The Ramsey Show - Controlling Your Own Behavior Is Half the Battle to Building Wealth
Episode Date: October 28, 2024📱Watch the full episode for free in the Ramsey Network app. Jade Warshaw & George Kamel answer your questions and discuss: "Is it okay to continue renting indefinitely?" "Should I continue to wai...t on buying a home?" "My identity was stolen; how do I start over?" "I got a court order for a credit card I don't own," "Do we need to finance a roof repair?" Talk Nerdy to Me: Explain Dollar Cost Averaging "How much house can I afford," Support Our Sponsors: 🌱 Get 10% off your first month of BetterHelp 🏥 Learn more about Christian Healthcare Ministries 🏡 Get started today with Churchill Mortgage 🏦 Go to FAIRWINDS Credit Union for an exclusive account bundle! 🥗 Save 15% on your first Field of Greens order with code RAMSEY 💤 Visit Helix Sleep for special offers! 💻 Visit NetSuite today to learn more 🗂️ Use promo code RAMSEY for18% off at The Nokbox 🏛Get started with YRefy or call 844-2-RAMSEY 🔐 Visit Zander Insurance for your free instant quote today! Next Steps 📞 Have a question for the show? Call 888-825-5225 Weekdays from 2-5pm ET or click here! 📈 Are you on track with the Baby Steps? Get a Free Personalized Plan ❤️ Reconnect with the NEW Questions For Humans Conversation Cards: Intimacy, Couples, Friends, Parents & Kids Editions 🚢 The Live Like No One Else Cruise is booking fast! 🏖️ Invest in Your Future With a SmartVestor Pro 💵 Start your free budget today. Download the EveryDollar app! Listen to more from Ramsey Network 🎙️ The Ramsey Show 🧠 The Dr. John Delony Show 🍸 Smart Money Happy Hour 💡 The Rachel Cruze Show 💸 The Ramsey Show Highlights 💰 George Kamel 💼 The Ken Coleman Show 📈 EntreLeadership Ramsey Solutions is a paid, non-client promoter of SmartVestor Pros. Learn more about your ad choices. https://www.megaphone.fm/adchoices Ramsey Solutions Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
from the Ramsey network app it's the Ramsey show I'm your host Jade Warshaw next to me is George
camel and we are who you got for the next couple hours taking calls about your life and your money.
If you want to get involved, it's an easy call.
You can call 1-888-825-5225,
and we'll hook you up with the best advice
that we could possibly come up with.
Isn't that right, George?
Call us now for your free financial rating.
All right, here we go.
Let's go straight to the phone lines.
We got Vinny in Atlanta GA.
What's going on, Vinny?
Hey, how you guys doing?
We're doing good.
How can we help today?
Hey, so I am 24 years old.
I live in Atlanta.
I am doing my dream job.
I'm a Bible teacher at a Christian school.
And I want to kind of figure out
how I can either up my income,
do something to allow my wife to stay home.
I am getting a lump sum of fifty thousand dollars in
in November on my birthday
So I want to know if there's something I can do to use that money to be able to up my income or if I'm able
To use that in some sort of way to you know, I want my wife to stay home. What's the 50k for?
Why are you getting that? Yeah, so I've actually gotten
It was there was a lawsuit lawsuit from my family from years ago.
So I've actually gotten $50,000 before.
This will be my last payout, but I've gotten that before.
So I actually don't have any,
me and my wife, we don't have any student loans,
any card debt, anything like that.
What'd you use the last lump sum for?
It was all school, my wife's school and everything.
So we have, I have money in my Roth IRA.
We just bought a house in December.
So I'm all out of the old money.
Okay, good.
No debt, you guys are paying for school and cash.
Do you have money saved anywhere?
I got about $30,000 in my Roth IRA.
Okay, do you have any liquid money saved, like non-retirement?
Yep, we have about $12,000 in our safety and our emergency fund.
Okay, cool. And what's your income that you make off of the job that you have?
It's about $32,000 after taxes.
A year?
Yes, ma'am.
And is this the long- You said this is the dream job.
Is there any upward mobility?
Is there a ladder in this world?
Can you teach at a college or what are your options here?
Because 32K is gonna be tough to live on as a household,
as a Bible teacher.
That's for sure.
Yeah, that's what I'm calling you guys.
So yeah, that I don't really know.
I don't want to teach college. I kind of like I don't really know. I don't I don't want to, you know, teach college.
I kind of like teaching like the like the little kids I teach fifth grade through ninth grade.
And so I love the people that I'm around and everything. So I would like to work at the
school that I'm at. You know, I love the people I'm with. It's kind of affiliated with my
church in some sort of way. So I like to stay there and do something else. I've looked at
in a real estate or doing something with my money.
Is it 40 hours a week?
Are you working 40 hours a week
or tell us more about your schedule?
Yeah, I'm working 40 hours a week.
It's full-time school.
Okay.
Yeah, I'm with George.
The glaring issue here is your core income is not enough.
And there's not, I mean, it doesn't sound like
you're gonna go jump careers to a 40 hour a week job
and then do Bible teaching on the weekends for ministry.
Yeah.
How much of that do you take home?
Like what's your take home every month?
Just to put it in real terms.
It is $1,300.
Okay, and then how much is your rent or your mortgage?
You said you have a house.
Yeah, our mortgage, yeah, it's 2,500.
I mean, my wife, she's a teacher too.
She gets $60,000 a year.
Okay, so, okay.
And didn't I hear you say at the beginning,
you're trying to get to the point
to where she's a stay at home mom?
Yes ma'am.
You tell me how it works,
because the math is not math in where I'm sitting.
No, it doesn't, yeah, I know,
that's why I'm hoping to use this $50,000
to help me do something.
So I'm kind of calling you guys for-
But $50,000 is not gonna replace 60,000 of income yearly.
Yeah.
You know, so the problem is it's not gonna get you
very far.
Now you could, you know, pay off the mortgage
and that's gonna reduce your expenses.
There's only two ways to get this margin
is either make more or spend less.
And you guys will likely have to do both,
but the really hard truth you're gonna have to have
the conversation to have with your wife is,
I don't know that I can continue doing this full-time if this is our new dream
yeah what's the time what's the time frame on this I mean is she pregnant
tell us more about what you what the timeline is she's not pregnant but you
know I would like her to be so we talk about it and everything but you know
people always say the Lord will provide but I don't want to put the Lord my God
to the test so you know you know, I want-
Sometimes he provides by making us get up off the couch
and go work our butts off.
