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Gold Digger

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Gold Digger (trope)
Not to be confused with Part 2: How to Marry a Billionaire.
"She take my money when I'm in need.
Yeah, she's a triflin' friend indeed.
Oh, she's a gold digger way over town
That digs on me."
Kanye West and Jamie Foxx, "Gold Digger"

This is a character who hooks up with a rich partner (known as a Meal Ticket or Sugar Daddy), specifically to mooch off of said partner's money and status (usually in exchange for sex).

The digger is typically (but not always) female in modern shows, and often much more attractive than her partner — in earlier eras, gold diggers often were men seducing rich heiresses, who then took advantage of the fact that laws of the time often stated that the man of the house controlled the finances, even when it was the wife's money. This may also overlap with All Women Are Prudes, resulting in the idea that the only reason women ever have sex is to gain access to a man's money and/or get men to buy them things, while the only reason men even bother to make money in the first place is so that they can have sex with lots of hot women. If this character does enjoy sex for its own sake, she still doesn't necessarily want it from her husband, as it's not unknown for a Gold Digger to marry a man who can provide for her and then to sate her urges on the side with men to whom she's more genuinely attracted.

They usually get Distracted by the Luxury quite easily. Generally stunningly beautiful, to explain her success. Often a blonde whose hair is dyed. Once able to spend his money, she will be conspicuous about it. Expect lots of evening dresses and jewelry. Many a gold digger would be happy to marry a man who is old or in bad health, just so long as he'd be so kind as to leave at least some of his inheritance to his spouse when he dies. If he doesn't seem likely to die any time soon and the Gold Digger isn't also a Black Widow, she may instead seek to screw him over in a divorce settlement.

This is Older Than Steam and a subtrope of Sleeping Their Way to the Top. Compare Rich Suitor, Poor Suitor. Compare Only Cares About Inheritance, which this trope overlaps with if a person is only married to someone because of the inheritance that they'll receive. Compare Friendship Bribe for a more PG-version of this trope, as those who go for said bribe are usually gold diggers. See also Trophy Wife, although the two don't always overlap. Sometimes overlaps with Coattail-Riding Relative. Often overlaps with Beauty Breeds Laziness. There's also a degree of overlap with The Schlub Pub Seduction Deduction, when an unattractive guy is unable to figure out that the hot woman is only coming on to him for ulterior motives. The cardinal sin of the Gold Digger is Greed, though Lust and Gluttony (of the materialistic variety) also figure in.

For the opposite type of character, who definitely does not want the rich beau's money, see Not with Them for the Money. Contrast Marry for Love. In a Love Interest vs. Lust Interest scenario, this character often acts as the "Lust" Interest in contrast to the "Love Interest", who doesn't care about money. A Fair-Weather Ex is often one of these. In Love with Looks can be considered the looks-based equivalent of this trope. If a character's relatives push them to marry for money, it's a case of Vicarious Gold Digger. Gambler Groupies is a related trope, specific to lucky gamblers at casinos.

Important Note: A gold digger is almost never a Housewife. While both of them stay home, the gold digger has expensive tastes and refuses to dirty her hands. That's what maids are for. Children and family are almost never part of her priorities, unless she aims to use The Baby Trap to secure a marriage with (or child support from) her Meal Ticket. And if she does have children by him, don't expect her to be a very hands-on mother. That's what nannies are for. The Housewife on the other hand, even though she may live off her husband's paycheck, will concern herself with running the home and raising the kids, money and luxury usually not being in her repertoire other than as byproducts. See also the Do-Nothing Housewife.

For the comic book series, see Gold Digger (Antarctic Press). For the people who make a living actually digging up gold, see Prospector. Also has nothing with the other kind of gold digging.


In-Universe Examples Only:

Works with their own subpages:

Examples:

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    Anime & Manga 
  • Aggretsuko: In the Netflix adaptation, the protagonist, Retsuko, becomes a rather sympathetic version of this. She hates her job and desperately wants to get out of it. After talking with her co-worker Haida, who says that if they were married, he would like for both to keep working (as he doesn't make enough to sustain both and they could motivate each other), she decides she needs to marry a rich guy for this to work. She eventually grows out of it though, as when she does starts dating a very rich man, she is in love with him, rather than wanting his money (in fact, she thought he was poor and was willing to sustain them both), and even then, eventually breaks up with him because he doesn't want to get married and have kids.
  • Berserk: Griffith's courtship of princess Charlotte is solely so that he'll gain a kingdom by marrying her. It ultimately works.
  • In Bi no Kyoujin, Kabu's stepmother is heavily implied to be this, which is one of the main reasons why he can't stand her.
  • Bleach: One omake has some of the nurses in Ryuken's hospital talk about flirting with Uryu after learning that he's Ryuken's son. Ryuken promptly decides to personally attend to Uryu to keep them away from him — much to Uryu's chagrin since the two barely get along.
  • Nadeshiko Amamiya's family accused Fujitaka Kinomoto of being this in Cardcaptor Sakura because she was a wealthy Uptown Girl, and he was a poor novice teacher (it also didn't help that this was a May–December Romance). Subverted because he did genuinely love Nadeshiko, and she genuinely loved him; money actually didn't factor in at all. They did marry, although Nadeshiko was disowned (and her cousin Sonomi still vehemently resents Fujitaka); Nadeshiko started working as a successful model, Fujitaka continued his teacher work, and the two lived their lives happily with their kids in a small but cozy apartment. (The Big Fancy House is much more recent.)
  • Case Closed has suspects and victims that either qualify as gold diggers or are referred to as such. Surprisingly, many of them are males:
    • In the "Luxury Liner" case, the husbands of Natsue and Akie are accused of being this. On one hand, Akie's husband Tatsuo openly admits it before he becomes the second Asshole Victim in the case — much to the horror of Akie, who actually loved him. On the other, Natsue's husband Takashi turns out to not be one, and while he at first approached her to get at her cruel grandfather Gozo for destroying his family's business, he came to actually love Natsue for her person.
    • In the "Distinguished Family's Consecutive Accidental Death Case" case, it's strongly implied that the businessman Mitsuaki Nagato married his best friend Hideomi's little sister Yasue just to get closer to her dad Dousan, a very rich and very ill entrepreneur who isn't expected to live for too long. At the same time, Hideomi and Yasue's big sister Nobuko accuses Hideomi's girlfriend/Dousan's Sexy Secretary Miyuki of being one and taking advantage of Hideomi's feelings for her. Things get increasingly darker from there: Mitsuaki not only fits in here to a T, but he also was planning to murder Dousan to become the CEO of the Nagato enterprise. He recruits Miyuki for his plan... but Miyuki double-crosses and kills him since years ago Mitsuaki and Hideomi caused the Deadly Prank that killed Miyuki's parents and Hideomi had already committed suicide over it.
    • And in yet another case, a woman named Machiko Yabuchi married a very rich and much older man named Yoshichika Yabuchi, and after he died of illness and his old age, she may be planning to kill at least one of the other heirs to get a bigger share of the super large inheritance. It backfires fatally on her: When she tries to stab her brother-in-law Yoshifusa, he turns out to be a stand-in for the already dead Yoshifusa and a talented martial artist, so he kills her in self-defense.
  • In Dame na Watashi ni Koisite Kudasai, Michiko's first "boyfriend" seems to be more interested in getting gifts and money from her than an actual relationship. She ends up dumping him after he admits to being this trope.
  • The filler character Maron from Dragon Ball Z is implied to be this, and ultimately leaves her boyfriend Krillin.
  • Fruits Basket: Kimi Toudou. Possibly one of the few good-natured examples of this trope, as she uses her wiles to "earn" the Student Council needed supplies and perks (in addition to gifts for herself).
  • Future Robot Daltanious: Catine is an Alien Princess from Planet Proxia, but she wants the Heliosian throne. When she finds out the heir to it is on Earth, she immediately flies there and tries to woo him, only for it to go nowhere because she has the self-awareness of a brick.
  • Galaxy Angel: Ranpha Franboise is always trying to hook up with a rich husband to settle down for life. Ironically, the Sequel Series Galaxy Angel Rune reveals that she succeeded, but ended up divorcing because she found the married life too boring.
  • Hello! Sandybell:
    • Enforced with Mark. He is the son of the Countess of Wellington, but the family is on the brink of being penniless. To save face, it is proposed that Mark enter an Arranged Marriage with Kitty Shearer, the daughter of a wealthy conglomerate business owner. Mark hates this idea because he loves Sandybell, and later breaks off his engagement to Kitty knowing he'll stay in poverty, much to her shock, and runs away from home.
    • Averted with Kitty's father. His only interest in marrying his daughter Kitty to Mark is to have more prestige by having family ties with the nobility; but when Mark makes it clear he's not interested, he understands. Even with his employees, he is a rigid, but generous man.
  • Interspecies Reviewers: The men of Stunk's family are so well known for using their lady killer skills to marry into money that people say it's the Tricarlco family business. Stunk himself does not like this reputation and it's a part of why he hates his father.
  • Isabelle of Paris: In spite of being wealthy himself, Léon uses his daughters as tools to expand the Laustin family's status and wealth and wants them to both marry Bourgeoisie men. When Geneviève rejects the Arranged Marriage he set up with her and Victor, he disowns her.
  • Itazura Na Kiss: Marina Shinagawa. The only reason she went to nursing school was so that she could find a rich doctor to marry.
  • JoJo's Bizarre Adventure:
    • Steel Ball Run: A rumor surrounding Diego Brando is that he married a wealthy 83-year old widow, who died several months later after he supposedly killed her to inherit her fortune.
    • JoJolion: Ojiro Sasame is in a romantic relationship with an older woman who's a real estate agent and the owner of a baseball team. He's seen to be pocketing cash from his girlfriend's wallet. Ultimately seems to be downplayed, though, as dialogue from both of them implies the other really did legitimately care about the other, and his girlfriend's daughter even seemed fond of him.
  • In Lady!!, George is being pressured into becoming this via marrying a minor noblewoman from a very rich family so he can use her money to pay his debts. He actually refuses in the anime, but in the manga he goes through with it, allowing her to be an utterly cruel Wicked Stepmother to Lynn.
  • Fujiko Mine from Lupin III is always acting like this around her boy of the week. Often she's trying to wile out of them the same treasure that Lupin is trying to steal. She often pulls this on Lupin himself to boot, and most of the time he lets her get away with it, saying that betrayal is a privilege reserved for women. A couple of times though he's had enough of her and left her in the dust for Inspector Zenigata.
  • Maris the Chojo: Whilst Maris has to rescue Koganemaru as part of her job, she hopes that he'll be smitten by her and propose out of gratitude for her saving him because he's a billionaire heir and she sees him as an escape from her Perpetual Poverty. This selfish motivation for saving him makes it more karmic when Koganemaru does not fall in love with her, but instead falls in love with and proposes to her old wrestling rival Sue, the woman who kidnapped him.
  • Eva Heinemann of Monster (1994) before she went completely into her cups. In a subversion, she's extremely wealthy, with alimony payments from three wealthy ex-husbands, and genuinely wants companionship from Tenma. The only reason she goes after rich guys is that poor people are beneath her.
  • Otaku no Video: Yoshiko. Part of the reason she and Kubo break up is because of his desire to become an otaku rather than a far more financially stable career. The next time they see each other, it is when she has been appointed the new president of GP by the president of Tozai Bank, whom she had married for his money, after he had acquired the company and gotten its board of directors to dismiss Kubo for his bad financial decisions. This trait of hers resurfaces yet again near the end for when her husband goes bankrupt after his own string of financial misfortunes (including GX, Kubo's new company, buying out the bankrupt GP), Yoshiko divorces him and takes their daughter with her in the proceedings.
  • Pokémon the Series: Iris's Emolga. She uses Attract to make Pokemon fall in love with her, then takes their apples for herself. Ash's Oshawott already has a crush on her without Attract, so she easily manipulates him and many of the other male Pokemon. Unfortunately for her, she often has to deal with Ash's (female) Snivy to get what she wants since they're usually sent out at the same time.
    • When James's background as a runaway noble is revealed, Jessie and Meowth force him to return to his parents and his arranged fiancee Jessiebelle for the inheritance by proxy. They later find out this was a bad mistake — not only do James's parents see through the ruse, Jessiebelle is a horrible enough person that the heroes form an Enemy Mine with Team Rocket to get him out of there.
  • Usagi's motivation for being Sophie's manager in PriPara. He rides on Sophie's stardom just so he can get some for himself. He even sees Sophie as useless without her pickled plums.
  • Ranma ½ exaggerated this to parody levels in a late manga story. Nabiki is going on a date with a boy whose face is pixellated (apparently for his dignity), having him pay for a bunch of expenses during the date, including jewelry, a movie ticket, and a large meal. When the date is over, Nabiki tells the boy they should break up and then sells him back copies of his Love Letter.
  • Subverted with Ursula from Red River (1995). She poses as a Rich Bitch and a fake Ishtar under Nakia's orders and tries to seduce Kail to live a life of luxury. However, when Kail is not fooled, unmasks her, and then asks her why she even bothered when she knew she'd be found out... Ursula breaks down crying and not only admits her deeds but reveals her Dark and Troubled Past as a poor orphan desperate to have a bit of wealth for once in her life. She's then forgiven by Kail, becomes one of his girlfriend Yuri's ladies-in-waiting, falls in love with Kail's bodyguard Kash... and performs an Heroic Sacrifice some time later.
  • Skyhigh: A hideous man kills his girlfriend because he thinks she was after only his money.
  • Star Driver: Kanako openly admits that this is the reason she married her husband, a much older wealthy man. She claims that he is well aware that she does not love him, and is fine with the relationship as-is: she gets lots of money and a very comfortable lifestyle, he gets a hot young Trophy Wife. In her view, it's a win-win for them.
  • In Sword Art Online, there are vibes that Asuna's mother Kyouko (who once was a very poor Country Mouse) married her husband Shouzou because of his money and she certainly wants Asuna to do so. She claims that it would be "stable" and she "wouldn't have to worry". However, she did use that stability to build a successful career of her own as a uni professor and wants Asuna to do the same as well.
  • In Tales of Little Women, Mrs. Moffat herself is an interesting variant. The only reason she allows her daughter Annie to invite Meg to their ball is so she can have her daughters meet Laurie, even telling her servant, "it's a parent's job to think in the best interests for her children". It doesn't work.
  • Transformers: Cybertron: Thunderblast is a power-digger. She flirts first with Starscream and then with Megatron, pursuing them for their prestige and strength. Not that they notice or care beyond using her for their dirty work... Interestingly, Thunderblast is powerful enough to carve out her own path but prefers to be a digger hanging off of someone else because that way she's not the one wearing a bulls-eye.
  • Yokai Watch: Injurnalist gets fired from his newspaper for being a bad journalist. He then proceeds to make it big with his own gossip magazine. Injurnalist proceeds to meet a pretty woman and marry her a day afterwards. His to-be bride is actually an infamous swindler who marries rich men, then runs off with their money.
  • The main character of Yurika's Campus Life is this. Due to her father's debts, she is left with no money and no place to stay other than the campus of the women's university she's enrolled in. She takes on a Gold Digger life by seducing and having sex with rich students, making them give her money, food, and a soft bed to sleep in.
  • The Maid from YataMomo is a sympathetic version. She originally agreed to marry Suda so he could pretend to have a proper, respectable life while still carrying on his real relationship with Momo and she did it only for the money. However, she grew to love him for real, to the point of tearfully begging Momo to leave so she could have a real relationship with Suda. However, Suda couldn't get over Momo, causing her to leave him and take their son with her, though they eventually made up.

