Stock tips from TikTok? The platform brims with financial advice, good and bad

One TikTok influencer adopted the guise of a 7-year-old in pigtails to demystify investment advice. Another appraised the field of S&P 500 investment funds in 56 seconds. A third presented the ultimate Chipotle hack: A sort of reverse-engineered burrito that costs four dollars.

TikTok has emerged as an unlikely mecca for personal finance advice, under the hashtag FinTok. Content creators with such handles as @YourRichBFF and @JohneFinance have collected millions of followers and tens of millions of views with quick, breathless videos that offer tips on everything from credit card rewards to haircut costs to cryptocurrency, often in less than a minute.

As with TikTok generally, FinTok trends young. Many content creators are in their 20s or early 30s. They market themselves not so much on academic credentials or professional training as on lived experience and relatability: A self-made millionaire at 30. A six-figure saver at 25.

In a September survey by WallStreetZen, three-quarters of Gen Z respondents said they learned about personal finance from social media, especially TikTok.

Financial advice offered on TikTok, under the hashtag FinTok, ranges from benign to potentially risky.
Financial advice offered on TikTok, under the hashtag FinTok, ranges from benign to potentially risky.

FinTok: Financial advice on TikTok ranges from benign to risky

Much FinTok content seems innocuous, even inspirational: Who couldn’t use some help in balancing their budget?

But some videos veer into potentially risky advice about investments, insurance, and taxes, topics that might better be left to the pros.

“It’s scary because it’s so unregulated,” said Catherine Valega, a certified financial planner in Boston. “And the people who post, you click through, and maybe they’ve paid off a student loan, but they have no credentials, in most cases.”

Where, then, to draw the line between good FinTok and bad?

Thousands of TikTok videos offer affirming, uplifting advice for young spenders and savers: How to write a monthly budget. How to start an emergency fund. Where to find high-yield savings. The fundaments of investing.

Checkbook math, as the subject was once known, eludes many young Americans. In a 2022 survey by the National Endowment for Financial Education, only 14% of adults said they had access to financial education in high school, and 15% in college. Most of us seem to pick it up at work, from a mentor, or on our own.

Michela Allocca, 28, entered the workforce with a finance degree but little sense of personal finance. Now, she shares what she has learned on TikTok.
Michela Allocca, 28, entered the workforce with a finance degree but little sense of personal finance. Now, she shares what she has learned on TikTok.

"I didn't know what to do with my salary."

Michela Allocca, 28, entered the workforce with a finance degree but no real sense of personal finance.

“I didn’t know what to do with my salary. I didn’t know I should be investing, beyond my 401(k) match,” she said. “There wasn’t any real, relatable resource for me to go to, so I didn’t know how to navigate all of these things.”