That's a good word, George.
He gave us the ability to work.
And so that's my challenge to you.
I'm not saying you need to leave your profession,
but if you're saying this is what we want,
and this is God's will for our life,
that might mean I need to total career switch
and go, I'm still gonna do Bible teaching for fun. I'm going to be very involved with my church. But what I do Monday
through Friday, 40 hours a week is going to be completely different because I need to go make
65 to 90 grand to make this life work. Yeah. What's the total mortgage? What,
tell us that picture because let's see if we can lower your expenses. Yeah, so we had a 7.5 interest rate, the house of $300,000,
and we put 8% down or something like that.
But the mortgage is worth 300?
Yeah, yes, and I was kind of assuming you guys were,
it was 2,500, and I was kind of assuming
you guys were gonna tell me this,
which is okay that I need to go get a different job.
I'm totally fine with doing that, doing so and so.
I just kinda didn't know that somebody you know put the name Ramsey like
on the title. Yeah. What's giving me the okay to kind of do this? Well here's the thing.
It's already tight just like if right now if your wife said hey I'm not going to work anymore with
just the two of you guys this would be almost impossible. Oh yeah. But now let's add kids to
it and it becomes 100% impossible.
And I just, I don't think that you want to enter into that and thinking, okay, God will
just carry me.
I think that that's going to be a fool's errand if you do that.
I think that you need to look at this and go, okay, let me count the cost before I build
this tower and let's find out how this works.
And the truth is, the math that you're doing right now does not
work. And so you're going to have to say, okay, what, what must I make in order to allow
my wife to stay home with at least a little bit of comfort? Because what will happen is
if you, if she's staying home with no margin, that means I'm home with two, one or two kids,
or I don't know how many kids you guys are playing on habit and she doesn't have any
place to go. And that right there, I can tell you,
that's a tough recipe when she's,
because she's gonna feel that more than anything.
Because if she's staying at home,
she's probably the one doing the grocery run.
She's the one having to look for things
for the kids to do all day.
So if anybody's gonna feel that lack of margin,
it will be her.
That makes sense.
Yeah, totally, I agree.
I'm gonna send you a great resource, Vinny. It's Ken Coleman's Find the Work Your Wire
to Do. It comes with a Get Clear Career Assessment. I want you to read it, take the assessment.
It's going to help you figure out what are the underlying skills. Clearly, you love to
be working with youth. You're a great teacher, educator. Let's use those underlying skills
to find you some core income that's enough to sustain the life that you want.
And right now you're between a rock and a hard place.
You're saying, I love what I do, but we also have this other dream here.
Well, one of them is going to have to shift.
Yeah.
You know, George, I love the idea of a stay at home parent.
I mean, I love it.
My wife now stays at home.
Exactly.
It's amazing.
But how would you feel?
I mean, the stress that, the blessing that that can be,
but also the stress that can come from that
if it's not the right time
or if the finances are not there to support it.
That's the part that-
We get that call very often.
They go, she stays at home, I make 40 grand,
we've got three kids, we're drowning.
What do we do?
Well, he's got the blessing right now of kind of foresight.
It would be foolish for him to do this,
having heard what we've just said. Yes. They have two incomes, they don't have a kid yet, He's got the blessing right now of kind of foresight. It would be foolish for him to do this,
having heard what we've just said.
Yes.
They have two incomes, they don't have a kid yet.
There's some planning we can do here.
Yeah.
So if this isn't a giant shock to our financial future.
Yeah, because a lot of the calls we get,
they're already on that side of it.
And it's really hard to get the ship upright at that point
because time is limited, resources are limited,
because now the kids are already part of the equation.
So if on this side of it, if you can say,
okay, what needs to happen?
And the point is on any choice,
there is going to be a measure of sacrifice
and you really can't get past that.
That's just life.
Very rarely do we get to make a list of wants
and just jump into all of them with little to no sacrifice.
There is a cost associated with anything you want.
That's right. You got to choose.
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You're listening to The Ramsey Show. I'm Jade Warshaw. Next to
me is a bestselling author, George Campbell. We're taking
your calls this hour. So if you want to get involved, it's easy
to do. Call the number 888-825-5225. We'll get you on. All right. Let us go to the phone
lines where we've got Lori in Orlando, Florida, my neck of the woods. What's going on, Lori?
Hello. Thank you so much for taking my call. I appreciate it. Okay. So I noticed that we
recently signed a lease for a place and then at the end there's a calculator that shows
you like a mortgage rate and it's the mortgage
salary is a lot lower than the rent. So would you recommend, um,
with we're following Dave Ramsey's plan and we were trying to save up for the
baby's, the emergency fund. Um, even though we're not in a position to buy now,
um, I'm thinking why would the mortgage, I mean, the mortgage seems lower.
So what would your advice be?
Follow the steps and be and become ready to buy a home
or because it's better to rent?
So I'm just kind of wondering about that.
Yeah, I mean, the truth is over time,
it's always gonna be a better choice
for you to buy over rent.
But the biggest deciding factor
in whether you buy or rent for the moment
is what you can afford.
And so-
Oh, even though you have that.
And we have a very specific definition
of what that looks like,
because guess what?
The bank is gonna loan you way more than should be legal.
And you'll go, oh my gosh,
the bank thinks we can spend $2,800 a month on our mortgage.
I guess we can, even though we make four grand.
They'll take you up to 40%, 50%.
So here's the parameter to keep you in line here.
It's 25% of your after tax income.
So this is after taxes, but before other deductions
like your 401k investing or healthcare,
you want it to be 25% of your income.
And we only recommend a 15 year mortgage.
And then there's parameters before that.
Also, Lori, we want it to be a blessing for you.
We never want somebody to get into a house
and then the house has them, right?
And so for you, and not just for you, but for everybody,
we want to make sure that you're out of debt, right?
Because we don't want you having a bunch of payments.
We want to make sure that you have three to six months
of expenses saved because the worst thing ever
is to buy a $500,000 house and then the $5,000 AC goes out
and you can't afford to fix it, right?
And so-
Oh, that's not going to, yes.
That's what people don't factor in
is the extra cost of home maintenance, repairs.
The risk is on you.
The homeowner's insurance is more expensive.
Property taxes can and will go up.