    Art 
  • A Rake's Progress: After falling into debt, Tom tries to remain wealthy by marrying a rich old maid. It doesn't stick.

    Ballads 
  • In Child Ballad 62 Fair Annie, Annie's long-term lover — and the father of her many children — goes to marry another woman for her dowry. When the bride arrives, she hears Annie's lament and reveals that Annie is her kidnapped sister; she makes over her own dowry to her, so she can marry him.
  • In Child Ballad The Lord of Lorn and the False Steward, the Duke of France offers a rich dowry with his daughter. The false steward posing as the young Lord of Lorn takes it without comment; it is the true lord who declares that he wants to marry the daughter more than the gold.
  • In Child Ballad 73 Lord Thomas and Annet, Lord Thomas, on his family's advice, marries for money.
    The nut-browne bride haes gowd and gear,
    Fair Annet she has gat nane;
    And the little beauty Fair Annet haes
    O it wull soon be gane.

    Comic Books 
  • Archie Comics: In the four-part special "Veronica in Germany", said heiress travels to said country to visit her distant relatives, including her cousin Elke, who is engaged to a man named Wolf. Even though they are set to be married, Wolf suddenly becomes too interested in Veronica when she reveals her father's massive wealth and empire, arousing her suspicions when he starts taking her on private outings just the two of them while leaving his "beloved" fiancée at home. In the end, Veronica's suspicions are right, as Wolf breaks up with Elke after they fight over his over-friendliness with her cousin, and immediately jumps to romancing a Greek heiress.
  • Asterix: Subverted. Mrs. Geriatrix is much younger than her husband, but he isn't particularly rich. Their marriage is happy, but there is always the status of being married to the oldest man in the village.
  • Astro City: Charles Williams' wife Darnice from the "Dark Ages" story arc. She flirts with anyone who has money, spends his earnings on personal luxuries, even encourages him to take bribes as a way to supplement their income, then leaves him when he refuses to be a Dirty Cop.
  • Batman himself frequently deals with these type of women in his unmasked persona as Bruce Wayne. One of the most infamous examples was Jillian Maxwell, a woman he met during a Halloween party. At first glance, she doesn't seem like a gold digger other than being a bit pushy. Up until Alfred finds Jillian looking around in Bruce's study while he's not home. Alfred does a facial recognition check on her and learns she's a Black Widow previously married under several different names to rich men who all died "under mysterious circumstances." He manages to drive Jillian away. The last time she's seen, she's now using a different alias and preparing to marry someone else, until she receives a note saying "Confess" signed with a familiar bat symbol.
  • Disney Ducks Comic Universe:
  • Spider-Man: One of Doctor Octopus's old schemes was a variation. During his feud with the mobster Hammerhead, he actually proposed to Peter's Aunt May, not because she was wealthy (which she wasn't) but because she had unknowingly inherited an atomic plant that he wanted. Of course, Spider-Man got involved, the scheme culminating in a three-way fight between him, Doc Ock, and Hammerhead, the plant's destruction, and Ock becoming a destitute vagrant for a while.
  • In Drowntown, Gina Cassel doesn't care that her courier business doesn't bring her riches, and refuses help from her rich boyfriend, Vincent Drakenberg, on the grounds that she wants to keep her independence. This view is not shared by her partner in the business, Izzy, who tries to seduce Vincent herself. It doesn't work (or perhaps we just haven't seen it yet, since Izzy certainly seems to have prospered in the time since Gina's supposed death).
  • As expected from the source material for the show Tales from the Crypt, the writers at EC Comics did not much care for the gold-digging sort. A good number of the most despicable antagonists and Villain Protagonists alike would plot the most gruesome of crimes specifically to get hold of their spouse's or lover's money, and rarely was anything but the cruelest Karmic Death in store for them in turn. EC was pretty egalitarian about it, too; greedy, predatory men would scheme against their wealthy wives about as often as selfish, conniving women would do the same to their rich husbands.
  • Fables features two male examples.
    • One of Jack's get rich quick schemes was to become a hero of the Civil War and then marry into a wealthy Southern family.
    • Prince Charming makes his living mooching off his conquests, and attempts to renew his relationship with Briar Rose when he learns she has a blessing that keeps her wealthy.
  • Katmandu: The furry comic had a story where a villainous fortune hunter is about to marry the daughter of a rich man with every intent of sponging off him. Fortunately, a woman he cheated before has a friend who's a tailor and also a magician, who places a magic spell in his wedding suit to make him blab at the altar that he's only marrying the girl for her father's money. While the father is about to beat up the villain, the bride runs away in tears, but cheers up immediately when she runs into a very nice boy.
  • Maus: Money seems like a probable reason for Vladek leaving the poor Lucia Greenberg for the wealthy Anja Zylberberg — although they do eventually truly fall in love.
  • ORPHANIMO!!: Ursula is one. She married (and divorced) Vallalkozo at some point prior to the series, and tries to marry Zemeckis only for their money. She even complains to her cat that Zemeckis should be spoiling her.
  • Red Sonja meets Laranda-fa, the Empress Dowager, who was a lowly if beautiful commoner before she married the emperor. Soon after the emperor was dead and Laranda-fa was free to spend his money and wield his power.
  • Ruby Elizabeth De Longe from an issue of The Sandman (1989) is a particularly ambitious and cynically calculating example of this trope. Not content with merely finding a good Meal Ticket, she's determined to basically marry into Fiction 500. She had resolved to remain a virgin until this happened, and in the past, she dumped a guy who she really liked after doing a routine credit check on him and deciding that he wasn't wealthy enough. In the end, her determination is in vain, as she burns to death in a hotel room, still not rich, and still single.
  • Shazam!: In Whiz Comics #55 "Captain Marvel and His Family Tree", a woman called Helen Goodrich claims to be Billy's boss Sterling Morris' distant cousin, threatening to sue him if he will not support her. Mr. Morris is sure he has no living cousins and that woman is after his money, so Billy investigates who made Morris' family tree chart and finds out Mrs. Goodrich indeed paid a con man to create a forgery.
  • Secrets of Haunted House:
    • In the fourth issue's third story "Bird's Eye View", Stella Stafford courts an old man solely to get his fortune.
    • The tenth issue's first story "Ask Me No Questions" has a woman marry a partially disfigured man named Andre solely so that she and her lover can get Andre's fortune. She ends up wrongly accused of her accomplice's death and learns the hard way that her husband's job is that he's an executioner.
    • The 37th issue's first story "About Amy" is about a man named Freddie who courts an elderly woman named Fay Wadsworth and admits in his internal narration that he's only interested in her for her money.
  • Several of the female criminals confronting The Spirit classify as such.
    • The prime example is P'Gell. Her usual modus is to find a shady rich guy, work her wiles, get married to the same, and have the guy either disappear or get busted.
    • Silk Satin, who turns more or less legit when she finds her missing daughter Hilde.
  • Supergirl: In Good-Looking Corpse story arc, college girl Elise is dating fellow Harvard student Justin only because she thinks he'll grow up to be a millionaire (or at least that's what the Big Bad thinks).

    Comic Strips 
  • Blondie (1930): Dagwood Bumstead, though you'd never know it to look at him today, started off as the rich and privileged heir to the Bumstead fortunes. His family cut him out of the will when he married Blondie Boopadoop, whom they believed to be a gold digger. To be fair, they might not have been entirely wrong at the time. The strip is called "Blondie", though Dagwood is clearly the more comedic character today, because originally it was about Blondie the flapper girl's crazy antics, with her then-boyfriend Dagwood playing straight man. After they got married and found themselves suddenly middle-class (at best), Blondie underwent a lot of character development.
  • A Krazy Kat comic had Ignatz finding out that Krazy stands to inherit a lot of money. He immediately begins to woo Krazy with poetry, candy, and mandolin music. When he finds out that Krazy isn't inheriting the money after all—and simultaneously gets billed for all the candy and poems—he returns to his usual practice of pelting Krazy with bricks, much to the Kat's relief.

    Fairy Tales 
  • "Good Day, Fellow! Axe Handle!": The ferryman's wife abandons his disabled husband as soon as he runs out of money.
  • Franz Xaver von Schönwerth's "Nine Bags of Gold": Marie turns an arranged marriage down because she was warned that her father's proposed suitor will squander her money and then he will abandon her. Subverted, since the man is financially well-off but he would still mooch off her.

