Harm Reduction · Financial Clarity · No Judgment

Harm Reduction Without
the Guesswork.
Know the Cost.
Keep What's Worth It.

Everything Has a Cost. You Choose Which Ones to Pay.

We quantify the financial, psychological, and opportunity trade-offs of your vices — so you can decide with clarity.

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We're not here to make you quit. We're here to make sure you chose — not just defaulted.

By Vice

Choose Your Vice

Six breakdowns. Same framework — financial, psychological, and opportunity cost — applied to each habit with full honesty. Pick the one you've been avoiding examining.

🚬
Nicotine

Cigarettes, vaping, pouches, dip. One of the most expensive habits per dollar of effect — and one of the hardest to see clearly from inside it.

Financial Dependency Health
View breakdown →
Caffeine

The socially acceptable one. Coffee, energy drinks, pre-workout. The costs are subtle — sleep debt, dependency, anxiety — but they compound.

Financial Sleep Anxiety
View breakdown →
🌿
THC / Cannabis

Legal in many places. Normalized almost everywhere. Still has real costs: motivation, memory, and money — especially at daily use.

Financial Motivation Cognition
View breakdown →
🥃
Alcohol

The most culturally embedded vice on this list. The costs are wide: financial, relational, physiological, professional — and easy to rationalize.

Financial Health Relationships
View breakdown →
⚗️
Other Substances

We don't moralize. We calculate. Whether recreational or habitual, these carry some of the highest opportunity costs in the table.

Financial Opportunity Risk
View breakdown →
📱
Screen Time

The only vice engineered by teams of people whose job was to make it harder to stop. The dependency is real. The cost is mostly invisible — until you add up the hours.

Psychological Opportunity Attention
View breakdown →

Three Costs Every Vice Carries

Every calculator and every article on this site runs through the same three lenses. Because the full price is never just the price tag.

01
Financial

The cash leaving your account. Daily spend, annualized cost, and what that money could be doing instead.

02
Psychological

Dependency patterns, mood effects, cognitive load, anxiety, and the mental energy required to maintain the habit.

03
Opportunity

Time, energy, and capital redirected away from things you actually want. The invisible cost most people never calculate.

Tool

Run Your Numbers

No signup. No judgment. Just clarity.

Vice Cost Calculator

See the real annual cost — and where that money could go instead.

Monthly cost
Annual cost
5-year projection
That's roughly…

Think, Don't Just Feel

Essays and frameworks for people who want to understand their habits — not just quit them.

The Hidden Tax on Your Morning Routine

Coffee feels cheap until you add it up. Then add the sleep debt. Then add the anxiety. Here's what the full invoice looks like.

What Daily THC Use Actually Costs Your Ambition

Not a scare piece. A real look at the research on motivation, working memory, and what "functional use" means in practice.

Harm Reduction Isn't Quitting. That's the Point.

The binary of "using" vs. "clean" misses the point. Clarity about cost is what actually changes behavior — not shame.

The Opportunity Cost of Nicotine, Quantified

Beyond the health stats you've already tuned out — what does a pack-a-day habit actually cost you in capital and time over a decade?

Drinking and the Invisible Recovery Day

The financial cost of alcohol is obvious. The 18–36 hours of reduced cognitive output after drinking? That never shows up on the receipt.

You Are Not the Customer. You Are the Product.

Social media isn't free. You're paying with attention, mood, and hours. Here's what that costs — in dollars, in days, and in what you're not building.

We're not anti-vice. We're anti-default. The difference is whether you chose it or just never questioned it.
— The ViceBudget principle

What ViceBudget Is — and Isn't

ViceBudget is a harm-reduction resource. We're not anti-vice — we're anti-default. Every page on this site applies the same three-cost framework: financial, psychological, and opportunity. No moralizing, no scare tactics, no abstinence agenda.

We're not doctors, therapists, or financial advisors. We're people who think clearly about trade-offs and believe you deserve the same clarity about your habits that you'd apply to any other significant recurring expense in your life.