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Leadership Quote by Benjamin Franklin

"One today is worth two tomorrows"

About this Quote

Franklin’s line lands like a thrift-store proverb, but it’s really a miniature piece of statecraft: time as currency, delay as debt. “One today” isn’t just a calendar slot; it’s a unit of agency you can actually spend. “Two tomorrows” is a seductive IOU, inflated with optimism and permanently vulnerable to collapse. The arithmetic is the trick. By giving procrastination a bigger number, Franklin acknowledges its appeal, then punctures it by declaring the smaller amount more valuable. It’s Puritan frugality translated into a punchy exchange rate.

The intent is practical and political at once. Franklin lived in a world where printing schedules, shipping routes, epidemics, and imperial crackdowns turned plans into roulette. “Tomorrow” wasn’t guaranteed; it was a wager. In that context, punctual action becomes a form of power: the person who moves first controls terms, sets narratives, locks in alliances, and compounds advantage. Franklin, the diplomat and institution-builder, knew that revolutions and reputations are built the same way savings accounts are built: early, consistently, and with suspicion toward easy promises.

The subtext is moral without preaching. You don’t get scolded for laziness; you get invited to be rational. Put bluntly: stop hallucinating about the future and start producing in the present. It’s also a quiet rebuke to a culture that loves visionary talk more than boring follow-through. Franklin’s genius is making discipline sound like a bargain.

Quote Details

TopicLive in the Moment
Source
Verified source: Poor Richard improved: Being an Almanack... for 1758 (Benjamin Franklin, 1757)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
One to-day is worth two to-morrows, (null). Primary attribution to Franklin is via his long-running almanac under the pseudonym Richard Saunders (“Poor Richard”). A bibliographic record for the final Franklin-edited issue (for the year 1758) gives the imprint as Philadelphia, printed by Franklin & Hall, dated [1757] and notes that this issue contains the proverbs later reissued as “Father Abraham’s speech” / “The way to wealth.” The proverb also appears (with quotation marks and attribution to “Poor Richard”) in the text of “The Way to Wealth” as reproduced on Project Gutenberg, where it reads: "One to-day is worth two to-morrows," as Poor Richard says. ([catalogue.nla.gov.au](https://catalogue.nla.gov.au/catalog/3376413?utm_source=openai))
Other candidates (1)
Today Matters (John C. Maxwell, 2008) compilation95.0%
... BENJAMIN FRANKLIN I believe that everyone has the power to impact the outcome of his life . The way to do it is t...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Franklin, Benjamin. (2026, February 8). One today is worth two tomorrows. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/one-today-is-worth-two-tomorrows-25521/

Chicago Style
Franklin, Benjamin. "One today is worth two tomorrows." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/one-today-is-worth-two-tomorrows-25521/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"One today is worth two tomorrows." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/one-today-is-worth-two-tomorrows-25521/. Accessed 13 Feb. 2026.

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Benjamin Franklin

Benjamin Franklin (January 17, 1706 - April 17, 1790) was a Politician from USA.

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