HOA fees can and will go up.
And so that's why we want you to be debt-free,
emergency fund in place, have a strong down payment,
try to avoid that PMI, private mortgage insurance.
And then you can use our mortgage calculator.
You can go to ramsysolutions.com slash real estate.
We've got tons of tools and resources for you there.
And so I know it looks like,
oh, we might as well just spend that money on the mortgage,
but that could be on a 30 year high interest rate,
all of these things.
And you may not be quite ready to jump into homeownership.
Yeah, good question, thanks for the call.
All right, let's go to Nilly in Hartford, Connecticut.
What's going on, Nilly?
Hello.
Hi.
How's it going?
Going good, how can we help?
I'm good.
I've been running my own business
for a little over two and a half years now
Okay, I've been having trouble finding services that give me good information
I've called all the biggest like accounting firms and stuff like that. What kind of information are you trying to find?
I'm trying to see if I should incorporate as an S corporation, you know
I see all these like
TikTok videos and like if you do this and you have this board of directors.
And they told you to ride off a G wagon
and go spend 150 grand.
No, I'm definitely not doing any of that sort of stuff.
Is it just for liability protection?
Well, liability as well,
because I've been working with business seven days a week
since I opened it.
I haven't hired anyone yet,
but I am going to be looking to hire someone.
I do have a lawyer who's very good.
What kind of business is it?
Talk to Mike.
I do trading cards.
Trading cards?
Magic the Gathering.
Magic the Gathering.
Do you have an LLC right now?
No, I'm a sole proprietorship.
Okay.
And why do you feel like you've outgrown that?
I started this business with like $3,000 in my pocket,
and I'm slated to make close to in sales
a million dollars this year.
Nice.
So, just the thing is I paid like,
it was like over $50,000 in taxes last year.
So what are you doing right now?
You're just doing business as whatever.
Social entrepreneurship.
Yeah, okay.
I mean, yeah, I would sit down with an accountant and say, what makes sense for me to do?
I mean, my husband and I, we did an escort, but it's an accountant's going to be able
to say what's the best for your tax purposes, for your business type, for your liability.
They're going to be able to decide what makes most sense for you.
But congratulations, a million dollars is pretty sweet.
Yeah, I've called all the biggest accounting firms
in the area.
You don't need to account, call the big accounting firms.
I would get with a Ramsey Trusted Tax Pro.
Go to ramsysolutions.com, click on Trusted Services.
I'd get their opinion first before making any moves.
And I think they're gonna look at your actual numbers.
Something we can't do on air right now
is unpack your entire business
and give you very specific tax advice.
That would be unwise.
We're not experts in that field.
But I would contact one of our Ramsey trusted pros
to walk you through this.
And they might go,
yeah, you're at the point where this makes sense.
Here's how much money you'll save.
Here's the reason you're doing this.
Only work with someone that is willing to teach you,
who's willing to educate you on the next move
instead of just go, just source, trust me, bro.
I got this.
Good call, it's a good thought.
Thanks for the call, Nilly.
Let's go to Zach.
He's in Indianapolis, Indiana.
We're just working, George.
Reason, let's go.
What's going on, Zach?
Hi, how are you all today?
Doing great, how can we help today?
So I'm in the process of looking at purchasing a new home. I kind of have some scares with the market the way it is.
At least in my area, it seems like a lot of homes
prices are valued a lot more than what the home really is worth.
And I'm actually in the process of trying to sell my home
and trying to be fairly fair about it. But But again trying to buy something that some of the prices making it a little difficult for me to sell mine
But the biggest question is my situation has kind of recently changed my wife
And I have no biological kids that we decided to foster and ended up adopting three of the kids
So we're my wife and I I'm a trade plumber done it for
years almost ten years went to UA and stuff and I actually recently got out
took a maintenance position just to have more time at home with the kids to help
my wife because never having kids before I'll be honest we didn't really realize
what we were doing. What are their ages? Not that I don't love every minute of it, but we're trying to figure it out.
We've been doing it a little over a year now and it's been up and down.
But aside from that, we're wanting to buy a bigger home.
We're in a two bedroom and three kids and plus the dogs and it's just not ideal.
It was a perfect house for just my wife and I, but it's not practical anymore.
But I've got a lot of people that tell me.
What would you get if you sold it for what you're wanting what would be the net profit after the mortgage is paid
off fees are paid all that well I really wouldn't be walking away with anything
beyond what would pay my down payment on the new home which would be what I'm
wanting to you right around 15 15 20 or. So you'd net 15 and then you turn around and put that down on the new home?
Correct. There is more profit coming from the home, but I want to use that to pay off a couple things just to help balance out.
Do you have other debt?
What a mortgage payment would be. Not a ton.
Tell us what it is.
My debt right now, I'm right under a hundred thousand.
That's a lot. I owe 64 on my home.
I and I have a one car loan.
That's a 30,000 a used car.
My wife's income as well as mine together,
we bring about 115,000 a year.
So the 100K that you mentioned,
that's including the current mortgage of 64,000?
That is correct.
Okay, so we cleared that out,
and then after that you'd only have the 30k car.
Correct, because I'd be paying the rest off.
Do you have any savings?
I do have a motorcycle loan.
Yeah, we do have some savings, not a whole lot.
We've got roughly right about 8,000.
And the big reason for that is because we didn't know about this until after we had
adopted the kids, but we received benefits for them, which we after we had adopted the kids,
but we received benefits for them,
which we'll only get for the 18,
but I kind of feel greedy taking it.
But we tried to use that money to help pay off debts
as well as, and we do use it on the kids
and kind of make their lives better.
You shouldn't feel bad for taking that money
because it's there to help you take care of the kids
and they're now part of your household.
You paying off debt is helping you take care of the kids. they're now part of your household. I think it's a-
You paying off debt is helping you take care of the kids.
But here's the bad news, Zach.
I would not move forward with this,
not because you're not in a good spot to buy a home
at the market, but because you got some work to do.
You gotta get your ducks on the line.
Clean up the debt, get an emergency fund,
get a bigger down payment.
I would rent for a year in a house that makes sense
for you guys and then make the purchase
once you're in a better spot.
Yeah, I agree 100%. It's going to feel like more of a blessing.
If you do this house right now, it has the ability to bring a lot of
chaos financially into your life.
So I agree with George.
This is the Ramsey Show.
