After graduating from culinary school with $130,000 in student loans and a $12-an-hour job, Bradley Alagna knew he had to make a drastic change. Now known as BradleyOnABudget on TikTok, the 32-year-old shares his ultra-frugal lifestyle with over a million followers — not to shock, but to inspire a new mindset around money, debt, and intentional living.
A costly education, a hard truth
Bradley Alagna’s story starts the way many do: with a dream, a degree, and a debt load that didn’t come with a plan for repayment. After graduating from a top culinary school, he found himself making just $12 an hour in the industry he trained for. That paycheck barely put a dent in his $130,000 student loans.“My student loan payment was almost half of my monthly income,” he tells PEOPLE. “I had two choices: I could accept defeat and let this be my life forever, or I could make my situation better.”
And so he pivoted — not by landing a higher-paying job or relying on a safety net, but by choosing radical frugality. “I began to live frugally, and it was out of survival mode,” he explains. “I told myself I have the chance to turn my financial situation around, so let me do everything I can.”
Living below the line
Alagna’s version of frugal living isn’t just skipping lattes or cutting cable. It’s an all-in lifestyle rooted in discipline, self-awareness, and sheer necessity. He eats the same meals every day. He doesn’t run the heat in winter. He lives in a studio apartment, has no paid subscriptions, and works a variety of side gigs — from dog sitting to financial coaching — when he’s not creating content.
“It’s just me and my acoustic guitar and my sound guy, who happens to be my fiancé,” he jokes, highlighting the lean simplicity of his day-to-day life. But his sacrifices have a purpose: not only to get out of debt but to show others what’s possible. “I’m fascinated that people think it’s a miserable lifestyle to save your money,” he says. “In culture, we see saving money as punishment, whereas I see it as the exact opposite. Saving gives me the chance at a better life.”
Fighting back against overconsumption
While his lifestyle may seem extreme, Alagna doesn’t push it as a one-size-fits-all solution. What he does challenge is the culture of overconsumption that keeps people financially stuck. “Many are so focused on the life that others are living and the things others have,” he says. “It makes them unhappy, then they chase that, which results in spending a lot of money.” He believes one of the best financial habits people can adopt is gratitude. “When you’re always spending money to get a rush, it’s never going to be enough.”
Instead of chasing fleeting pleasures, Alagna urges people to shift their mindset. His content isn’t about judgment — it’s about mindfulness. “I posted a video that said, ‘How long have you worked and what’s in your bank account to show for it?’ That hit many people hard,” he recalls.
Real talk, real change
Alagna acknowledges that his methods aren’t for everyone — nor does he want them to be. What he encourages is awareness. “Track your spending,” he says. “The No. 1 wake-up call is to see where your money’s going. People think the $5 coffee and $15 online purchase don’t matter, but it all adds up.”
He also addresses common pushback with a sense of fairness. “I don’t run the heat in the winter to keep my electric bill low,” he says. “But I never made a video saying you must not run your heat. I’m saying, ‘Can you become mindful and lower your living expenses?’”
For those who find his content uncomfortable, that’s by design. “My content makes people uncomfortable. I question why you’re spending $150 a month on going out for coffee every day, but you’re telling me you have no money?”
Becoming the guide he never had
Despite the tough love tone, Alagna speaks from a place of empathy. He’s been through the struggle, and he knows how lonely it can be. “I had no one teaching me about finances. It was a lonely experience,” he says. “I can’t even believe the total 180, where now I’m that person for so many people.”
That transformation — from a broke culinary grad to a financial educator with a massive following — is something he doesn’t take lightly. “I’m glad that I’m able to be that person, to motivate and inspire other people in the ways I needed it.” His message is simple: You don’t have to replicate his lifestyle, but you do have to make intentional choices if you want your financial life to change. “People need to keep pushing and hanging on because I never imagined I would have what I have today,” Alagna says. “It’s all because I didn’t give up on myself.”