in autonomous underwater vehicles. I basically made half what I was offered for a similar job in New York, around $35,000 starting salary. I’ve always valued location and life over money, which is probably why I was willing to take a chance on triathlon.

Triathlon isn’t cheap. How did you pay for equipment and travel and races?

No, triathlon is crazy expensive. I’ve always been really frugal, but it was still about a month’s paycheck to set myself up with enough gear to race. And in Hawaii that didn’t even include a wetsuit.

When did you train while working?

Before and after work. Everything was on Hawaii time, which means there were somewhat flexible hours.

When did you decide to go ‘pro’?

In 2006, I got second at amateur nationals, then at worlds I was leading by two-and-a-half minutes and crashed. Then, in 2007, I won nationals and then won the amateur worlds championships in Hamburg, Germany. For my first international triathlon I actually got to the race by asking flight attendants to help me fly there and staying with a family I found on Craigslist.

Is that even a thing? How did that work?

I met some people who worked in the airline industry. Hawaii is super friendly and you’re always meeting people. They offered to help out and put me on standby. I didn’t have very much money at all, so I had to rely on favors.