For free tools and resources to help you reach your home goals,
go to ramsysolutions.com slash real estate or click the link in the show notes.
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All right.
Thanks for hanging out with us on the Ramsey show.
I'm Jade Warsha.
Next to me is George camel.
Hey, we're heading into fall and it's time to get your money on point.
I don't know about you, George,
but I feel like the holidays just hit.
It's gonna be Halloween here in a minute,
which means in a minute it's gonna be Thanksgiving
and then it's gonna be Christmas
and before you know it, it's gonna be the new year.
And most of us are gonna look up and go,
oh my gosh, I have made a real mess of my finances.
Your brain just turns into pumpkin pie
and you just go spend and spend and spend and go,
well, what are you gonna do?
It's the holidays.
Yeah, man.
And everybody's demanding time and money of you
around this season, right?
It's like, aren't you gonna,
are you gonna bring the kids for Thanksgiving?
And people are giving you their Christmas list.
And you gotta buy the costumes.
Remember that party?
You gotta buy a thing for that.
And it just never ends.
Yeah, hosting the parties, going to the parties.
What side are you gonna bring to the party?
There's just so much going on with your life and your money,
but let's try to get ahead of it before it gets worse.
It might be bad, but it doesn't have to get worse, all right?
And I can help you with that.
I'm doing a free live training here coming up
Tuesday, October 29th.
It's gonna be at 1 p.m. Eastern time, 12 p.m. Central time.
This is your lunch break, okay?
And it's on Zoom, so no one has to see your face.
If you're still in bed, that's fine.
I don't care if you're in your pajamas.
I don't care if you're sitting in your car
on your lunch break.
You can get involved.
You can register for free at ramsysolutions.com slash,
wow, www.ramsysolutions.com slash webinar
is where you're going to register.
And now here's the thing,
if you can't make it in real time, still register
because you can watch the link later.
We'll email it to you and you can watch it later.
But the point is over a hundred thousand people
have signed up for this webinar series.
And I've gotten to sit on there
and help with you guys' questions,
help you put together your budget for the first time,
help you find margin,
help you stop living paycheck to paycheck.
That's what this is all about.
And we can talk about goals, how to reach those goals.
But the point is, a budget is the number one way
to eliminate debt.
A budget is the number one way to build wealth.
We know that we've seen that.
And a budget is the number one way to get on the same page
as your spouse.
So if that has anything to do with you,
you need to sign up for this.
And oh, did I mention, a budget is the number one way
to achieve financial peace.
We know what we've seen it time after time.
So it's the holiday season, enjoy the holidays,
but don't let it get crazy.
And this is your way to get it all under control
and make sure that you have a plan going into the holidays
and going into the new year.
Again, live training October 29th,
ramsysolutions.com slash webinars where you want
to go to register. All right, Bridget is on the line. She's in Omaha, Nebraska. Bridget, how can we help?
Oh gosh, hi friends. I'm so excited to talk to you guys. Okay, moral of the story. I'm in a 23 grand
in student loan debt and I'm living in delusion slash trying to get back to reality. I recently got my identity stolen and what that entails was two
cashier's checks taken out and they closed my accounts and I've only gotten
back $358.59 out of the three grand. So I'm in this delusion land of when I
finally get my money back I don't want to keep screwing myself
over, moral of the story.
And I just don't follow your guys' recommendation because I have $1,300 saved up in like cash
for the emergency fund, so I'm trying to do the baby steps.
I have an Acorn value.
Do I pull out the two grand?
And then I just don't know what to do.
So you bought some, is this single stocks, crypto?
What's in the Acorn account?
Single stocks or the EECs or sorry, the Invest Later
or I'm sure I'm gonna pull it up right now.
I should have been better prepared, sorry.
But yes, they're non-retirement funds.
I would cash them out and use that toward your debt payoff.
Okay.
Who's helping you with the stolen ID?
Is this just you tracking this down yourself?
Yes, kind of, but I do file the police report and then the detective is just not getting
back to me.
He hasn't responded since October 10th.
So of the 3,000 stolen, you said how much is recovered?
I've only gotten a check from the bank for $358.59.
Oh my gosh.
And that was me being absolutely insane to the bank,
like going in every single day, being like,
no, figure it out.
Cause I noticed within 40 minutes
that I went on to go get gas and then it said car decline.
Like there's no way, there's no way.
And then.
So have they told you the timeline?
Is it under investigation?
What's the status?
Under investigation,
but the detective hasn't even got back to me.
Okay.
And I've even gone down through the precinct
and I sat there for two hours
and not leaving until he talked to me.
And then finally talked to me.
He's all looking into it.
Okay, yeah, you gotta be the squeaky wheel here.
Have you put a fraud alert on all of your credit accounts
and frozen your credit with all the bureaus?
Yes, she also tried to open that day
two different credit cards
and I put it since I noticed it, so yeah.
Okay.
So you acted quickly to kind of mitigate this
to keep it from spreading, which is really, really good.
Have you pulled your credit report
to see if there's anything else that's been opened?
Just that she tried to, but once she did it, it was already black.
Okay.
So nothing got pulled.
I would pull it just to make sure that whatever's on there is accurate, and you can do that
at annualcreditreport.com.
You can pull all three for free and just verify that there's nothing TBGB on there.
You can also file a report with the FTC, the Federal Trade Commission, as well.
Yep, I did that.
Okay.
Good, good.
You've done all the right things.
On top of that, I would, for the future,
have ID theft protection.
And I've got mine covered through Xander.
You can go to xander.com to get that set up.
This is for anyone listening as well.
Cause I went through the same thing, Brigid,
back when I was broke in 2013,
and I had just started at Ramsey, 36,000 student loan debt.
And they opened up these cell phone accounts in my name,
racked up debt,
I had collectors calling me, it's scary.
You feel just so exposed, you lose just trust of humanity.
It's not a fun time, so I'm sorry that you went through that,
but it sounds like you've done the hard work
to climb out of this, and now the next step is
let's follow the baby steps.
So you're working on the student loans,
is that the only debt you have?
Yes. All right. Because I paid off which I oh, you know how long so I
Stopped being my car payment learn that the hard way and then I was gonna get repossessed and then I was like, what are you doing?
I was just being depressed little girly and so then I just paid it all off at once
I don't know if that was a stupid mistake or because now it's saying on my credit report that
They close the issue.
What is they?