    Fan Works 

Crossovers

  • Beyond the Outer Gates Lies... A high school library?: Serafall has a bad history with men due to this; the few who were willing to pursue her romantically only saw her as a massive political prize to be won.
  • A Call To Monsters: Daario Naharis is a male example. Prior to the fanfic's start, he became the lover of Daenerys, a queen with the only three dragons in the world. He later appears trying to flirt with Wilmarina and her daughters. This fails and he's eventually hunted down and killed.
  • Christian Weston Chandler in Survivor: Kujira-Jima has Cass, who proudly admits in her first line of dialogue that she mooches large sums of money off of her boyfriend instead of finding gainful employment.
  • Cursed Blood: After learning just how powerful Izuku's Quirk is, Ochako considers pursuing a relationship with him so that he can put an end to her family's economic woes.
  • Family Bonding and other Perilous Pursuits:
    • While Patrick Wayne was already rich, the fact that he only pursued and married women from Old Money families led to him being labeled a gold digger.
    • This is why Jack hesitated to introduce himself to his half-brother Bruce, especially right after he graduated — he feared Bruce would assume he was just looking for a wealthy sponsor. (Bruce acknowledges that at that age, he very well might have assumed just that.)
  • Averted in the Winx Club part of The Infinite Loops: Diaspro thinks that Bloom is one due to how her romance with Sky started out, and that's what led her to do what she did attempting to save Sky and their homeworld from her. What's worse, from a royal's point of view her reasoning is sound enough that Stella and Aisha flat-out admit they would think the same had they not seen what actually happened...
  • Limefrost Spiral in Manehattan's Lone Guardian is noted as being one of these. She's already doing well financially, but she wants to do even better by marrying someone richer than she is. Unfortunately, her status as a Grade-A ditz renders her terrible at it, as she's yet to even start a first date, though not for a lack of trying.
  • The Many Dates of Danny Fenton:
    • Vicky from The Fairly OddParents! goes on the 13th date with Danny, only to ditch him when she finds out he isn't rich.
    • Bonnie Rockwaller from Kim Possible becomes this to Danny in the fifth alternate ending, trying to steal him from Kim after his identity as Danny Phantom is revealed and she wants a rich boyfriend. His love for Kim and Bonnie originally dismissing him as a geek makes his disinterest clear.
  • Many Maribat AU have Lila attempt to cozy up to Damian out of a desire to tap into the Wayne fortune, only to fail miserably since he can tell she's only interested in his money (and is often already in love with Marinette). It's also not unusual for her to claim a connection with the Waynes as part of her Celebrity Lies, including claiming that she's already secretly dating Damian... only to fail to recognize him once they actually meet.
  • Not the intended use (Zantetsuken Reverse): Leon's first wife married him because she was under the impression he was rich due to being a Barron. Unfortunately for her, Leon had already given up his title by that point and was broke, so she left him.
  • The Rejuvenationverse: In Intriguing, Prince Blueblood assumes that Fleur Dis Lee is only interested in Fancy Pants for his money, and offers a (relatively) friendly warning to back off before Fancy's reputation is ruined.
  • Universe Falls features an example of gold-digging by proxy; when Stan finds out a girl has feelings for Dipper in "Mismatched Making", he laughs it off as a joke. Then he finds out the girl in question is Pacific Northwest, heir to the uber-rich founding family of Gravity Falls, and realizes this is a chance for his family to be connected to wealth.
  • Vindictive Hand of Vengeance: Charmcaster got into a relationship with Kevin in order to take advantage of him in this fashion, eventually breaking things off and leaving him a single father. Both still have feelings for each other, though.
  • Your Alicorn Is in Another Castle: From "Convectional Errors", one of the things that 'Prince' Vladimir Blueblood is immune to:
    for it turned out that even those generally willing to put up with near-endless demeaning in order to gain access to some level of wealth had their limits.

Arrowverse

  • best served cold (Nyame): After Laurel's relationship with Malcolm is revealed, the public quickly decides that she must be a gold digger, especially since she'd been dating another billionaire before getting into a relationship with him.

Danganronpa

  • The Naekawa Project: Toko’s parents, especially her father, are this to her, taking profits from her literature work for them to binge on expensive meals and other hedonistic pleasures. One way Toko hits them after cutting ties with them is to cut off their funding connection with her, causing their living standard to crash and burn.

Danny Phantom

  • In Growing Pains, one of Helena's main requirements for a potential husband is that he's rich enough to take care of her forever.

Diary of a Wimpy Kid

Dead or Alive

  • Kunoichis Like Us: While Alex and Kasumi are posing as a couple in the subway, a pair of old men gossip that she's likely only dating Alex for the money, and that he's likely not the only guy she's strung along with her looks. Alex glares at them until they shut up.

For Better or for Worse

  • The New Retcons:
    • Frank Day and Stan Watson both end up viewing their ex-girlfriend Elly this way. In Stan's case, she attempted to pull off The Baby Trap in order to bind them together.
    • Kortney Krelbutz starts out as this, dating and getting engaged to John Patterson (although there's a revenge element in it as well, since Elly didn't stand up for her when she was fired). She realizes she's fallen in love with him when he defends her against Connie.

Frozen (2013)

  • Perfect Diamond World: Iris isn't attracted to men, and only married her husband due to his wealth. After she ran off, another woman married him because she also needed money.

Gravity Falls

  • Pacifica's Revenge: In Back to Gravity Falls, Dipper's ex-wife Tracy only pursued him because he'd made a lot of money working with NASA. After running up some severe credit card debts, she divorced Dipper and took everything she could from him... except custody of their son Tyrone, as well as all those bills.

Green Lantern

  • With This Ring...: When detective Jonny Double is hired to investigate Hal Jordan and Carol Ferris' disappearance, his first theory is Hal wanted Carol's money, and her father disapproved of their relationship.
    The case seemed simple enough. Carol Ferris had run off with her lover, this hotdog test pilot. Her for love, him for money. Carl Ferris didn't want the guy's hands in his wallet. Maybe. But maybe it wasn't that simple.

Harry Potter

  • In the Bleak Midwinter (TheLoud): When Tom gets to know the Prewetts a little, he suspects that they have invested a great deal of their modest resources (being only a branch family) in their daughter's appearance. The results are mixed; she falls for a wealthy and titled Muggle, which certainly wasn't part of their plans.
    Tom respected that investment plan. The payoff was potentially large, for a relatively small initial outlay.
  • In Knowledge is Power, The Weasleys are only interested in Harry so they can get their hands on his Gringotts vault, despite being far too proud to take his money in canon.
  • The Peace Not Promised: At Petunia's wedding, some near-forgotten relatives meet Severus, and his table manners (learned in a past life from the Malfoys) mislead them into the assumption that he's wealthy. Neither Lily nor Severus care enough about the people in question to take the trouble to disabuse them of this notion, though Lily finds it surreal to be insisting that she doesn't love Severus for his (practically non-existent) money.
    "Of course not dear," Maurice reassured her with a proffer to toast with her champagne glass. "To true love and all that." While the male relative muttered under his breath about pretty girls and something to do with prospecting.

Hellaverse

Horror Express

  • Aylen: Efa Von Humboldt, the abusive mother of Gabriel Davies, clawed her way out of poverty by either marrying or becoming the mistress of multiple men with money and/or connections. Not satisfied with what she's accumulated on her own, she wants her son to be like her and futher secure her wealth, pressuring Gabriel to become a doctor for this reason and being infuriated when he moves to the small, poor titular town and enters a relationship with the local priest, Father Charles Greenwell. Although it's the early 1900's, Efa doesn't care about Gabriel's sexuality so much as she would like him to seduce anybody with money regardless of gender; her problem with Charles is that he took an oath of poverty.

Miraculous Ladybug

  • In the wake of "Chameleon", Lila is frequently presented as pursuing Adrien purely because she wants the wealth, fame and power that comes with being an Agreste. She also commonly accuses Marinette of being one in order to make her look bad.
  • Chloé's Lament: Death and Changes: Lila's mother, Chiara Rossi, regularly flirts and sleeps with powerful men in order to boost her career, having divorced Lila's father while making him out to be the one responsible for their marriage dissolving just to "free herself up". She also encourages her daughter to follow her lead; the first time she appears in person, she berates Lila over how she hasn't managed to seduce Adrien yet.
  • CONSEQUENCES: The main things Lila likes about Adrien are that he's handsome, rich, sheltered, wealthy, well-connected, has deep pockets, accommodating... and oh yeah, he's loaded.
  • He Can Only Blame Himself: After Adrien cheats on her with Lila, Marinette warns Gabriel that Lila is only interested in milking the Agrestes for all they're worth, noting that she might try springing The Baby Trap.
  • In Hero Chat, Marinette, Adrien, Kagami and Luka are all in a Polyamorous relationship. Several outsiders assume that this concept is in play — that Adrien and Kagami are in an Arranged Marriage, Marinette is trying to get a leg up in the fashion world, while Luka just wants a Meal Ticket. Upon hearing some of this speculation, Gabriel is insulted both that anyone would think so little of his son, or so little of him for failing to notice.
  • Jerk in Sheep's Clothing: It's heavily Implied that Henri's mother is one, having repeatedly married and divorced several wealthy men.
  • Marinette Dupain-Cheng's Spite Playlist: The Remix version has Gabriel's former boyfriend try hitting on Marinette after seeing what kind of connections she's got. He then turns around and tries his luck with Chloé, who declares that she's got no use for gold diggers or her arch-frenemy's scraps.
  • Miraculous Ladybug Salt-Shots: Played for Laughs in Golden Temptations; Lila accuses Marinette of cozying up to all the richest kids she knows in hopes of profiting off their friendship. Not only is this not true, it inspires her wealthy friends to start arguing over who can spoil her the most... and Kagami points out that by that logic, Lila should be part of Marinette's "harem".
  • No One Sees Me, But Please Know I'm Right Here: When Nino breaks things off with Alya, she angrily accuses him of wanting to get together with Chloé, insisting that he must be after her money. In reality, Chloé is dating Kagami; not that this stops Alya from making the same accusations on her Ladyblog.
  • Spots Drawn in Marker:
    • Rébecca winds up dating Adrien after falsely claiming to be Ladybug. He showers her with jewelry and other expensive gifts, which she happily accepts, needing some way to compensate for her father's Parental Neglect.
    • When Lila complains about this, Rébecca retorts that "We both know you're only interested in the fame and money. I'm sure we can snag you a cuter guy, from a richer family, okay?"
  • Subverted in Unexpected Surprise. Gabriel questions Marinette about who her daughter's father is, pointing out that she might be denied a promotion if she doesn't tell. When she still refuses, he drops the matter and promotes her anyway, satisfied that she doesn't intend to act as a gold digger. He knows who the father is by then, but she does not.

My Hero Academia

  • All but One: This is Subverted by Inko, who personally dislikes the idea of becoming one given how her partner keeps spoiling her with lavish gifts and financial support. She strives to become more of an equal partner.
  • Defused: Back when Katsuki first graduated from U.A., he dated a string of girls who were only interested in hooking up with a potential "rising star" in the field of Pro Heroics. Katsuki was perfectly fine with this so long as they gave him the praise and attention he wanted. However, his self-centered attitude and Hair-Trigger Temper kept driving them away, and his pool of shallow admirers dried up as his career stalled out.
  • Dekugate: Members of the titular online community accuse Izuku's mother of being one who only hooked up with All Might to bolster her career and leech off his fame and fortune. They also suspect Uraraka could have similarly "impure motives".
  • One for All and Eight for the Ninth: Once Ochako's father learns how rich Momo is, he encourages his daughter to pursue her. It's entirely Played for Laughs.

My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic

  • Many fans portray Fleur Dis Lee as either this or a Trophy Wife. She is a young, model-like mare with a knack for posing who is seen hanging around (and clinging onto) the obviously much older aristocrat Fancy Pants.
    • Some fans also interpreted Rarity as one during the events of The Best Night Ever and actually sympathized with the rather charmless Prince Blueblood. There's even a fan theory that Blueblood is normally a nice guy (or at least not that bad), but acts like an ass around women he thinks are only interested in him for this reason to drive them away.
  • In By Royal Command, Twilight Sparkle gets depressed because she fears that anypony who'd show romantic interest in her would only do so because of her new princess status. When Rainbow Dash suggests that she could just take matters into her own hooves and pick a pony who won't care about such things, Twilight sets her sights on the one pony in Equestria guaranteed not to think highly of her for her new status: her self-appointed rival, Trixie.
  • Earth and Sky: Prince Blueblood marries Diamond Tiara strictly so that he can have access to her wealth (having squandered his own). In a possible subversion, she's well aware of this, as she only married him to gain power and prestige.
  • The Pieces Lie Where They Fell: In the sequel Picking up the Pieces, Night Blade's brother Deep Blade mentions that he's had to deal with a few who wanted to marry into his family (who are nobles and thus rather wealthy and influential), and tried to manipulate him into making a relationship permanent. This is a big part of why he has a personal lawyer, to deal with ponies like that.

