The Science of Buying Happiness

What’s Worth the Splurge?

Woman-sitting-in-restaurant-with-two-female-friends-smiling_web
Woman-sitting-in-restaurant-with-two-female-friends-smiling_web

How much is happiness worth to you? Placing a price tag on emotional well-being may seem like a slippery slope, but scientists have a lot to say about the intersection between happiness and the money we spend.

Will the emotional value of a $300 blouse by a Parisian designer really outweigh the satisfaction of a similar one plucked from the clearance rack? Does forgoing affordable indulgences make you frugal — or does it mean you don’t think you deserve what you want? There is growing research that denial of pleasures (when you have the budget for them) isn’t necessarily good for you.

In fact, it looks like happiness can be bought. One caveat: As you might have suspected, not all splurges are alike. So, what kinds of purchases offer the greatest happiness?

Go on Vacation

Woman-with-sunglasses-on-top-of-head-lying-in-lounge-chair-by-pool_web
Woman-with-sunglasses-on-top-of-head-lying-in-lounge-chair-by-pool_web

Purchasing experiences, or “money spent on doing,” gives us heightened feelings of pleasure compared to buying things, or “money spent on having,” say study authors from Cornell University, who worked on four different studies. Even “waiting for an experience tends to be more pleasurable” than buying material goods, added the researchers. It appears that the elation you feel from acquiring items is fleeting, while the memories made from an exotic or romantic trip endure.

So, book that vacay as far in advance as you can to get even more ROI (return on investment) on your purchase. Isn’t that well worth the price?

Hire a Housekeeper

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Woman-cleaning-oven-in-kitchen_web

Go on, use that disposable income to hire someone to dispose of your dust bunnies and wastebasket garbage at home. Giving yourself the gift of free time by hiring someone to do tasks you don’t want to do, such as arranging for a housekeeper, just may be the kind of splurge you need to make your life happier.

In exploring the link between money and happiness, the lead study author at Stanford University found that the way you manage your time plays a “critical role in understanding happiness.” When you save cash to clean your own toilet and do other housekeeping chores yourself, as opposed to doing something you enjoy, you’re squandering valuable time — which can make you sadder.

If you have the resources, consider outsourcing other mundane tasks so you can make more enjoyable use of your time. Here are six other housework hacks to consider, too.

Pay for Sports

Women-participating-in-breast-cancer-marathon_web
Women-participating-in-breast-cancer-marathon_web

I’ll admit: I suffered a bit of sticker shock when I first signed up for the New York City Marathon. Was the privilege to run really worth shelling out over $250? But, based on research from the UK government on quantifying and valuing the money we spend on things that boost our well-being, I probably paid too little.