They just did as a write off.
And I'm like, no, but I paid you guys.
What do you mean?
Was it in collections before?
And no, just wanted collections once.
I'm not on my credit report.
Oh, well, the debt's completely cleared.
Now you've paid it off completely.
Yes.
Listen, I would try to. You've paid it off completely. Yes. Listen, I wouldn't.
I tried it.
I wouldn't worry about it.
I wouldn't worry about it too much
because you're about to pay off these student loans
and your credit report's gonna go to zero anyway.
Okay.
So that's the way that works.
Next, let's list the student loans, smallest to largest.
We'll make minimum payments on all of them,
but put any and all extra money on the smallest debt.
That's how it works. Oh gosh,
let's take another call. Brian in Baltimore, we're up against the clock. What you got going on, Brian?
Hi, how's it going? Thanks for taking my call. My main question was, should I hold off on paying
my student loans until I'm making more money? Well, how much are you making now and how much
are your student loans? So right now I'm making about 70,000. I'm currently a resident in training.
Okay. Right now I have about 220 or so in student loans. Is it your only debt?
I have about 3k in consumer debt which I plan to pay off by the end of the year.
Okay well if I were you I'd start I, it's never too soon to start working the baby steps.
And so if I were you, I would do that.
I'd set $1,000 of savings aside as soon as you get it.
Do you have any money saved?
Yeah, currently, I already have my $1,000 in emergency loan
fund.
I'm working on paying off the consumer debt.
OK.
Yeah.
To answer your question, would I wait,
if the $3,000 is the smallest debt, yeah, I'm going to pay that one off first. So in that way, question, would I wait? If the 3,000 is the smallest debt,
yeah, I'm gonna pay that one off first.
So in that way, yes, I would wait.
But then when it comes to these student loans,
is it all one lump sum,
or do you have it divided into a bunch of little loans?
I'll have it divided into a bunch of little loans.
Okay, so what we're gonna do is we're gonna look at
all of the debt, including the consumer debt,
and we're gonna list it smallest to largest.
Now with the student loans, some of them might be grouped together in a payment and that's
fine because we're going to make minimum payments on everything.
But as far as what you have left after you've made minimum payments, you're going to put
it at whatever the smallest debt is, whether it's a student loan, a credit card, a medical
debt, whatever it is, you're going to knock that thing out and then that's going to free
up money to go towards the next smallest debt.
And so that's really the way this works is there any way to do some side
hustling on the side you said residency right correct yeah right now we're not
too much time to do any side hustling how much margin do you have each month to throw out the debt
if I were not paying the debt I would have about 700 in margin or so okay yeah if Yeah, if I had 700 a month and you said,
what should I do with it?
I'd go, let's start tackling this debt
because it's gonna be there.
And so let's not be the ostrich in the sand.
Let's be already attacking it
and then just increase momentum once we make more money.
Yeah, and if these are federal student loans,
this might be a good time to kind of utilize
one of those systems where it's lowering
the minimum payment.
So that way you have more margin available
to throw out whatever the smallest debt is.
But I want you moving with intensity if you choose to use that method.
This is the Ramsey Show.
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all right thank you for listening to the Ramsey show I'm Jade Warshaw George
camel is next to me host of the George camel show on YouTube today's Ramsey show
question of the day is sponsored by why refi hey it's hard to make progress when
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Today's question comes from Sam in Pennsylvania.
My fiance and I are considering a new home build
in the 500,000 range in our dream community.
Together we earn about 120,000 a year.
We have a child and no debt other than my current mortgage
which doesn't have a lot of equity.
We're cash flowing our February wedding.
We'll be putting down 25K to reserve the lot
and another 25 for an additional down payment before closing.
Are we moving too fast,
considering everything going on in our lives?
On one hand, this is a phenomenal opportunity
that gives us exactly what we want and can afford.
But with the wedding planning and moving costs
on top of everything, we're still on the fence.
Please give us permission or a swift slap in the face.
Wow, I got aggressive real quick.
I think she knows that they might need
a little bit of a slap.
Yeah, this is, I mean, they say they can afford,
but Jay, I'm out here crunching the numbers
and I'm going, okay, 500,000,
they're putting about 50,000 down, it's 10%
with the interest rates that where they're at,
private mortgage insurance, because they're not putting 20% or more down to 10% with the interest rates that where they're at, private mortgage insurance,
because they're not putting 20% or more down,
property taxes, homeowners insurance, potentially HOA.
What are we looking at?
We're talking 4,700 bucks a month.
Didn't she say they make 120 a year?
They make 120 a year.
And so the question is, you know,
what are they taking home?
Because I doubt it's more than eight grand or so.
So you're talking a five grand mortgage
with an eight grand take-home pay.
And wrong answer.
Unless there's something we don't know about,
this sounds like a horrible idea.
This house in the dream community
is about to become a nightmare if they do it right now.
So the fallacy is if we don't do it now,
we're always gonna look back and go,
oh, the one that got away, why didn't we?
Now that home is 700,000 in our dream community.
Yeah, but you're not coming into it broke,
calling in the show going, Jade, we made a mistake,
we did a lot at once, we had the wedding,
we bought the house we couldn't afford,
and we need to sell now,
and we're gonna lose money on this.
Oh my gosh.
That's what I see in their future, my crystal ball.
Yeah, plus, listen, they're not even married yet,
we always say it's a good idea,
unless one of the people already owns a house of their own.
You know.
But he said he owns one, but he's got no equity.
So he's probably gonna break even on the sale here.
That's fine, but they could live there for a little while,
or if he's gonna sell it and they break even,
whatever, go rent for a while, I would not rush into a buy.
This reminds me, George,
when my husband and I first got married,
there is a community, Jackson Valley was the community.
And we-
Sounds ritzy.
Here's my point is, if you go in that community now,
I'm like, why did I care about this so much back then?
You know what I mean?
What were, did it have nice amenities or just fancy homes?
Yeah, it was nice at the time.
They were kind of like a craft-
Craftsman style, yeah.
That craftsman style, yeah.
That craftsman style.
And I just thought, this is amazing.
And now I go and look at it, I'm like, they're old.
Just like, you know, they're 20 years old.
You know what I'm saying?
And so the idea that you won't love something else.
The shininess wears off quickly.
There's always gonna be something that's the dream.
You know, there will always be a great opportunity.
Listen, if you're about to just get married,
get to know each other, rent for a while.
