“Seeing is Believing”: Tolu Frimpong on Her Journey From £36,000 in Debt to Empowered Investor

For financial educator and mother of four Tolu Frimpong, the mission is personal. After facing crippling debt, she taught herself how to invest and now she’s dedicated to showing other women how to do the same.

Tolu Frimpong is a financial educator, content creator, and a busy wife and mother of four boys. But her most powerful role is that of a role model. Frimpong is a passionate advocate for financial literacy, driven by a simple, unshakeable belief: “Seeing is believing.”

“It’s so important for women to have role models when it comes to investing,” she says. “I think once we see other women like us doing things or investing and making their money grow, it makes you believe that, ‘Oh, if I see her doing it, I can do it too.'”

Frimpong’s path to becoming a financial authority wasn’t paved with privilege; it was born from crisis. “About six years ago now, we got into over £36,000 worth of debt,” she recounts. “I thought we had an income problem, but at that time it was more of a spending problem. We were just spending way beyond our means.”

That moment was the catalyst. Frimpong embarked on a “whole debt-free journey,” immersing herself in financial education online. It was there she first discovered the world of investing, a concept she’d never considered.

“Before that, I just assumed investing wasn’t for people like myself because I didn’t come from money,” she admits. “I had no idea that it was something somebody like myself could possibly take part in, until I started finding all that content on YouTube… and from then I was sold.”

Her journey was entirely self-taught, pieced together from books, podcasts, and online research. The fact that she succeeded is, she says, proof that the barriers are often just perception. “The fact that I’m even an investor is crazy to me because I was not that great with money once upon a time,” she laughs. “So if I can do it, anybody can do it.”

“Typically when you think of investors, you don’t think female, you don’t think black. But I am an investor… and you could be one too.”

A significant part of her mission is redefining what an investor even looks like. “It’s true, a lot of people would say that I don’t look like an investor. And to be honest, I would have said the same thing once upon a time,” she says. “Typically when you think of investors, you don’t think female, you don’t think black. But I am an investor, I invest, and yeah, I might not look like one, but I am and you could be one too.”

This conviction is what pushed her to start creating content. “I can’t be the only person that has been through this and struggled with money,” she explains. “If I’ve learned all of this stuff and it’s helped me to pay off over £36,000 worth of debt, then surely sharing that with other people can help them.”

Frimpong is candid about the initial fear. “At first I was quite scared,” she says, “I was like, anxious about the fact, ‘Oh my gosh, I’m putting my money in this thing. And it’s going down and I’m going to be broke again.'”

But her research led her to a more profound realisation: the risk of not investing. “A lot of barriers to investment is the fact that people think it’s risky,” she says. “But what I really came to realise is that I’m losing my money, saving it over time because of inflation… We all need to make our money work harder for us, particularly right now.”

She notes that many are already investing without knowing it, through their pensions. “You’re already passively invested anyway. You just don’t know about it. So why not take that time to learn?”

Six years after she began her journey, Frimpong sees a sea change. “When I entered into the space, I could count on one hand the amount of female finance content creators… those speaking about investing, I could name two,” she reflects. “Whereas now, fast forward to 2025, there’s so many more females in this space… it’s just an empowering space to be in now. We can empower each other to take control of our own financial futures.”

Ultimately, Tolu Frimpong’s journey from crippling debt to financial educator is the fuel for her mission. Her choice to “invest loudly” is a conscious act of dismantling the very barriers that once held her back. She is determined to be the visible proof that investing is not an exclusive club for “other people.” By sharing her story so openly, Frimpong is providing the representation she never had, ensuring that countless other women can see a path forward and feel empowered to take control of their own financial futures.

Watch Tolu’s full chat with us below:

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