BCBusiness

November/December 2025 – The Entrepreneur of the Year Awards

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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82 | BC B U S I N E SS NOVEM B ER/ D ECEM B ER 2025 LIFE IN DOLLARS Biggest Splurge: Hobby gear—crafting, sewing and outdoor equipment from brands she believes in. Hard Pass: Fast fashion—and cheap clients who undervalue her work. Dream Job: Travel or food influencer How She Defines "Rich": Taking time off work, travelling one to two times a year, investing in property and retiring at a reasonable age. MONEY MAKER$ Real people. Real finances. From six-figure earners to side hustlers, we're pulling back the curtain on how British Columbians make, spend and think about money—no filters, just facts. At 28, this Vancouver-based freelancer earns $61K per year designing graphics— with enough flexibility to splurge on her crafting hobbies and the occasional concert ticket. She's trading square footage for lifestyle perks and saving aggressively to cushion the unpredict- ability of self-employment. Her motto? Save hard, play creatively. She sets her own rates and refuses to take on lowball clients, but the ups and downs of freelance life push her to save as much as she can during high-earning months. "I'm mostly worried about being able to save enough to settle down one day," she says. "Seeing how my parents did things—and how their experi- ences were so different from mine, even just generationally—makes it difficult to visualize what my financial future will look like." She uses Wave to manage invoices and receipts, has a $21,000 GIC TFSA (a Guaranteed Investment Certificate in a Tax-Free Savings Account) earning 5-percent interest and she recently began contributing to an RRSP (Registered Retirement Savings Plan). Her next goal? "To start actually planning soon and making some smarter investments with my small savings." Living in one of Canada's most expensive cities means trading space and natural light for a smaller, more affordable home—freeing up cash for home decor, concert tickets and spontaneous Ubers. MEET THE EARNER WEALTH WISDOM Age: 28 Location: Vancouver Industry: Marketing/design Role: Freelance graphic designer Pronouns: She/her Total Income: $61,000 Freelance Income: $60,000 Passive Income: $1,000 Benefits: Flexibility in schedule and unlimited unpaid vacation Education & Training: $35,000 (four-year design degree) Save, save, save. One of my favourite things about freelancing is embracing the down periods and reinvesting time into the things I love—without stressing. That's only possible because I save as much as I can during my higher months. MONTHLY SPENDING (ESTIMATES) Debt Repayments: $65 Pets and/or Childcare: $50 Personal and Lifestyle: $350 Transportation: $125 Insurance (non-employer-covered): $30 Health and Wellness: $200 Housing and Utilities: $1,200 Food: $425 Savings and Investments: $600

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