As I'm saying. Like home ownership
and building a new home,
it is a part to full-time job to be doing that.
Yeah, to build too as you're, that's a lot.
A lot of decisions to be made,
a lot of chaperoning to be done on that project.
So I would just rent for a year, keep saving up,
and then we'll see where we're at.
Maybe you have 100 or 200 down a few years from now,
now we can step into this with peace.
So would you call this a swift slap in the face?
I'm not gonna slap, I'm not slapping anybody.
But I'm gonna, I can't give you permission,
and I will say not now.
Not now. This is a wait.
I like that.
Not no, just not now. No violence.
Yeah.
All right, let's go to Matt.
He's in Toledo, Ohio.
What's going on, Matt?
How can we help you out?
Hey, thanks for taking my call. How are you doing? Uh-huh going on, Matt? How can we help you out? Hey, thanks for taking my call.
How are you doing?
Uh-huh, we're good.
How can we help?
Yeah, so I just got a letter in the mail today
from the local courts with a judgment against my name
for a total debt from a credit card company,
the amount of $2,380 for a card that I did not open.
Oh, that sounds like fraud then, does it not?
Yeah.
Have you ever done business with this company?
Did you ever have any accounts or apply for a card or anything like that?
No, I did not. It's actually a Spirit Airlines credit card.
Oh, insult to injury. Oh, gosh.
Okay, have you contacted Spirit's credit card department
and said, hey, this was open fraudulently
and I need proof and here's the statements
and all of that to get to the bottom of it?
No, I have not.
I literally just got this letter in the mail
probably 45 minutes to an hour ago.
The other question, are you sure it's legitimate?
There's a lot of scams out there
where they make you think that it's a collector and they say,
hey, if you pay us this, then we'll call it good.
That's a good point, George.
And so I would be seeing what the name of the company is
and then research that company elsewhere.
Don't contact them through anything on that paper.
Look them up online.
Yeah, on the summons from court,
the company that filed is LVNV Funds, LLC.
Is it showing on your credit report?
If you pull up your credit report, are you seeing that this credit card is part of it?
I have not pulled that up yet.
Go to annualcreditreport.com and pull your credit report from all three bureaus and see
if it's reflected on there.
If it's not reflected on there, it's likely a scam.
And the other thing you can do is contact the actual court
and go, hey, I got this in the mail.
I know there's a lot of scams going around.
Is this legit?
Because I didn't open this
and I know there's a lot of things going around right now
before I, you know, people get freaked out
and their goal is to freak you out and say,
but if you just pay us a little bit of money,
we'll make it go away.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I would do my due diligence on this.
When I get off this call,
my next move would be to check the credit report.
If it is on the credit report, I'm gonna freeze it
and I'm gonna drill down on this
and make sure the right parties know that this is fraudulent.
But I agree with George,
I would not deal off of that paper in front of you.
And then document everything.
Document your call with spirit, what happened,
what did they say, what was the name of the agent, what time, all of that, so that you have front of you. And then document everything. Document your call with spirit, what happened, what did they say, what was the name of the agent,
what time, all of that, so that you have all the info.
Okay, and the other thing that says on here
is it was filed, the judgment was filed on August 30th.
Okay.
Which is, what, two months from pretty much Thursday.
Yeah. Or Wednesday.
So, I don't know if that's,
I don't know why it took so long to get the paper to me.
Listen, we can't answer these questions
until you drill down a little bit further because-
You got some phone calls to make.
I'd be calling the courts, I'd be calling Spirit,
and I'd get to the bottom of it.
But just know, I mean, don't pay this.
Don't pay anyone a dime for anything.
That's the bottom line here.
And then make sure you freeze all of your accounts
with all the credit bureaus.
So you got your day ahead of you, man.
And this is another opportunity for that ID theft protection.
I mean, this is the second one in the last hour, George,
where we're seeing this.
Yes, it's happening more and more.
Yeah, and Xander is where you wanna go.
They're gonna make sure that you're protected.
And here's the thing, what I love about Xander
is they're gonna fight the fight for you.
Because when you have identity theft,
the amount of hours that you have to put
into tracking people down, trying to recover the money,
trying to explain your case,
trying to tell them what happened,
ain't nobody got time for that.
But if you have ID theft protection,
they're gonna do all of that for you.
And it's so cheap.
George, I think-
Yeah, we're talking the cost of a pizza.
Six, 12 bucks, like, it's not a lot. I know for my whole family, I- Yeah, we're talking the cost of a pizza. Six, 12 bucks, like it's not a lot.
I know for my whole family,
I don't think we pay more than $12 a month.
And so if you don't have it,
this is a good time for you to look into that
because you never know.
And especially around this time of year, George,
coming up in the new year,
when people are doing their tax returns
and they're waiting for that refund check to come through,
that is where people experience a lot of theft.
And so there's a lot going on.
So you wanna know A, if it's real.
I had a text come through the other day
from a bank saying somebody's been using your card scam.
Wow, was it your bank?
Did they say it was your bank?
It was Ally.
And what I do is I usually, if it's a phone call,
if it's a text, I'll usually Google the number.
And a lot of times if it's a scammy number,
if you Google it, it'll show you as a scam, yeah.
But what I never do is I never contact directly
through the text, through the email, through the letter.
I'll usually say, okay, if it's Ally,
let me just contact Ally from, you know.
With the info on their website.
Yeah, or if it's whatever.
Because you can even spoof numbers and emails now. So it looks like it's coming, let me just contact Ally from, you know. With the info on their website. Yeah, or if it's whatever. Because you can even spoof numbers and emails now.
So it looks like it's coming from legitimately
that website when it's not.
But if you contact them through that same email,
it'll actually go to Ally.
That's right.
So you gotta be real careful.
And I know like the elderly,
they're very highly targeted with these
because they're not as savvy as the youngsters,
but this affects everyone.
So go to Xander.com, get their ID theft protection.
Every single team member at Ramsey, Dave covers it
because it's that important to us.
Yeah.
And if you've been working our plan
and your credit score is rolled to zero,
make sure you've frozen your credit
because there's no reason for you to access it.
And when you freeze it,
it makes sure that nobody else is getting to it either.
All right, that does it for this hour of the show.