The Owl House

  • A Blight on Bonesborough: Edric Implies this about his mother when he remarks that Odalia got more than she brought with her when she married into the Blight family.

Pokémon

  • In More than Meets the Eye, Chris turns out to be a Bitch in Sheep's Clothing who's set his sets not just on Misty, but on taking over the Cerulean Gym so he can enjoy all the income it brings in. His primary interest in his last two girlfriends was because of their money, as well.

Pride and Prejudice

  • Better For Loving You: This seems to have been Viola Casterton's motivation for marrying; she showed no respect for her husband, she just enjoyed exploiting his position and wealth. Lord Casterton learns his lesson from that, and intentionally keeps very quiet about the dowry that Elizabeth will receive, because he knows it would attract attention from predators and parasites. Mr Darcy, who has no need to worry about money, doesn't find out just how much it is until they're engaged, and is startled.
    Darcy: Can you imagine if it were common knowledge? Hertfordshire would have been invaded by all those with a good name but empty pockets, looking to trade.

RWBY

  • Learning To Bloom: All her life Weiss has dealt with guys who just want her because she's rich. When she falls for Neptune, Weiss thinks he's different, but it's implied that he's also into her for her name. He tries to get her to pay for their first lunch together under the excuse that he left his wallet in his dorm (only for him to "realize" he had it on him the entire time upon Weiss deciding to leave early). Neptune also likes bragging about dating Weiss, which makes her feel like a Trophy Wife. This quickly leads Weiss into falling out of her infatuation with him.

The Scum Villain's Self-Saving System: Ren Zha Fanpai Zijiu Xitong

  • Another Time, Another Place, Another Story:
    • Subverted with Liu Qingge. The Shen family first suspects him from preying on their sickly, isolated third son to escape his poverty-stricken background, but he genuinely was unaware of Shen Yuan's wealth and is actually embarrassed by the prospect of asking anything his friend could give him.
    • Played entirely straight with Chen Baozhai. She's dating several men at once in order to maximize the gifts she mooches off them, and decides to seduce Shen Yuan when she learns how wealthy his family is.
  • SV Wishes: Despite Yue Qingyuan being an emotionally abusive and generally unsupportive husband, the public blames his spouses for leaving him, accusing Shen Qingqiu of being an adulterous gold digger and Liu Qingge of being too frigid.

She-Ra and the Princesses of Power

Simon Boccanegra

  • In Stabilization, Paolo's initial motive in asking for Amelia's hand is, indeed, like she suspects both here and in canon, her enormous fortune. What she doesn't know is that he doesn't want the money for himself – he plans to use it for the needs of Genoa.

Slayers

  • This is somewhat deconstructed in Flam Gush with Lady Monara. She's the sister of a wealthy merchant who badgered him into buying a noble title and then married herself off to a noble looking for a second wife (and step-mother for his daughter). Her marriage ends when another relative pulls a coup, and she has to flee back to her brother with her step-daughter in tow. Then she engineers another marriage for her brother, which is what gives the villains of the story the chance to act.

A Song of Ice and Fire

  • Let the Galaxy Burn: Asha's first husband was only interested in her dowry. However, he died just minutes after their wedding ceremony, so his family was unable to claim it and wound up declaring bankruptcy.
  • A Northern Dragoness: One of Aegon's mistresses wants to have a child with him so she can extort money from his family. Aegon doesn't appear to mind; his father, on the other hand, disapproves, and interrupts before they can do the deed.

That's So Raven

  • In Support, Raven temporarily dated a girl who used her for presents and money. Raven doesn't mind fawning over lovers, but she found her to be annoyingly clingy. After less than a month, Raven separated from her by "forgetting" to tell her that she changed her phone number.

Thomas & Friends

  • Ask the Famous 8! has an interesting gender inverted double subversion with Gordon I. He originally married in order to expand his own wealth, but he changed his mind after he began feeling unconditional love for a Chinese woman, Lily Lu. After Lily's death giving birth to his son Gordon II, he reverted back to his old ways. At present, he is married to Lady Carmine Redferne, who hails from an even wealthier family, and has faint connections to The British Royal Family.

Total Drama

  • Unbreakable Red Silken Thread: Heather's mother is this played straight, and people sometimes mistake Heather for this until they find out she's actually the one with more money.

The Twilight Saga

  • Tough Love: It's Implied that one of the reasons Bella wants to go live off the Cullens is so she can play the Pretty Freeloader and sponge off their wealth. She's aghast when Charlie informs her that the Cullens have actually been living well beyond their means and are on the verge of going broke.

Young Justice

  • With This Ring: Hephaestus and Aphrodite never wanted to be married, but Zeus commanded it. She essentially ignored it and had a series of affairs, predominantly with Ares. However, when Hephaestaean defeats Zeus and Ares, and takes the throne, Aphrodite turns up and suddenly wants to make their marriage work (which would, naturally, make her Queen of Olympus). He turns her down, and issues the divorce that Zeus wouldn't grant.

Yu-Gi-Oh!

  • Stacking The Deck: Jasmine is presented as a Justified example, declaring that "Love and stuff only goes so far when you're a poor nobody with barely a roof over your head and working day in day out until you're an exhausted mess. I want the good life when I've graduated. I want to enjoy all life has to offer, and some no-name Slifer can't give me or my friends any of that. Got a problem with that Odhar?"

    Films — Animation 
  • Barbie as the Princess and the Pauper: Preminger is both a figurative and literal example. He seeks to marry Princess Anneliese solely to become king, having no actual interest in her as a person, and stole all the gold from the mines to make himself look like a worthy suitor for her hand. When his scheme for her hand in marriage falls through, he tries to marry her mother instead.
  • Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget: Dr. Fry has a fortune and lots of land, but Mrs. Tweedy claims she actually fell in love with his mind... which, along with the other resources, provides the means to enact a lucrative business plan. She's also seen putting the moves on her prospective business partner Reginald Smith, targeting him as a future husband once Fry is no longer useful to her.
  • Cinderella: Lady Tremaine is a potential gold digger in that there is a conspiracy theory that she may have murdered Cinderella's father, and may have even done the same to her first husband, and Cinderella's biological mother. This idea is brought forward even further in Cinderella III: A Twist in Time, because Lady Tremaine dismisses Anastasia's discovery of what love is by saying that love isn't necessary when they can have power, which likely means that she just married first Anastasia and Drizella's father, and later Cinderella's widowed father for their wealth and power and disposed of them once they'd outlived their usefulness. You can't help but wonder what Lady Tremaine might have done if she had succeeded in marrying one of her two biological daughters to the prince, and worse still, what she may have done if she'd managed to dispose of both Cinderella and Anastasia, after her younger daughter had refused to marry the Prince.
  • Corpse Bride:
    • The Van Dorts and the Everglots are rather untraditional examples: both families are pushing their children into an Arranged Marriage to get at something the other family has. The Van Dorts want to marry into the aristocratic Everglot family so they can escape the stigma of being Nouveau Riche. The Everglots wish to use the Van Dorts' newfound wealth to restore their diminished fortune.
    • Lord Barkis Bittern is a more typical — and murderous — example, wooing wealthy women so that he can kill them and steal their money.
  • The Curse of the Were-Rabbit: Victor Quartermaine. He's already a rich nobleman, but he was wooing Lady Tottington solely for her money.
  • Frozen: Hans only wants to marry Anna so that he can later murder her and her sister, take over Arendelle, and turn it into a dictatorship. All because he's 13th in line for his kingdom's throne and really hates his family (a later tie-in novel gives him a believable Freudian Excuse).
  • Gay Purr-ee: The money-obsessed Meowrice advises his henchcats to marry out of love... for money.
  • The Queen's Corgi: At first, attractive female cocker spaniel Wanda is interested in Tyson because of his high social status among the other dogs, then switches to supporting Rex as soon as she finds out he's royalty. However, it's implied she genuinely falls in love with him by the end of the film.
  • Robotomy: "From Wretchneya with Love": A variant. Shoxana is an attractive woman who meets lonely men on the internet, sweet-talks them into marrying her, and then ghosts the reception in order to steal the wedding presents and run away.
  • Shark Tale: Lola the seductive lionfish. In her intro scene, she even calls herself superficial and dismisses Oscar calling him "cute, but a nobody." The Ludacris and Bobby V song "Golddigger" even plays in her introduction, but Oscar was too busy fawning over her to notice. When Oscar becomes the Sharkslayer, Lola is immediately interested in him and begins dating him, much to Angie's jealousy and dismay. When Oscar finishes a Sharkslayer stunt, Lola forcefully kisses him in front of the cameras, causing Angie to leave in jealousy, anger, and sadness. When Angie confesses Oscar her love for him, Oscar rethinks his feelings and dumps Lola—which, unfortunately, leads to her great fury as she mercilessly slams him against the windows. Lola then arranges Don Lino to kidnap Angie, even gleefully threatening her life if Oscar doesn't comply.
    Lola: You know, Sharkslayer. There's only one thing I like better than money: Revenge!
  • Strange Magic: Roland, who's only marring Marianne because she's the princess and he wants the armies that come with it.
  • Top Cat and the Beverly Hills Cats: Kitty Glitter, who hears T.C. is rich and promptly agrees to try and woo him (as part of Snerdly's plan to distract him from protecting Benny). At the end of the film, when she learns T.C.'s actually broke, she instantly drops him and drives off, having no interest in a non-wealthy cat.
  • Turning Red: Ming believes the character Siu-Jyu in the Jade Palace Diaries to be this.
    Ming: She's just using him to get to the throne.

    Jokes 
  • A man wanted to mow the lawn but it was so hot he entertained the idea of doing it naked. When he asked his wife what the neighbors would think if they saw him naked, she said they'd think she married him for money.
  • This little ditty:
    "He was rich and old, and she
    Was twenty-two or twenty-three.
    She gave him fifteen years to live
    The only thing she meant to GIVE."
  • There is a joke about a millionaire who asks his friend whether his chances to marry a young girl will improve if he'll tell her he's sixty instead of seventy five. The friend points out ninety three is a safer bet.
  • A joke where a woman who broke off her engagement tries writing back to her lover:
    Dear John,
    I have been unable to sleep since I broke off our engagement. Won't you forgive and forget? Your absence is breaking my heart. I was a fool, nobody can take your place. I love you.
    All my love,
    Belinda. xxxxoooxxxx
    P.S. Congratulations on winning this week's lottery.
  • Two women are chatting in a bar when one of them sees her ex and waves to him. The man doesn't even respond. She gets huffy and says "Well! I made him a millionaire, and that's the respect he shows me!" "How'd you make him a millionaire?" "He was a billionaire when we started dating."
  • A rich playboy son-of-a-tycoon is trying to flirt with a pretty girl, boasting that his father is 100 and in ill health, ready to die anytime soon, and being the only child he's entitled to have all the inheritance money, which totals up to multiple billions.
    The girl replies that she'll consider his offer and let him know in a few weeks. A few weeks later, boom, she's now his stepmother.
  • Q: What's six inches long, two inches wide, and drives women wild?
    A: Money.

    Manhwa 
  • Pig Bride: Doe Doe Eun. She's a Bitch in Sheep's Clothing who plays to the male lead's preference for unthreatening women so she can marry up in society. Late in the story, we learn her birth mother actually got her adopted by an upper-class family so that Doe Doe could then marry very well.

