“…Schooley and Worden (2008) extend the wealth effect by showing that spending depends not only on the amount of wealth, but also on the types of assets that make up this wealth. Many researchers utilise Survey of Consumer Finances data set to explore household finances and debt issues (Crook, 2001; Lee & Kim, 2016a), saving behaviour (Fisher & Montalto, 2011), retirement savings (Lee & Kim, 2016b; Yao & Cheng, 2017), emergency fund savings (Bhargava & Lown, 2006), the use of mortgages and credit cards (Donou‐Adonsou & Basnet, 2019; Lee & Kim, 2018), borrowing behaviour (Yazdanparas & Alhenawi, 2017) and spending behaviour (Barbić, Lučić, & Chen, 2019; Basnet & Donou‐Adonsou, 2016; Chalise & Anong, 2017). The purpose of this study is to explore how overspending behaviour is affected by mental accounts of wealth, savings goals and expense forecasting.…”