Thanks for hanging out with George and I. Stay tuned because we'll be right back
with another hour. app, your single source for content that keeps you motivated. The Ramsey Network
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From the Ramsey Network, it's the Ramsey Show. I'm Jade Warsha. Next to me is
George Campbell. We are your hosts for this afternoon. We're talking about your
life, your money, your relationships, your career. If you have something that's
burning in your spirit that you need help with, you have a question
that you need the answer to, George and I will do our best.
We'll put our heads together
and come up with a solution for you.
If you wanna call in, the number's easy,
888-825-5225.
Kelly will pick up, screen your call, get you on the line.
That's how it works.
All right, let's get into it, George.
We've got Cash, Very ironic from Columbia,
South Carolina. What's going on cash? Hey guys, how's it going? Thanks for taking the call.
You bet. How can we help? Yeah. So recently, I've been in contact with the bank looking
to see if I shouldn't do a cash out refi and the goal to try to pay off my mom's house.
Interesting. What's going on that you feel the rush to pay off your mom's house?
I mean she's not getting any younger and there's been some recent health scares so
looking to kind of simplify for her and just kind of make sure that you know however long we have
her she has you know just a rock star rest of her and however many days make sure that, you know, however long we have her, she has, you know, just a rock star rest of her.
And for many days she's got left, you know.
Listen, I love your I love your spirit of generosity.
I think that's great.
Generosity is one of those things.
I always want to make sure that we're in the position to be able to offer it without detriment to ourselves.
So tell us a little bit more about your financial situation to see if you're in a position to help, maybe not with a cash out refi, but in another way. Let's see. Tell us about your debt, your income.
Yeah, so income is currently $6,000 a year. Don't have any debt paid off car everything. The only debt that I have is the home that I'm in right now that I would be cash out refining,
which is purchase price is 135,
current evaluation is 180.
Okay.
What do you owe on it?
90.
Okay, so you're gonna do it,
you wanna do a cash out refi on your own home
and then take that money to pay off mom's mortgage?
Yes sir. What's left on her mortgage?
90.
Which is all the equity you have if you're lucky.
Yes. Yes sir.
What's her income situation?
She makes about $20 an hour. I'm not sure what that breaks down to.
Does she work 40 hours a week?
30, 30 hours now since the diagnosis.
What's the diagnosis?
Diabetes.
Okay.
And how old is she?
60. 60, did she just become diagnosed with diabetes or is it something that's progressed and it's gotten
Okay, you're breaking up on his cash. Sorry speak directly into your phone
Here's the bottom line
Here's the bottom line cash doing this is the equivalent to you going out and taking out a
$90,000 loan
at 7% interest in order to help mom out.
So now you're gonna have an $180,000 mortgage,
which is gonna be a lot for you to handle making 60K,
all so that mom's gonna be okay.
I just think there's better ways to help.
That might mean a stipend every month to help support her
if she's low on cash or whatever it may be.
Maybe she moves in with you eventually
if she needs more care and can't afford the mortgage.
But I would not do this good deed
that puts you way behind.
It's moving you backwards financially.
And I wanna see you have your own mask on first.
I'm 100% along with that.
I think it's great that you have no debt and I think it's a great great that you have no debt
and I think it's great that you're looking for ways to help. I think paying off the mortgage
causing you to go into debt is not the method. I like Georgia's idea of maybe it's a stipend,
maybe you're coming alongside her and really asking her, hey mom, what is your need? Because
she's making money.
What other information do you have about her financial picture?
Has she let you know, hey, this is tough for me, I'm having trouble making ends meet?
What has she said to you?
It's nothing too clear.
Just the general sense.
You can feel it when somebody's got some anxiousness, if the washing machine goes down.
And that's where I'd love for you to be able to step in,
if you've got a bunch of savings, go,
hey, I'm gonna get the washing machine fixed,
don't worry about that.
There's ways you can be generous
without making this giant financial move.
And on top of that, I would sit down with her
and make a budget with her and say,
hey, mom, what are your actual expenses?
How much are you actually bringing home a month?
What does this look like for the foreseeable future
when you factor in, you know, maybe social security?
And are we gonna be able to make this work?
Because I want a sustainable solution.
Yeah, I mean, I know we're asking you a lot of questions
about somebody else's financial pictures,
so you may not have these numbers,
but do you know, does she have a nest egg of any type?
You broke up on his cash. We're losing him.
Are you there?
I don't believe so at all.
Hello?
Yeah.
Do you know, does she have a nest egg at all?
I don't believe so.
Okay.
Well, you know, to George's point, you're going to need to sit down with her.
I don't know.
Sometimes it's hard to get parents to divulge the information that we want, right?
It's powdered butt syndrome. Yes, that's what I'm looking for.
If I powdered your butt,
I don't want your financial advice.
Exactly.
So that's a tough one.
But the fact that she's 60 and she's working
and she's got a health concern
and she's still working through that
does point to a little bit of a,
that's a green flag that there's probably
a financial strain going on.
And I love his heart to wanna help with that. But the truth is, I mean, you do not have to set yourself on fire to
keep somebody else warm. Ooh, I like that. You know what I'm saying? I got that from
Viola Davis. That's a, that's a very good quote. But the truth is we like, okay, we
feel guilt, you know, if you're, if you're in that situation, here you are looking at
your parents, they've taken care of you their, their whole life, right? And you see a situation where, okay, they could use somebody to help them
out. There is part of us on the inside that feels like, okay, this is my duty to step in.
And sometimes we'll do it, you know, at a fault when we've got our own kids, we've got our own
family that we could possibly put them in a worse situation by stepping in when we're really not equipped to do so.
Hmm. That's tough. That's tough. And again, it's gonna be carried on generationally if you keep going backwards instead of moving forwards.
That is true. All right, let's take a couple of social questions.
Yvette says this, hey, do you have any tips for a stay-at-home mom to make income while she's at home? George,
I feel like you could speak to this.
You gotta stay at home mom at home.
Yes, there's a lot of things you can do from home,
but you have to understand that
unless you have experience and skills
that you can work a remote job making serious money,
a lot of them are just not worth your time.
I'm like, you know, I'm gonna do surveys
or like one of those,
or I'm gonna do multi-level marketing
and build up a business.
Those things I do not recommend.
So what I would do is find things with your skillset,
with your experience that might be customer support roles.
Virtual assisting is a great one to do.
I love that.
And you can make 20, 30, 40 bucks an hour
doing this remotely from home
and sometimes on your own schedule.
