This common money regimen can actually backfire and leave you worse off

So-called money diets work about as well as the ordinary kind.

That is, they may work for a short time, but you’ll have to stay on the diet to keep the weight off.

There’s plenty of disagreement about whether diets truly work, and whether money diets are effective.

A money diet sounds terrible to Monica Sipes, a certified financial planner and senior wealth advisor at Exencial Wealth Advisors in Frisco, Texas.

“It usually follows an overspend or a bad financial situation,” Sipes said. “It’s a restriction, often temporary, and I haven’t ever seen it work well.”

Sipes never recommends this strategy. You’re better off with a budget and some financial goals, which you support with some type of savings and perhaps a sacrifice. “Ultimately, it comes down to why you are making the decisions around your money, not a temporary restriction to undo bad spending habits,” Sipes said.

One approach that can work is trimming your budget, says Lauren Anastasio, a certified financial planner at New York personal finance company SoFi. Anastasio calls this the dieting equivalent of having a side of veggies instead of a starch.

But avoid the equivalent of crash dieting when it comes to your finances, she adds. “I rarely encourage someone to go on a no-spend diet or budget,” Anastasio said.

source: nbcnews.com