The 4-Hour Workweek: Escape 9-5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich (Expanded and Updated)

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars | 27,397 ratings

Price: 15.8

Last update: 01-09-2025


About this item

Forget the old concepts of retirement and a deferred life plan. There is no need to wait and every reason not to, especially in unpredictable economic times. For living more and working less, this book is the blueprint.

This expanded edition includes dozens of practical tips and case studies from people who have doubled their income, overcome common sticking points, and reinvented themselves using the original book. Also included are templates for eliminating email and negotiating with bosses and clients, how to apply lifestyle principles in unpredictable economic times, and the latest tools, tricks, and shortcuts for living like a diplomat or millionaire without being either.


Top reviews from the United States

  • Seth
    5.0 out of 5 stars Plus the title made it sound like it belonged on an infomercial and not in my ...
    Reviewed in the United States on May 31, 2015
    I had seen the uber-orange cover of The 4 Hour Workweek by Tim Ferriss all over: Bookstores (duh!), backseats of cars, airplane terminals, frat houses and more. Yet despite its proliferation into the hands (and Kindles) of millions of people all over the world, and its catchy headline, I had yet to read it. In fact, I had no inclination to read it whatsoever.

    Quite frankly, I had no idea what it was about. Plus the title made it sound like it belonged on an infomercial and not in my book collection.

    Things changed when I started listening to the Tim Ferriss Show podcast just a few weeks ago. The podcast is fantastic and I haven’t been able to stop listening to it; I highly recommend it.

    From what I’ve noticed, if I enjoy reading someone’s articles or website, I generally enjoy their podcasts (the same holds true vice-versa). So when I saw that it was available for only $1.99 on Kindle I didn’t hesitate one bit.

    Can I really only work 4 hours?

    That’s what everyone wants to know. For the most part, no it is not feasible for most. In fact, Tim repeats in his podcasts and presumably other mediums that The 4 Hour Workweek is not to be taken literally. Rather, it drives the point home of what the book is really about: Optimizing your time, eliminating distractions, and finding passive streams of income to allow you to do minimal work while having maximum freedom.

    It’s a solid concept. In fact, there really is little basis for the traditional 9-5 schedule:

    How is it possible that all the people in the world need exactly 8 hours to accomplish their work? It isn’t. 9– 5 is arbitrary.”

    The idea behind this book is to essentially turn the idea of working hard on its head:

    Being busy is a form of laziness— lazy thinking and indiscriminate action. Being overwhelmed is often as unproductive as doing nothing, and is far more unpleasant. Being selective— doing less— is the path of the productive. Focus on the important few and ignore the rest.”

    Many books of this nature are simply filled with fluff, woo-woo, and other law of attraction platitudes, but The 4 Hour Workweek is absolutely filled to the brim with productivity tips. This makes the book worth the price of admission alone (that goes for the full price hardcover too!)

    There are a few concepts that he really stresses throughout the book and that will allow you to eliminate and optimize.

    The first of which is the 80/20 principle, also known as the Pareto Principle. This principle states that 80% of results (profit, happiness etc.) comes from 20% of output. Once Tim discovered this principle, he applied it to his nutritional supplement company so that he could focus on the select few clients that brought him the bulk of his income, and to eliminate the pesky customers who were nothing but trouble.

    Sure, it cost him some income, but it allowed him to reduce his stress exponentially and freed up a plethora of time.

    A second major principle is Parkinson’s law, which states:

    … that a task will swell in (perceived) importance and complexity in relation to the time allotted for its completion. It is the magic of the imminent deadline. If I give you 24 hours to complete a project, the time pressure forces you to focus on execution, and you have no choice but to do only the bare essentials. If I give you a week to complete the same task, it’s six days of making a mountain out of a molehill.”

    The best approach to Parkinson’s Law is to

    1. Limit tasks to the important to shorten work time (80/ 20).

    2. Shorten work time to limit tasks to the important (Parkinson’s Law). The best solution is to use both together: Identify the few critical tasks that contribute most to income and schedule them with very short and clear deadlines.”

    There are a plethora of other tidbits of wisdom throughout, such as:

    Check e-mail twice per day, once at 12: 00 noon or just prior to lunch, and again at 4: 00 P.M.
    At least three times per day at scheduled times [ask] the following question: Am I being productive or just active?
    More is not better, and stopping something is often 10 times better than finishing it.
    Getting Your Own Personal Assistant

    One of the most engaging and laughable topics in the book was the chapter on virtual assistants (VA). I say laughable because it’s actually incredibly feasible to have a 3rd world virtual assistant, and I couldn’t help myself from laughing at the idea of having a team of Indians heeding my every beck and call.

    Consider this:

    If you spend your time, worth $ 20-25 per hour, doing something that someone else will do for $ 10 per hour…”

    Makes sense. Plus there are other good reasons to consider getting a VA:

    Getting a remote personal assistant is a huge departure point and marks the moment that you learn how to give orders and be commander instead of the commanded. It is small-scale training wheels for the most critical of NR skills: remote management and communication.”

