Most expensive problems do not start big.
They start small.
Quiet.
Easy to ignore.
A £50 decision.
A mild annoyance.
A “not today”.
And then, years later, the bill arrives.
£15,000.
This article is about how that happens.
Not just in dentistry.
In life.
The lie we all believe
We believe this:
“If it doesn’t hurt much, it can’t be serious.”
That belief feels sensible.
It feels grown-up.
It feels financially responsible.
But it is wrong.
Very wrong.
How humans really make decisions
Humans do not choose what is best long term.
We choose what hurts least right now.
We avoid:
- discomfort
- hassle
- awkward conversations
- small costs that feel annoying
We tell ourselves:
- “I’ll deal with it later”
- “It’s probably fine”
- “I don’t want to overreact”
This works beautifully…
Right up until it doesn’t.
The key idea: costs do not grow in a straight line
Most people imagine problems grow like this:
- Small problem → small cost
- Medium problem → medium cost
- Big problem → big cost
Nice.
Predictable.
Comforting.
Reality looks nothing like this.
Reality looks like a curve.
For a long time, the cost stays low.
Almost flat.
Barely moving.
Then suddenly…
It takes off.
Fast.
The moment people get trapped
There is a dangerous point on the curve.
It is the point where:
- the problem is real
- but still feels optional
This is where people say:
“I’ll wait.”
They feel clever.
They feel cautious.
They feel like they are saving money.
They are not.
They are locking in future pain.
Dentistry shows this better than almost anything else
Let’s use teeth.
Not because they are special.
But because the pattern is very clear.
Stage 1: The £50 stage
- Small cavity
- Mild gum bleeding
- Slight wear
- Nothing dramatic
Cost: low
Pain: minimal
Decision: easy to delay
Most people do nothing here.
Stage 2: The £500 stage
- Bigger filling
- Gum disease starting
- Tooth getting weaker
Still manageable.
Still “not urgent”.
This is where people say:
“Let’s keep an eye on it.”
This is the most dangerous sentence in healthcare.
Stage 3: The £3,000 stage
- Cracked tooth
- Root canal
- Crown
- Bone loss
Now it hurts.
Now it’s inconvenient.
Now it’s expensive.
But the real damage is already done.
Stage 4: The £15,000 stage
- Tooth loss
- Multiple crowns
- Implants
- Bite collapse
- Years of patching
At this stage people say:
“How did it get this bad?”
It didn’t get bad suddenly.
It got bad slowly, then all at once.
This is not about teeth
Teeth are just the clearest example.
The same curve exists everywhere.
The same curve in money
Ignore pension contributions at 30.
Tell yourself you’ll “catch up later”.
Later never really comes.
Small monthly choices turn into massive gaps.
The same curve in health
Ignore sleep.
Ignore weight gain.
Ignore fitness.
Nothing breaks for years.
Then suddenly:
- joints hurt
- blood sugar rises
- energy disappears
And fixing it takes ten times the effort.
The same curve in relationships
Avoid small conversations.
Avoid awkward honesty.
Avoid early repair.
Everything feels fine.
Until one day it isn’t.
Then the cost is emotional, not financial — but just as real.
Why the brain keeps making the wrong choice
Your brain is not broken.
It is doing exactly what it evolved to do.
It prioritises:
- today over tomorrow
- certainty over risk
- comfort over logic
Long-term costs feel abstract.
Short-term discomfort feels real.
So we choose wrong — calmly, confidently, repeatedly.
The most expensive sentence in the world
Here it is:
“I’ll deal with it later.”
Later is where compound damage lives.
A better way to think: health as compound interest
Money compounds.
So does neglect.
Small good actions early:
- stay small
- stay cheap
- stay boring
Small bad actions early:
- grow quietly
- gain momentum
- become unstoppable
Prevention looks boring because it works.
Failure looks dramatic because it waited.
Why this matters more as you get older
As life expectancy rises:
- teeth last longer than designed
- joints last longer than designed
- bodies take more years of wear
The curve gets steeper with age.
Delays cost more.
Mistakes compound faster.
The real decision is not £50 vs £15,000
That framing is too simple.
The real decision is:
“Do I pay a little now — or guarantee I pay a lot later?”
There is no third option.
Why people still choose wrong (even when they know this)
Because knowledge does not change behaviour.
Friction does.
It is easier to:
- ignore
- postpone
- rationalise
Until the curve turns vertical.
A simple rule that actually works
Here it is:
If a problem is cheap, quiet, and reversible — act.
Those three conditions never last.
Once one disappears, costs explode.
The quiet truth
Most £15,000 problems were once £50 problems.
They were not unlucky.
They were postponed.
Final thought
The biggest financial mistake most people make is not a bad investment.
It is assuming small problems stay small.
They don’t.
They wait.
Kumar Kolar. “The £50 Decision That Becomes £15,000.”
www.kumarkolar.com, 2026.
Available at: https://kumarkolar.com/the-5-decision-that-becomes-15000/
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