    Mythology & Religion 

    Music 
  • ABBA: This is one of the methods of getting rich discussed in the song "Money Money Money".
  • AC/DC: "Money Talks" is an inverse example, with a man seducing a woman he thinks is a Gold Digger.
  • "Marry for Money" by Trace Adkins is a rare male example:
    I'm gonna marry for money
    I'll be so damn rich it ain't funny
    I'm gonna have me a trust fund, yacht club, hot tub piece of the pie
    Find me a sweet sugar mama
    With a whole lotta zeroes and commas
    I don't care if she loves me, she can even be ugly
    I'm gonna marry for money
  • Bell Biv DeVoe's landmark single "Poison" was based off a real life example. Dr. Freeze, the writer and producer of the song, had written it about an ex-girlfriend who had taken advantage of him romantically and monetarily in the past. The song itself is a warning to be careful about who you kick game to, lest you end up with a leech for a girlfriend.
  • Beyoncé's "Irreplaceable" shows how this backfires when the singer discovers her gold-digging boyfriend cheating.
    Driving her around IN THE CAR THAT I BOUGHT YOU!
  • "No Endz, No Skinz" by Big L. Every woman is out for a man's cash.
  • The 1899 ballad "A Bird in a Gilded Cage" tells the story of a beautiful woman who married for money instead of love, and lived a sad and empty life as a result.
    'Tis sad when you think of her wasted life
    For youth cannot mate with age
    And her beauty was sold for an old man's gold
    She's a bird in a gilded cage
  • "My Humps" by The Black Eyed Peas is about a woman who receives expensive gifts from men she doesn't know because they like her "assets". At first, she resists, but she gets used to it and starts exploiting her "attributes" more in order to get more gifts and attention.
  • Brand Nubian: The subject of "Slow Down" is implied to be this in one verse, moving from man to man, seducing them, taking their possessions, and selling for money for crack.
    Well, what you are is a stunt, man, you're on a hunt
    And your plan is to take all you can from a man and scram
  • Garth Brooks's song "Digging For Gold" from In the Life of Chris Gaines. The subject of the song was only in the marriage until the millionaire lost his money in the stock market and she bailed out in the end, leaving him crying.
  • "Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend", famously sung by Carol Channing in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. Also performed by Marilyn Monroe in the film Gentlemen Prefer Blondes; the famous dance number in which she sings it was also done by Madonna. Subverted in the Madonna example in the video. She plays a performer who is pursued by several rich men, but she'd rather be with the hot but poor handyman and make out with him in his pickup truck.
  • Kevin Denney's "Cadillac Tears" is about a rich businessman who marries his new secretary, only for her to divorce him and extravagantly spend the settlement money.
  • The female protagonist of the Eagles song "Lyin' Eyes" is a gold digger; she's treated more sympathetically than most examples, however, being depicted as being lonely and trapped in a loveless and unhappy marriage with a cold and distant man. The song nevertheless points out that she did bring it on herself and that she is stringing along at least two guys as a result.
  • "Cold As Ice" by Foreigner:
    You're digging for gold, you're throwing away
    a fortune in feelings, but someday you'll pay.
  • Good Charlotte's "Boys and Girls", continually claiming "Girls don't like boys, girls like cars and money".
  • Cee Lo Green's hit "Fuck You" is about a former girlfriend who left the narrator for a richer guy, and who he laments only wanted money. Despite his chorus's warnings, he kept asking for her back but she kept rejecting him for richer boyfriends.
    Chorus: Oh shit, she's a gold digger - Just thought you should know, nigga
    However, at the end of the music video, he gets sweet revenge when returning years later to show off that now he's rich and famous, while she's stuck working at the diner where her rejections took place. So much for her gold-digging.
  • Gwen Guthrie's "Ain't Nothin' Goin' on But the Rent":
    Boy, your silky ways are sweet
    But you're only wastin' time if your pockets are empty
    I've got lots of love to give
    But I will have to avoid you if you're unemployed
  • Mixed with Interspecies Romance in the German couplet "In einen Harung, jung und stramm". A flounder falls in love with a herring, but he objects to her body shape... until she swims into a golden 10 rubel piece.
  • "Acapella" by Karmin is a Break-Up Song about a woman who dumps her boyfriend because he isn't rich enough.
    Mama always said, "Get a rich boyfriend. You don't need to love 'em, girl, you can pretend."
    You bet I totes believe her, yeah, every word she said.
    Thought he was gluten-free but all that I got was bread.
    Mama always said, "Nice Guys Finish Last. Beat him at his own game, honey, take the cash."
  • "Do You Love Me" from KISS, with Paul Stanley asking if the person he's singing about really loves him or just loves the fame and celebrity that comes with being a rock star.
  • "Juliet" by Lawson is about a woman who is one of these.
    Dollar signs and crimson hair/She will steal your soul
    Sets her sights on billionaires/All she wants is gold
    (...) Pulls you with her perfect smile/Pretty soon you're done
    One more sucker pays the price/Thinking you're the one
  • "Loungin'" by LL Cool J features him trying to convince his ex-girlfriend to leave her Sugar Daddy and then mocking him once she leaves.
    You gotta try love, can't buy love
    If you play your hand, then it's bye bye love
  • "Why Don't You Do Right?" by Joe McCoy, performed by many many (including Jessica Rabbit in Who Framed Roger Rabbit). "Why don't you do right like some other men do? Get out of here and get me some money too!" The later version used by Disney differs considerably from the original ("Weed Smoker's Dream"), which is full of very thinly veiled suggestions that women should become gold diggers (or possibly prostitutes). "Sitting on a million, sitting on it every day, can't make no money giving your stuff away, why don't you do now like the millionaires do? Put your stuff on the market, and make a million too." Some of the verses are even more blatant than the chorus.
  • Tim McGraw's "It's a Business Doing Pleasure with You" is one from the male's perspective.
  • "Material Girl" by Madonna is a satire on this trope (and on the general materialism of The '80s) with a twist at the end: "Experience has made me rich, and now they're after me."
  • Bruno Mars's "Natalie". Although she's sort of this and sort of a con artist because she had no intention of staying with him after she got access to the money.
  • Nickelback: In "Rockstar", the narrator describes wanting to be pursued by gold diggers. The song in general is about wanting to be a rock star for all the wrong reasons.
  • The Offspring's "Why Don't You Get A Job?" deals with a guy whose girlfriend is a domineering one of these. Near the end of the song, it mentions another (female) friend whose boyfriend is also a gold-digger.
    I guess all his money, well it isn't enough
    To keep her bill collectors at bay
    I guess all his money, well it isn't enough
    Cause that girl's got expensive taste
  • Charlie Parker's "Romance Without Finance" is another male example.
    Romance without finance just don't make sense
    Mama, mama, please give up that gold
    You so great and you so fine
    You ain't got no money you can't be mine
  • The Pet Shop Boys song "Rent" seems to be about this and perhaps prostitution. The title sounds like an allusion to the term "rent boy", meaning "male prostitute", and the chorus is the words "I love you, you pay my rent" repeated over and over.
    You dress me up; I'm your puppet
    You buy me things; I love it
    You bring me food; I need it
    You give me love; I feel it
    The Carter USM cover of the same song tends to avoid this trope, putting more emphasis on singing about the love angle and emphasising the lyrics "Words mean so little, and money less / When you're lying next to me." It comes off as more about a poor guy in a relationship with a richer girlfriend/boyfriend rather than the relationship between a prostitute and his client or a downright Gold Digger.
  • Also Proyecto Uno's song "La Interesada". Quite appropriate, since the song was a cover of "Money Talks".
  • "High and Dry" from The Rolling Stones' Aftermath (Album) features a male example in the narrator, who laments that a woman dumped him after finding out "it was money I was after".
  • "Daddy (You Oughta Get The Best For Me)" by Bob Troup; Sammy Kaye recorded the first hit version, but there are lots and lots of cover versions. The song is "'bout a gal named Daisy Mae" who sings that she wants such things as "a brand new car, champagne, caviar."
  • "Georgie On A Spree" by Richard and Linda Thompson is from the perspective of a young girl who boasts about how her boyfriend takes her out to eat, drives her around in his fancy car, buys her whatever she wants, and takes her to fancy parties. The ending is a little ambiguous - either Georgie eventually tires of spending money on her, and she's just oblivious that he's trying to gently brush her off, or he really will "be back in a week or two" because he needs that time to get more money to keep her.
  • Kanye West's "Gold Digger". It ironically interpolates "I Got a Woman" by Ray Charles, which is about a Sugar Momma ("she give me money when I'm in need') but parodies the lyrics ("she take my money when I'm in need").
  • "Everything She Wants" by Wham!, with George Michael singing as a husband who married a woman with an insatiable appetite for all the things she can get out of him.
  • Amy Winehouse's "Fuck Me Pumps" is about women who go clubbing and specifically target wealthy men, especially footballers, with the goal of becoming trophy wives.
  • "Just Because", a 1929 song that was later covered by scores of Country Music, polka, and Rockabilly singers (including Elvis Presley in his Sun Records days) has the narrator complain about one.
    You caused me to spend all my money
    You laughed and called me "old Santa Claus"
  • The South African folk song "Old Johnnie Goggabie" is about a woman who wants fancy clothes who gets a marriage proposal from a rich guy named Johnnie Goggabie. While she finds his last name unappealing ("goggabie" means "bug" in Afrikaans and is pronounced "ho-HAW-bee" with a guttural H), she pragmatically decides to accept the proposal so she can live off his money.
  • The Title Track of Bobby Brown's Don't Be Cruel is about how Bobby gives his girlfriend everything he has romantically and financially, but it's never enough for her. He soon decides he's had enough, and threatens to leave her if she doesn't change her ways.
  • La Chanchona de Tino's "Tu Mamá" (Your Mom) has a rare male example. This is a song that tells the story of Micho Reyes, a man born in poverty who at first, tried to get out of his situation by emigrating only to get robbed and caught by border police. However, Micho seems to have lucked out when a friend introduced him to Doña Candelaria's daughter, whom he marries in no time as she was wealthy. Much to his chagrin, Doña Candelaria was such a cheapskate that he eventually decided to murder her by poisoning her water, thus getting the old lady's inheritance without anyone noticing.

    Podcasts 
  • S-Town: Tyler accuses "the cousins" from Florida of being opportunistic, manipulative carpetbaggers who only show up to get John's money from his mother. The cousins, meanwhile, accuse Tyler of being a parasite who has tried to leech off of John's money and good graces. Tyler also literally tries to dig up gold out of John's property after John's suicide.

    Radio 
  • Adventures in Odyssey:
    • It turns out that nearly every member of Wooten Basset's extended family (except his benevolent Christian paternal grandparents) is this, as shown in "Basset Hounds". The episode follows Wooten (and Bernard) as they go to said grandparents' mansion in Alaska, as the grandparents are permanently moving to Africa for mission work and have gathered up the entire family to say good-bye, as well as having made a will. Bernard talks with several of the various family members there, and quickly finds out that the only reason most of them are there is to figure out how much Grandpa Basset is leaving them, even though a large number of them are already pretty wealthy. They even claim to be either Christians and/or active in charities, hoping this will result in Grandpa giving them even more money. When they hear Grandpa's final message to them via video-tape, they even fast-forward all the way to the disbursement. Karma hits them all like a load of bricks when it turns out that Grandpa was fully aware of their money-hungry tendencies despite how filthy-rich they already are and has left them nothing as a result. The only ones who get anything are Wooten note  and his cousin Wilma note , with the rest of the money and Grandpa's mansion going to a charity he has started, to everyone else's chagrin.
    • In the early 2016 episode "No Cause for Concern", Wooton's fiance Penny sees whom she thinks is Wooton doing a search for her public recordsnote , only for it to be revealed that it was Wooton's twin brother Wellington that was doing the snooping in order to prove that Penny was a gold digger due to Penny's previous boyfriend having also been wealthy and Penny being in a sizeable amount of debt, only for Wooton to explain that Penny had already told him about those issues.
  • Our Miss Brooks: In "Marriage Madness", the butcher's new business partner tries to marry Mrs. Davis for her money. It seems as if he's been often married, starting with the time in school he ran off with his French teacher.
    Miss Brooks: If he had said English teacher, I would have screamed!