    The Original Internet Entrepeneur

    When I began to read Meditations by Marcus Aurelius, I noticed something: I had read this before. But it wasn’t because Aurelius was plagiarizing content 2000 years in the future, rather it was the inverse.

    I’ve noticed this phenomena with The 4 Hour Workweek in that much of the content seemed all too familiar with the Digital Nomad and lifestyle design communities and advice of today. But seeing as it was written originally in 2007, one could say it was the first of its kind.

    In fact, the proliferation of internet entrepreneurs are likely a result of this book.

    On that note, look where Tim Ferris is today. He’s not lounging on a beach in Guatemala making money off his supplements. Rather, he’s busting his ass in Silicon Valley helping startups turn into massive success stories.

    This is no fault of his; I just think many readers of this book and these internet entrepreneurs lose sight of this. They get caught in finding ‘passive income’ and settling for 1-3K a month; just enough to make do in a foreign country of their choice.

    This is what I wanted for so long, but now this doesn’t seem like enough. I’d much rather be doing what Tim is doing now as opposed to what he recommend in his book.

    Don’t Follow This Book Like the Gospel

    Again, the 4 Hour Workweek isn’t designed to be taken literally. This is a pattern throughout the book.

    In fact, much of the information regarding internet marketing and asking a boss for a remote work agreement is completely useless for me and may be for you. Yet, overall I was really impressed with the book. There was plenty of solid, actionable advice throughout. In fact, I’ve already marked this book down as one I will have to read again to internalize the concepts that stood out to me.

    http://masculinebooks.com/2015/05/26/the-4-hour-workweek-by-tim-ferriss/
  • Charles D. Payet, DDS
    5.0 out of 5 stars Ignore the critics and decide for yourself - I'm glad I did.
    Reviewed in the United States on August 30, 2011
    I hesitated a long time before buying this book (first got the audio version on Audible.com, then downloaded the Kindle version for a written reference version for all the resources he lists), and largely because of the many negative reviews that bash Tim Ferriss's ethics, yada yada yada. WHATEVER! (As my teen daughter likes to say). Some friends/colleagues/mentors, whom I genuinely respect, told me otherwise, and that even if I got 1-2 ideas out of it, it would be worth it. I am so glad I listened! Admittedly, I still have a long way to go in implementing these ideas - heck, there are so many, I haven't even been able to decide which ones most apply to me.

    So you know who I am: I am a small businessman/dentist, photographer, website designer and optimizer (out of financial necessity at first, then because I enjoyed it), and blogger - on top of being a husband and father of 2 girls. So yes, I am an EXTREMELY busy man, and in recent years, the busier I got, the more frustrated I got at not being able to do more. I felt like I'd finally run into the wall of "not enough time in each day." I'd already started reading/implementing David Allen's "Getting Things Done" systems, and that is helping, but it didn't make as much of a difference as I'd hoped, even though it did help me organize my desk at home and work and keep it cleaner than ever.

    As a dentist, I will never be able to have a 4-hour workweek, plain and simple. You just can't do that much dentistry in only 4 hours. However, most people never have a clue how much administrative work goes into running a small business, and that often seems to take more time than taking care of patients, which is what I really love and how I actually make money; doing paperwork, keeping up with government regulations, dealing with insurance companies, managing employees, email, mail.......it eats up time like crazy.

    Since I also manage my own websites (for photography and dentistry), with the increasing importance of Social Media, all the changes Google is making, etc. is is becoming important to manage my total "webutation," but it takes more and more time. How do I get it? And adding content on a regular basis? OMG - where am I supposed to find the time for research, writing, editing, link-building, Adwords, yikes!

    As I said, I haven't gotten a lot implemented yet, but after running a small business for 12 years, I've learned to recognize a quality resource for ideas when I see it, and Tim Ferriss has collected a HUGE number of resources in this book, with ideas on how to make it possible to focus on the IMPORTANT stuff and make it easy to delegate everything else. I am actually EXCITED about finding ways to implement as many of these ideas as possible, leaving me more time to enjoy my family, get to traveling and photographing more, and no longer just living to work long enough to retire "one day."

    JUST GET THE BOOK. Have an open mind when you read it. Recognize that it may not all be right for you, but you WILL find ideas to make your life easier, better, more productive, more profitable, and more enjoyable.

    UPDATE:
    I've recently come back to this book after a hiatus of several months, as I'm getting REALLY tired of working so much. One daughter has a year left before leaving for college, and the other is about to start kindergarden, and my wife and I want more time as a family, more time on vacation, more time AWAY from work, whereas it seems we are spending more and more time at work - NOT the goal. I just want to reiterate for those reading all the negative reviews - DON'T LISTEN. Tim offers real, systematic, solid, and ETHICAL ways to do better, and I am committed to putting more of them to work now. I'm excited about this book and what we'll be doing to LIVE more, not just work more.

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