Kevin O'Leary wants entrepreneurs to stop obsessing over valuations, follower counts, and the next viral pitch. Instead, he's pushing a different metric entirely: cold, hard, liquid cash that you promise yourself you'll never touch.
The Real Success Test
"Most entrepreneurs think success is about valuations, followers, or the next big idea. It's not," O'Leary wrote Sunday in a post on X.
He continued, "The real test is simple: Do you have $5 million liquid that you never touch? That's the discipline most founders never build. They double down on risky ideas, over-invest emotionally, and then wonder why they're broke at 65. Financial freedom comes from one thing, protecting the nest egg. Touch the income, never touch the principal."
Why $5 Million Matters
This isn't the first time the Shark Tank investor has championed this particular number. In a December 2024 interview with the Financial Post, he called $5 million "the minimum" needed for genuine personal freedom. At that level, he argued, work shifts from mandatory to optional.
The logic is straightforward: O'Leary wants that money parked in secure, liquid assets like cash or short-term government debt, not tied up in real estate or volatile stocks. At current yields hovering around 5% on Treasury bills, a $5 million reserve could generate roughly $250,000 annually in interest. You spend the interest, leave the principal alone, and suddenly you've got a perpetual income stream.
Most Founders Fail The Test
In a video clip attached to Sunday's post, O'Leary revealed his favorite reality check: he asks founders who claim they've "made it" whether they actually have $5 million sitting in Treasury bills. Nine times out of ten, he says, they don't. It's a stark reminder that many entrepreneurs mistake paper wealth or unrealized gains for actual financial security.
O'Leary's broader advice follows the same pattern. He's previously told investors that once they hit a major financial milestone, they should immediately lock that amount into safe, liquid assets before even thinking about their next high-risk venture. Build the fortress first, then go play with fire.