    Standup Comedy 
  • Discussed in Whitney Cummings' standup. She says she has very little sympathy for men who complain about gold diggers, since, she points out, the problem can very easily be avoided by dating women who are old and successful enough to have their own gold.
    Maybe stop dating 18-year-olds that need a Kickstarter campaign just to eat dinner. Maybe just date adults, with jobs!

    Tabletop Games 
  • Not a few petty-scale villains of Victorian melodrama, as mentioned in the Forgotten Futures supplement "Victorian Villainy", are some variety of "fortune hunter" who is after the Romantic Lead, who is usually the heiress to some vast fortune that the villain wants to get his greedy hands on.
  • Eberron: There was a period where something very much like this was popular amongst elves, who would find a wealthy human in need of a spouse, usually a noble, and marry them, the idea being that since elves live much longer than humans, eventually the elf would inherit. The humans made sure the inheritence laws wouldn't lead to a bunch of elves in charge of everything, but the elves still hoped to have elven children inherit. This tapered off when it became widespread knowledge that humans and elves were interfertile, but by then there were already enough half-elves around to sustain themselves as a distinct race.

    Theater 
  • Carmen (1875): Mercédès, during the fortune-telling number, sees herself becoming the wife of a wealthy but senile man — and then, as his widow, inheriting magnificently.
  • Craig's Wife: Harriet admits straight up that she married her husband because she wanted a rich household and Mr. Craig had money. Her motives are explained — her father divorced her mother for a second wife, leaving Harriet and her mother and sister with nothing — but she is still a cold and villainous character.
  • Large Ham Don Jerome in the opera La Duenna by Roberto Gerhard, though he comes to love his wife and really misses her when she dies.
  • In The Grand Duke by Gilbert and Sullivan:
    • Julia agrees to marry Ernest even though she hates him, because he's going to usurp the Grand Duke's throne and she wants to be Grand Duchess. When Ludwig becomes Grand Duke instead she insists on marrying him.
    • Rudolph and Caroline are an unusual example — they're mutual gold-diggers. Each is a rich miser who wants to marry the other in order to become even richer. They are quite frank with each other about this, and while they actually are affectionate to each other, it's clear that this is only because of the money.
  • A male version in Hamilton: Angelica Schuyler immediately deduces upon meeting him that Alexander Hamilton is one of these, as he's from a poor no-name family and must marry to gain the status and wealth he needs for his political ambitions. She's attracted to him anyway, but directs him to her sister Eliza, who fell in Love at First Sight with him. He and Eliza genuinely hit it off and have a happy marriage, at least until a certain event involving a pamphlet.
  • The 1913 Broadway musical High Jinks has a seductive widow named Adelaide, who sizes up her suitors by their bank accounts.
  • In Molière's play The Imaginary Invalid (also translated as The Hypochondriac), Beline, Argan's second wife, is a two-faced woman: she flatters and pampers her husband, but schemes all the time, trying to figure out how to get all his money after his death, and she wants to deprive his two daughters from his first marriage of their share.
  • Kiss Me, Kate:
    • Petruchio not only admits outright several times that he only wants Kate's money, but he has an entire song about it.
    • Just to even things out, Lilli Vanessi (not Kate) is planning to marry at least in part for status (in the stage show, her fiancé is a retired General who is intended to be the next Vice-Presidential candidate) or money (in the movie, he's a wealthy Texas cattle baron).
  • In A Little Night Music, Mme. Armfeldt, at the end of her life, fondly recalls the profitable dalliances with wealthy aristocrats that allowed her to die a very wealthy woman.
  • The Merchant of Venice is full of male versions.
    • Bassanio wants to marry Portia in part because she's wealthy and Portia's father had set up the whole "three caskets" thing to assure that she doesn't get stuck with one. Like everything William Shakespeare, this is up for interpretation. Some productions have Bassanio marrying Portia entirely for her money, some have him marry her because he loves her, with her money an obstacle, and some play around in the space between the two.
    • The text suggests that this is a big part of Lorenzo's interest in marrying Jessica. Depending on the production, it may be more or less obvious.
  • Older Than Steam: Petruchio of The Taming of the Shrew says outright that he wants to marry Katherine for her money.
  • The Judge in Trial by Jury got his big break in law by courting the "elderly, ugly daughter" of a wealthy attorney to get access to her father's money and connections. Once his career had advanced to the point where he got a judgeship, he dumped her.
  • In The Unsinkable Molly Brown, when Molly's father says that she should settle down with a nice Irish-Catholic man, she objects that she only wants to marry "the richest Irish-Catholic next to the Pope." She rejects Johnny's marriage proposals until he has made enough money to satisfy her demands.
  • In The Women, Crystal Allen is trying to sleep her way to the top, and replacing Mrs. Haines with herself is not the last step on her social climb.

    Theme Parks 
  • The Haunted Mansion: Constance the ghostly bride married and decapitated about five men for their wealth. In the Attic scene, her smile and the amount of necklaces around her neck on her portrait steadily increases. The last husband was one of the Mansion's owners — the Imagineers specifically modeled his appearance after "George" from the Portrait Room.

    Video Games 
  • Ace Attorney:
    • Alita Tiala is a particularly cruel version, as she's not only marrying Wocky Kitalki for his family's money, she's also doing it in the full knowledge that Wocky still carries a bullet near his heart that will kill him sooner rather than later — knowledge she is not sharing with Wocky or his family. She hires Apollo as her fiancé's defense attorney hoping he'll lose, since that would solve a couple of problems for her.
    • Desiree DeLite certainly seems like one at first, as her spending habits cause her husband to become a Phantom Thief just to keep money in her purse, which puts him in a sticky situation since he's afraid if the money stops coming she'll leave him, but she also despises criminals, so if she ever finds out how he's getting the money she'll definitely leave him. However, it turns out that she genuinely loves him, money or not. She doesn't even particularly mind his thievery, since he announces all of his heists in advance unlike the cowardly criminals she hates.
  • Annie of Atelier Annie: Alchemists of Sera Island dreams of falling into a life of easy luxury by "marrying up" before her family sends her lazy rear end off to work as an alchemist. Once she finds out that the prize for her efforts could include the Prince's hand in marriage she becomes incredibly determined.
  • BitLife: You may choose to have your character be this, only marrying people for their money.
  • Dragon Age: Origins: A variant occurs within dwarven society. Dwarves have a very strict caste system that determines each dwarf's profession, with casteless dwarves filling the very bottom rung, and ways up are extremely limited- the only sure way to do it is to be named a Paragon for doing something badass that would put you in the history books (the only current Paragon managed to invent an efficient and smokeless fuel, saving dwarves from smoke-related illnesses and increasing productivity, and a historical Paragon mastered the skills of all castes). Female casteless dwarves commonly opt for an easier-but-risky alternative known as "noble hunting", where they seduce a male dwarf noble and have his child. Caste is determined by the same-gender parent, so if the noble hunter has a boy, then that boy is a noble and will be adopted into his father's house along with his mother. The risk factor is that if the baby is a girl, then the mom gains nothing, she's unlikely to catch another noble, and now she's a Struggling Single Mother. The Dwarf Commoner's sister Rica is a noble hunter, though only because she's forced into it by the crime boss her family works for. She can get her happy ending when she gets with Prince Bhelen, who genuinely loves her and intends to marry her, caste-less or not.
  • Dragon Quest IV: Maya has expressed interest in richer men regardless of age, drooling at the prospect of swimming in gold.
  • Fire Emblem:
    • One of the Fire Emblem: Genealogy of the Holy War mangas has Patty, the local thief in Generation 2, as this, playing it completely for the lulz. She ends up falling in love with a poor guy, though: her cousin Lester.
    • Charlotte's profile in Fire Emblem Fates states directly that her dream is to "marry into wealth" and that she makes herself look sweet and cute in order to "get men to spoil her." She turns out to be a more benevolent version and possible deconstruction, as she wants the money to support her very poor but beloved Good Parents, uses her Gold Digger facade to mask her deep issues, and if she does get a Love Confession from a wealthy enough guy she'll wonder if she actually likes the guy enough rather than his cash or his Blue Blood, sometimes even rejecting the prospect boyfriend's proposal at first. Furthermore, while being wealthy is a priority, it's not the only criteria she has. If money is the only thing a man has to offer Charlotte (as opposed to being a decent person), she'd rather walk away.
    • Fire Emblem: Three Houses adds Dorothea as another sympathetic case. A former Street Urchin who only escaped poverty by being recruited by an opera troupe, she knows her looks and voice won't last forever and explicitly joined the Academy to get close to a bunch of nobles and possibly find a wealthy husband before she grows old and ends up poor and alone again. So in a violent contrast to the standard, greed-driven examples, she ends up being one of the nicer and more empathic members of the cast... which results in awkward situations sometimes, like when she snaps at Lorenz for his views on prioritizing social status over everything else, only to apologize when he points out she's doing the exact same thing.
  • In Grand Theft Auto V, Trevor claims that Michael's wife Amanda was a stripper that Mike bought breast implants for and eventually knocked up back when he was a bank robber. At the start of the game both are living unfulfilling lives as rich socialites and the two have something of an open marriage with some caveats (Michael gets pissed that she's screwing her tennis instructor in the house rather than finding a motel), though by the end of the game they're making steps to try and repair their relationship.
  • In Higurashi: When They Cry, Rina Mamiya and her pimp Teppei Hojou plan to scam Rena's father for a large quantity of money, apparently up to at very least one million yen. It never goes well for her, since Rena is so determined to protect herself and her father that she bloodily kills her more than once.
  • In Data Age's Journey Escape for the Atari 2600, groupies that resemble hearts with legs must be avoided at all costs, as running into them causes you to lose cash.
  • In June's Journey, this is how Arabella Peel gets back on top of society after June's schemes have cost her the exploitative mining empire she was leading. Her new rich husbands always seem to die very soon.
  • In the Kindergarten 2 mission "Flowers for Diana", the protagonist has to hook Alpha Bitch Cindy up with Token Rich Student Felix Huxley in order to get a flower required to complete the mission. After he does so, Cindy will gush over what a "walking goldmine" her new boyfriend is. Of course, Felix himself is a Rich Bastard who's just as nasty as Cindy herself, if not more so, and who only agreed to the whole thing because he thinks having a partner will make him more appealing to potential investors, so there's little sympathy to be had for him.
  • Leisure Suit Larry:
    • Fawn in Leisure Suit Larry 1: In the Land of the Lounge Lizards, who dumps Larry after receiving a lot of gifts from him, including a diamond ring.
    • Leisure Suit Larry 7: Love for Sail!: Larry's main Love Interest in the previous game (who was a rich Granola Girl) suddenly turns into this trope after sleeping with Larry. She chains him to the bed and leaves with his wallet. His primary pursuit in this game (Captain Thygh) also turns out to be this, not to mention the Black Widow in the game who hires Larry to off her husband. Of course, neither Thygh nor Larry have any intention for a long-term relationship, but when Larry wins the contest, she refuses to honor her end of the deal until he shows her how much money he has.
  • Max Payne 3 has Fabiana Branco, who's way younger than her husband Rodrigo Branco, head of the Branco construction conglomerate. The two have an unspoken arrangement where he gets to parade her around as a Trophy Wife at the various parties he throws to make connections with Sao Paulo's rich and elite while she gets to live it up on her husband's dime in the various parties and nightclubs around the city. It also makes her a Damsel in Distress when she becomes a kidnapping target because of her being married to Rodrigo, who despite knowing that "she does not love (him) for (his) body" still does care about her well-being when she is shanghaied.
  • In Mystic Messenger, Jumin considers all the women his father (an extremely wealthy business tycoon) has dated to be this. It doesn't help that on Jumin's route, his father's current squeeze tries to manipulate him into marrying his son off to her sister to get them to purchase her failed company. Constantly gushing over Jumin's wealth is also one of the most surefire ways for the player character to lose affection points with him.
  • In NBA Ballers: Phenom, Kimberly, the player's ex-girlfriend, is implied to be one; as she left him to get with Hot Sauce after he gets a basketball contract, and only gives him the time of day when he starts making money and connections with Ludacris and some of the NBA players. Luda wisely warns him to stay away from her after she disses you for Hot Sauce a second time, and sets him up with his assistant instead.
  • Many of the mistresses in Overlord, particularly Velvet in the first game and Juno in the second. A big part of either game is acquiring enough wealth so that you can afford to decorate your Tower with things that please the mistress. If you buy them all of their particular decorations, you are rewarded with an Optional Sexual Encounter with the mistress.
  • In Private Eye Leppin's ex-wife Charlotte's first words to him were "How rich are you?"
  • In Ratchet: Deadlocked Courtney Gears gets pissy over her boyfriend Reactor being a Nice Guy and nearly leaves him, only for her to come back to him after he becomes a rich Gladiator.
  • Rave Heart: Lady Marselva Zephyr only married Lord Falric Zephyr to gain wealth and political power, and is willing to betray and kill him to get into Count Vorakia Estuuban's good graces.
  • The Sims:
    • In The Sims 2, Dina Caliente is implied to be this. She married Michael Bachelor and has the memory of "Married a Rich Sim", and he died before the game started. When the game starts, she's in love with Mortimer Goth, who is also very rich.
    • In The Sims 3 "Gold Digger" is a Lifetime Aspiration. To achieve it, sims have to marry someone worth a certain amount of money, and then have their spouse die and see their ghost.
  • Sly Cooper:
  • Lola Tigerbelly, the main Love Interest of The Spellcasting Series. In fact, Ernie has to give her a literal pile of gold to get her attention in the second game. For bonus points, if you play the love song for her on the moodhorn, she hugs a nearby cash register.
    • Penelope wanted to use Bentley, for his skills as a potential money maker, and eliminate the rest of the Cooper Gang who she thought was holding him back with their "honor", which backfires when he finds out and dumps her.
  • Tales Series:
  • Jo'on Yorigami from Touhou Project is a pestilence goddess who uses her ability to cause Conspicuous Consumption to get people to spend all their money on her, and initially doesn't even care whether the people she steals from can afford to lose what they spend on her.
  • Jokichi Yudasei of Yandere Simulator has aspirations of marrying into a wealthy family, which is why he's attracted to the occasional woman who's...less than ideal (namely, Rich Bitch Ritsuko).

    Web Animation 
  • AoHaru Manga Library: Types of these characters (usually the female ones) appear a lot as antagonists due to the abundance of stories of Keiichi getting dumped because he's too humble or not having a luxurious lifestyle. When Keiichi is being a Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass, they try to get back to his good graces once he reveals his actual wealth and power, but after seeing their true colors, Keiichi usually rejects them. This gets used so much that the series occasionally plays around with this trope:
  • Etra chan saw it!:
    • Yuzuriha tries to get Kuroki's non-existent fortune by marrying him while he's still in a coma.
    • In this story Yuzuriha starts off as one, being born in a dirt-poor family. This is a subversion, however, as she focuses on working hard on her studies in addition to her beauty. While Yuzuriha sets her sights on Tokusa for being rich, she realizes over time that she genuinely likes him.
    • Yuzuriha, who rejected and belittled Tokusa in middle school for being short, tries to get his attention during a middle school reunion after finding out that he became rich. Tokusa quickly rejects her and tells her that he is going to marry Tsutsuji and regrets having a crush on her back then.
    • Hiiragi is a male example. He leeches off of Karin by giving everything that she gave to him to his favorite hostess. He later breaks up with Karin when she refuses to lend him $20,000.
    • Yuzuriha only accepts Hiiragi's marriage proposal because he works in a company with a good salary. After they get married, Yuzuriha forces Hiiragi to change himself for the better. In the end, he manages to meet her expectations and they both are now Happily Married.
  • ETU - Animated Stories: Very common on this channel.
    • Irvin's wife Lexi spends his money shopping and partying. After she humiliated him, he decides to make her tattooist write "Gold Digger" on her back.
    • Laurie's boyfriend decides to marry her bridesmaid, Amy, after he found out that she is rich. She rejects him.
  • Gossip City:
    • Mikako only married Mouri for his money and had affairs with Masato.
    • Kaori cheated on Sho Hatakeyama with and even married Masa after seeing the latter's expensive-looking wristwatch. When Masa gloated about it, Mr. Hatakeyama revealed that Kaori is actually in massive debt and even borrowed money from the Yakuza. Masa himself reveals he only dated her because he thought she was rich. To top it off, he is told that his company went bankrupt after Mr. Hatakeyama's students investigate and reveal all of his and Kaori's shady dealings.
    • Kana sought to steal Asuka Ugumori's husband Yujiro because he allegedly was rich, despite being married herself. However, when she showed up to the Ugumori household with Yujiro to declare they're going to marry… only for Asuka to reveal that he is just a regular employee and she's the CEO, at least in public appearance since her sons Leon and Mamoru are the ones who run the company. Much to Kana's further dismay, Yujiro recorded everything she said as she refused to leave him alone and sent it to her husband, who divorced her.
  • Helluva Boss: In "Exes And Oohs", Moxxie and Millie's shared ex-boyfriend Chaz claims to be a millionaire to convince Moxxie’s father Crimson to arrange a marriage with Moxxie so he can get into ”the family.” However, Blitzo discovers that Chaz is actually so broke that he lives in his car and that he made the whole story up as part of a hair-brained scheme to gain access to Moxxie’s family’s wealth… Except that the homophobic Crimson, who also hates his guts, only agreed to it in order to get his hands on Chaz’s fortune in turn (Which also makes Crimson an example of this trope), which naturally meant that he’d expected Chaz to cough up the money once the wedding was over. This ends up leading to Chaz’s death; When Blitzo and Millie rescue Moxxie from forcefully getting married off and Blitzo reveals the deception to Crimson, the mob boss is furious that Chaz played him for a fool and kills him off-screen.
  • I'm Anton!: Terada caught a woman during a fishing crane game. Unfortunately she turned out to be a gold digger and was always making demands to Terada. He broke up with her soon after.
  • Kanon's RomCom Mangas: Haruka dumps Naoya after he gets fired from his old company. She coincidentally meets him again after a while when he gets accepted into a new company, leading her to beg him to start over their relationship again.
  • Manga Soprano:
  • The Music Freaks: Zoey is a classic example of this, as she both used Drew for money while they were dating and cheated on him with a Sugar Daddy.
  • Otakebi: Bob's brothers' girlfriends only date them only for their money, they dump them immediately after finding out their boyfriends have less money than they expected from $150,000 of the inheritance money left by their father.
  • Reina's room: Lisa dumped her boyfriend Kumamoto for his friend Kouichi, who is an elite college student and richer than him. This drives Kumamoto to study harder and becomes more successful, Lisa begs Kumamoto to take her back and lies about Kouichi being abusive, only for both men to record her begging and expose her on the wedding day.
  • RomCom Manga Chan: Some episodes have Kent's previous girlfriend/wife/fiancee dump him for being poor or otherwise "useless".
    • Sara dumps Kent once he shows her his house, to which she calls him poor despite his being the manager of a construction company.
    • Sara Mitsubishi tells a bedridden Kent at the hospital that she wanted to marry him because of his status as a CEO, but she dumps him for becoming disabled after suffering a stroke.
    • Reina Mitsubishi dumps Kent for giving her a cheap wedding ring and throws it on the floor.
    • Chihiro dumped Kent for focusing in his career as a mangaka and left the house with a delinquent-looking man.
  • RWBY:
    • Weiss Schnee, who comes from rich family, apparently had many suitors who only cared about her purse. This leads her to (mistakenly) believe that Jaune is this as well when he asks her out.
    • Weiss's father, Jacques, only married her mother to get his hands on the Schnee Dust Company. He doesn't care at all about his family and, just to twist the knife further, flat-out told his wife about it on Weiss's birthday.
  • Story Time Animated: Maya dumped Nate when he lost all his money and got with his rival Brody.
  • Tanabata Manga:
    • Yomeko stole Tanao's savings to buy expensive stuff, it is also revealed that the money Yomeko stole from Tanao was also given to her lover, causing Tanao to divorce her and sue the lover for damages.
    • Ryuji Kuraki is a male example, he only gets together with Lili to get her family's money and dump her after several months of their marriage. His plans are foiled when Mimi turns out to be recording the conversation of him and his lover, this leads to the arrest of the lovebirds for attempting a marriage fraud.
  • Tompkins' mother from Teen Girl Squad is depicted as a robotic prospector.
  • In Ultra Fast Pony, Rarity is this, though inconsistently. She seems to want a legitimate relationship with Prince Blueblood, and she stops pursuing him as soon as she realizes their personalities are incompatible. On the other hand, she's interested in Fancy Pants solely for his money, and she's not the least bit ashamed.
    Rarity: I am such a big fan of your money.

    Web Comics 
  • Cheating Men Must Die:
    • Cao Xueyi repeatedly seduces wealthy men for money and gifts. Her modus operandi is to play with a suitable man, squeeze all the money out of him, then throw him away and find the next prey. Cao Xueyi regrets losing her relationship with her first boyfriend, because even though he started out poor, he would eventually go on to become super wealthy.
    • Ling Xingzi claims to resent the rich and has a strong sense of pride, yet she clings to the CEO male lead of her novel, prompting a "Not So Different" Remark from Su Lüxia, who is playing the role of her rival. Meanwhile, the author of the novel herself plans to use Media Transmigration and Grand Theft Me on Ling Xingzi so that she can cling to her rich boyfriend's leg.
  • Cyanide and Happiness takes it rather literally. The girlfriend is an actual gold digger (ie. a prospector) who tells her boyfriend to get a job and not mooch off her findings.
  • El Goonish Shive:
    • Initially Diane is shamelessly one. Her plan is to marry a kind, compassionate, rich guy who will obey her every whim.
      Rhoda: What if you just fall in love with someone someday and they fall in love with you?
      Diane: That's adorable.
    • She eventually starts developing out of it, but is shocked to the point of wanting to drink at that realization.
    • Once she finally examines her motives more, she comes to the conclusion that a lot of those double-dates she had with her best friend Lucy were more like dates with Lucy, with two boys along to pay for things. After she and Lucy start dating officially, they stop this behavior... but they still have to deal with the fallout.
      Diane and Lucy: [thinking] Oh crap. Is she unfairly judging us?
      [remember that they used to treat guys as disposable wallets to fund their dating habits]
      Diane and Lucy: [thinking] Oh crap! Is she fairly judging us?
    • In the EGS:NP version of Cinderella, this is why the stepmother (Agent Bishop) married Ella's father (Mr Verres), while he just wanted a mother-figure for his son. They are both entirely upfront about this, treating it as a business arrangement. The Rant later notes that being in a loveless marriage is the best these characters have ever got on with each other.
  • Emperor And The Female Knight: Frau Sneke proposes marriage to Pauliana because he knows she is barren and unable to bear children. He desires to off her so that he and his son from a maid can inherit the title and its benefits.
  • Forever After: Robin and she's completely unapologetic about it. Her main goal in life is to nap herself a rich guy, then live the high life on his fortune. Seeing as she grew up in a poor neighborhood, it's kind of understandable.
  • I Love Yoo: Discussed in the first chapter. After receiving a bad grade, Rika suggests Shin-Ae just become a House Wife, with Maya adding that she might be able to find a rich guy. Shin-Ae points out that it sounds like they're suggesting she become a gold digger, which brings up the question of what the difference is between a House Wife and a gold digger. Rika and Maya take the stance that there is a difference, while Shin-Ae argues that an Unequal Pairing is an outdated concept. Becomes Hilarious in Hindsight as Shin-Ae gets into a Love Triangle with two rich dudes. (Probably).
  • In The Inexplicable Adventures of Bob!, Princess Voluptua, heir to the throne of a vast space empire, has lamented that she's endured 270 years of power-hungry fools vying for her hand. This is one of the main reasons she's attracted to Bob, because he harbors no such ambitions.
  • JL8 plays the G-rated version, being that they're all in Elementary School:
    Diana: Wait, why are you giving Bruce flirty faces?
    Karen Starr: Um, because I LIKE him. DUH.
    Diana: Because you like him, or you like the fact that he owns horses?
    [Beat]
    Karen: Yes.
  • In Jupiter-Men, Binny tries to act all chummy with Nathan to try to get on his good side and become his guardian so she can take over his finances. But it's blatantly clear to him that her "nice" behavior is all an act and she admits it to his face that she simply won't leave while there's money on the table. Since he can't get rid of her, he instead bribes her by letting her live in his penthouse rent-free and getting a $6,000 monthly allowance from his personal funds in exchange for not touching his finances, not inviting anyone over, and staying out of his hair.
  • Averted but mentioned in Kevin & Kell: Rudy will never say it out loud, but he's kinda relieved his girlfriend Fiona lost her tech fortune because now no one can accuse him of only being with her for her money. (Indeed, they first got together before she had earned that fortune, and they eventually marry.)
  • Issa of Least I Could Do freely admitted she was looking to marry rich, which she was so focused on she made no other life goals, to the point where she was 27, still living with her parents, working at a gas station, and had no skills to help her get a better paying job. She had to beg and plead for Rayne to get her a job at IDS. Now she has a new boyfriend.
    • Played with in that while she does end up marrying the wealthy Archie she does genuinely love him more than his money.
  • Lore Olympus: Minthe seems more interested in the expensive gifts Hades gives her than she is in the man himself, but as Persephone enters his life, Minthe realizes she has more attachment to Hades than she previously thought.
  • Monsieur Charlatan: Adeline, was Isidore's fiancé until he lost everything, she then decided to dump him. She then married a rich Count instead. Her new husband wants her dead.
  • Muted: Since the Severins put an emphasis on getting married for wealth (and the matriarch's children are trained to wish for Meal Tickets during their rituals), any Severin woman who does so would qualify as this. So far we've seen three subversions: Camille summoned Dendro instead of the traditional bird demon and hasn't made her wish, Abrielle used her wish to help Kalen transition so they could start a family, and Athalie wished for Abrielle's murder.
  • Nixvir: While there was probably no romance involved, the Faerie Redmane first began her ascent towards power by worming her way up to the side of a local king. She later killed this king with the "Amada Kenania" incantation right in front of his own son, and later killed the aforementioned scion of the royal house when he grew up and fathered offspring of his own. However, one little boy just had to slip through the cracks...
  • Perfect Marriage Revenge: Sehyeok’s parents were promised money for their business after he married Iju, and his sister was promised a designer wardrobe. When they found out the wedding was called off, they try to badger him to get back together with Iju, and when that fails, they confront her and demand that she either reconcile with Sehyeok or at least pay back the down payment they put down.
  • See You in My 19th Life:
    • Ji-eum was reborn into a poor family. She doesn't want people to think she is interested in marrying Seo-ha for being rich, though, which is why she doesn't talk about her family. Ji-seok Lee immediately thinks she is this the moment he hears she is pining for Seo-ha.
    • For similar reasons, Do-yun Ha doesn't want to date Cho-won. They like each other, but their difference in status is too much for him and he doesn't want to come off as someone who was only after her position as heir of a big company.
  • Shotgun Shuffle: Cinnamon, most likely. The only thing really mentioned about her boyfriend before he dumped her is that he was rich. Given Cinnamon's personality, it is quite likely she dated him for his money.
  • In Winter Moon, Risa is a priest in an MMORPG who prefers to charm males into giving her free stuff rather than earn her gear and experience points. This hits a snag when she encounters an extremely powerful homosexual mage who's more interested in frying her for her impertinence and using her as his "slave healer."

    Web Originals 
  • Dina Marino: Trixie accuses her ex Carla of being this in response to catching her having sex with a man.
  • A Dose of Buckley: Discussed in "Advice No One Asked For #43", featuring a letter from a woman who complains that her new husband (who is over 20 years older than her, and has a total of five adult children from two previous marriages) refuses to make her an equal partner in the family finances despite having no income of her own. Buckley points out that: a. With two failed marriages behind him, the man's refusal to give her unrestricted access to his money is most likely him learning from experience, and b. If it's money she's after, she should have married someone with no kids to share her future inheritance with.
  • Dragon Ball Z Abridged paints Maron as this. While in the original show, she's a ditzy airhead who genuinely likes Krillin (even if they don't end up together), here, she is portrayed as only being with "Juan Sanchez" to get ahold of his newly-inherited life insurance payoff from his death on Namek. Her Establishing Character Moment is to appear, exclaim that she broke a nail and then ask for a thousand dollars, to which "Juan" eagerly gives here two. It's later revealed she's an investigator who was trying to make sure Krillin's story was genuine, but she still kept all the money Krillin gave to her, forcing him to crash at Kame house for the rest of the Cell Saga.
  • iPro Texts: Cassy was a gold digger who was after her fiance Kason's money. She punched his sister Averie because she thought she was his ex-girlfriend and bragged about getting Kason's wealth. After Averie revealed this to Kason, he cancelled the wedding and the siblings got her arrested, but Cassy pleaded insanity and was sent into a mental institution.
  • A well known fake viral image that appeared on Reddit and an instigator of Poe's Law. The woman in the photo is Swedish actress, singer, and model Natacha Peyre. The guy next to her remains unidentified. (He's probably just a fan that she agreed to pose with for a photo op at one of her shows.) Hoaxes like this appear on Reddit a lot.
  • In this video, a girl rejects a guy's proposal to her...and then overhears that his friend died and left him all his money. And said friend was Jeff Bezos. Cut to the wedding.

    Western Animation 
  • All Hail King Julien has Clover's sister Crimson. When Crimson and King Julien become engaged, Clover accuses her of simply being a Gold Digger, citing an extremely long chain of men she's used and abandoned as evidence. As the wedding breaks up for entirely unrelated reasons, it's left vague if Crimson really loved Julien or just his power.
  • Batman: The Animated Series:
    • Poison Ivy plays around with the trope, using her powers to create beautiful plant-women to marry Gotham's wealthiest citizens and later kill them for their money.
    • In "Joker's Millions", a psychiatrist indignantly denies that he was bribed to give the Joker a clean bill of mental health. He is then seen getting into a flashy new car with an attractive woman about half his age.
    • Baby Doll winds up falling for Killer Croc because she sees much of herself in him — but his only interest with her is how much money they can make for crimes she plans and he executes.
  • The Boondocks: Cristal (you know? like the champagne). Kanye West's song is played over a montage of her shopping with Granddad, just to make sure we got it.
  • Daria:
    • Brittany's step-mom, Ashley-Amber, is mostly a Trophy Wife, though a tie-in book mentions that she's "secretly learning the joint-property laws."
    • The Fashion Club doesn't exactly hide the fact that a boy's money ties into their willingness to date him.
      Skylar:note  [reading Quinn's planner] "Long term plans: September, break up with Skylar; October, go out with Taylor?!"
      Quinn: His parents have a ski house!
  • In addition to being a coward, bully, cad, and thief, Dan Backslide, the arch-enemy of The Dover Boys, is also this, especially towards the Dover Boys’ beau Doris Standpipe:
    Dear rich Doris Standpipe, OH, HOW I LOVE HER!- father’s money.
  • Scrooge McDuck almost marries one of these in the Season 1 finale of DuckTales (1987), "Til Nephews Do Us Part". He realizes the truth right before saying "I do"... and right before his old flame Goldie shows up, at his nephews' invite. However, it seems she didn't learn, and starts trying to hit on Flintheart Glomgold. She clearly does not think Second Place Is for Losers.
  • The Valentine's Day special of Edgar & Ellen has Edgar fall in love with a pretty goth girl named Ursula. Ursula pretends to love him, but in reality, she wants to steal his inventions so that she can sell them and become rich.
  • Futurama:
    • When Bender undergoes a robot sex-change operation, Calculon falls in love with "Coilette" (AKA: female Bender). Bender intends to marry Calculon, then immediately divorce him for half his stuff. Unfortunately, he develops genuine feelings (or at least a desire to not screw him over) for him.
    • Bender also assumes that this is why Fry starts dating Amy:
      Bender: Congratulations, Fry, you snagged the perfect girlfriend! Amy's rich, she's probably got other characteristics...
  • In Gargoyles, Demona and her new lover, Thailog, take advantage of her new human form to try and do this to Macbeth; since they can't kill him, they would just lock him in his own dungeon forever and take his cash. Of course, in this case the money would have been used to fund much worse offenses.
  • Jez on Jimmy Two-Shoes, apparently. She seems largely uninterested in being romantic with Lucius, but has no qualms about using his stuff. Sure enough, the moment the Broke Episode happens, she dumps him.
  • Kim Possible: Bonnie going after Ron Stoppable's 99 million dollars. She promptly leaves after they get stolen because she told Ron to keep it in his pocket.
  • Looney Tunes:
    • In His Bitter Half, Daffy Duck marries a rich widow...and finds himself having to put up with her bratty kid and live his life according to her whims. After much physical and mental abuse, the gold digger decides he's had enough and leaves her.
    • Honey's Money features Yosemite Sam, who enters Wicked Stepfather territory by trying to off the kid (who in this case isn't so much bratty as dangerously large and naive like Baby Huey). As he leaves, he asks himself if all of that was worth five million dollars. Five million dollars? He runs back to the mansion.
    • Sam tries to marry another rich widow (played by Granny) in Hare Trimmer, but Bugs Bunny sees through the act and poses as a rival suitor (and later Granny herself) to save her.
    • In the classic cartoon The Dover Boys, this is part of what motivates coward, bully, cad and thief Dan Backslide's pursuit of Dora Standpipe. He is as subtle about this as he is about everything else.
      Dan: Dear rich Dora Standpipe! HOW I LOVE HER... father's money.
  • Miraculous Ladybug: Chloé Bourgeois states in "Dark Cupid" that she likes the fact Adrien is rich. And in "Princess Fragrance", she also hit on Prince Ali, who's wealthy as well. It's a bit odd considering that Chloé herself is already a billionaire.
  • Moral Orel: Doughy develops a crush on his teacher, Miss Sculptham, and starts buying her presents with the money his parents give him to leave them alone. She takes advantage of this even though she clearly has no interest in her student. When he runs out of money, Doughy becomes this to Creepler in order to keep buying gifts for Miss Sculptham, until he realizes that she's just taking advantage of him.
  • The Simpsons:
    • Marge's sister Selma (Bouvier-Terwilliger-Hutz-McClure-Stu-Simpson) at one point tells Marge that she from now on will only be marrying for love... "and maybe once more for money."
    • Selma got the surname "Terwilliger" from Sideshow Bob, who tried to kill her for money and would have gotten away with that if not for that meddling Bart Simpson.
  • Lady Jasmine turns out to be this in The Smurfs (1981) episode "The Prince And The Hopper", when Smurfette finds out that Prince Theodore's bride-to-be is only interested in marrying him for the money.
  • In the South Park episode Tweek Vs Craig, the girls in the third grade (and Kenny) take Home Ec, which teaches them how to become gold diggers. Lessons includes looking at a man's shoes to determine how much money he has, the perfect numbers of credit cards a man should have (two) and to dump any man who wants to become a doctor or a lawyer but is still getting his degree.
  • In Spider-Man: The Animated Series, Jason Phillip Macendale, better known as the Hobgoblin, tries to marry Felicia Hardy to get access to her wealth. When she finds out his alter-ego, he threatens to kill her unless she goes through with it.
  • Kelly on Stōked, when she begins dating Lo's brother (and Emma's crush) Ty Ridgemount simply because he is the son of hotel owner Mr. Ridgemount.
  • Tales of the Wizard of Oz: Implied with Lulabelle in "Mail-Order Lover", who doesn't mind when Dandy confesses about the rest of his fabrications, but dumps him the instant he admits that he's not really rich.
  • A beautiful white cat in the Tom and Jerry short "Blue Cat Blues" comes off as this, as she falls head over heels for Butch over Tom due to the fact that the latter's gifts are more expensive than the former's.
  • Total Drama:
    • The Action ending where Duncan wins has Courtney rushing over to celebrate winning "together", with Duncan himself lampshading how obvious the ploy is. In Beth's ending, she's disappointed about him losing but still agrees to go out to dinner with him.
    • After his elimination in Total Drama Presents: The Ridonculous Race, Noah notes that being married to a lawyer (Emma) means he won't have to bother looking for a job. Owen is amused by this, and jokingly threatens to tell Emma.



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