I said it the other week and I'll say it again.
The other day I ordered two recliners from Wayfair.
They came and they were not what I expected.
And so I needed to send them back
and I had issues with sending them back
and I hopped on the customer service.
It was all via text.
Oh yeah.
And I thought to myself, whoever has this job,
like this person calls into the Ramsey show all the time.
They're looking for something that's work from home.
Maybe there's a disability that's, you know,
limiting what they can do.
But I'm like, if you can do a customer service job
that is texting, which means nobody has to see your face,
nobody has to hear your voice, like there is,
there are options out there, no matter who you are,
stay at home mom, if you've got some limitations,
there's a lot out there.
And you can go check out our free side hustle quiz,
ramsysolutions.com slash Side Hustle.
Our team created a quiz that walks you through,
hey, how much time do you have? What are your talents?
What is your target? Here's some ideas to get you started.
God, perfect. Perfect, George. Coming in clutch.
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YouTube or podcast.
You are listening to the Ramsey Show.
Thanks for hanging out with us.
I'm Jade Warshaw.
Next to me is George Camel.
Hey, let me tell you, this weekend here at Ramsey was a really amazing weekend.
We had our money in marriage getaway event.
It was our second one that we've done here on campus in person and it was incredible.
George and I were both part of that, but Dr. John DeLoney and Rachel Cruz were kind of heading
that whole thing up.
It was great.
We had 500 couples from all across America here on campus.
They spent the weekend here with their spouse
and it was pretty freaking awesome, George,
if I do say so myself.
It was, I can vouch for it.
And it was so good that they wanted to do this
for people who maybe can't visit Nashville.
Yes, which I like that.
And so we're doing a brand new virtual event
called Money and Marriage Date Night.
And this is one you don't have to worry about
the flights and the hotels and all of the expenses
that come along with that.
So grab a virtual ticket and you can tune in
tomorrow night from anywhere, even your couch.
John and Rachel will be ready to guide you and your spouse
through this one night refresh for your connection
and communication so you can head into this
busy season as a team.
Tickets cost just 49 bucks.
You can get yours at ramsysolutions.com slash events,
or click the link in the description
if you're listening on YouTube or podcast.
Love it, meeting people where they're at,
be there or be square.
All right, let's go to LaDonna.
Houston, Texas is where she's at.
What's going on, LaDonna?
Hey, how are y'all doing?
I'm doing good.
How can we help?
Well, I'm 74 years old
and I'm trying to get my estate in order.
I have $400,000 in cash that I need to know
what to do with it to protect it
so that my two sons get it
and that it doesn't go through probate and also
that it's accessible and available in case I need it for care.
Do I put it in a trust?
I have a trust set up.
You do?
Do I put it in CDs?
Do I invest it?
Do I buy real estate?
What do I need to do?
Well...
Right now it's just in CDs.
You've already got...
What kind of trust is it that you have set up?
Just a plain, a revocable living trust.
Perfect. Okay. So you could put it within the trust and then name the kids as beneficiaries
and that will simplify the distribution process.
Okay. Is that the best thing to do?
Yeah.
I mean, and then...
That'll give you the most control over what happens with it.
I mean, if you have them listed as beneficiaries on the bank account, they're gonna get the
money.
Right.
Right.
Was there something you wanted to do with the money in the meantime?
There's taxes on it.
Well, there shouldn't be taxes.
I'm sorry?
There shouldn't be taxes on this inheritance, and you're likely not gonna have an estate
that's going to trigger taxes that's beyond the amount.
We're talking millions and millions and millions.
So I'm not worried about this,
but I would also make sure that you're working
with a good estate planning attorney,
walking through all of these different things
and setting this all up in a way that suits your wishes.
Are you doing this alone?
Well, no, my trust and attorney set up my trust.
Okay.
But this money was separate from that.
I would ask them, I would just say,
hey, I wanna make sure that it gets split between them
with very little, very much an easy process
to distribute this, and I want both of them on this
at this age or when this event happens
and they can make sure that you do it
in the best way possible.
That's their job.
And I'd be looking for a way too that it can grow over
the time between now and then.
Yeah, what happens when you live to 94
and for the next 20 years,
the 400K is just sitting there making nothing.
Well, I'm at a point in my life everything is paid for, I don't need any more money,
I don't want any more problems, I don't want anything else to have to take care of and
worry about.
She really said, more money, more problems.
She said, I'm not trying to make more, there's more problems in my hands.
I'm at the point in life where I want to just be simple.
I want to put it up where they get it if something happens.
Is it in a high-yield savings account?
No, it's in a high yield savings account?
No, it's in a CD. Oh, okay.
What's the CD making right now?
Is it like a four and a half or 5%?
Yes.
Okay.
That's fine for now.
Once the CD, you know, matures,
you're gonna have to do something else with it, right?
Right.
Because you might need this money, is that true?
Or do you have other money that you can use to live and cover any of your expenses?
Well, I do.
I don't have to touch this.
I have my retirement and my social security, and it's enough for me to live on.
Okay.
Yeah.
I mean, after the CD matures, I talk with a SmartVestor Pro and see if there's another
way that you can invest this, something that you understand
that's easy to be managed, and that way,
at least it's growing from now until the day
that your kids get their hands on it.
And the other idea is you could gift it to them
while you're alive.
Yeah, I like that. I mean, you can do it to, what,
17 grand per year without triggering
any of the gift tax pieces there.
That's a good idea.
And I like the idea of helping them,
giving them a leg up while they're still younger.
That's when you need it the most.
The biggest part of this, I think,
is to make sure that they know what's coming to them,
whether it's yearly, like you're talking about,
or if it's something that's gonna be a lump sum,
kind of letting them know, here's the money that's coming,
and just letting them know.
So it's not a surprise. Dave always talks about that I think is a good a good idea. Love it. All right
Thanks for the call good subject matter there. Let's go to mark. He's in Kansas City, Missouri. What's going on mark?
Thank you for taking my call
You're welcome
well, my
wife and I are both 60 and we're living on my disability check, uh, because
I've, I have a terminal illness and we've racked up some consumer debt.
Prior to that, we were completely debt free.
Um, just things that I wanted to go out and buy. But now we're in a position
where the roof on our house, um, was not installed correctly seven years ago and we have severe
water damage, rot and water coming into the house. And so I need to get the roof done and I'm questioning whether we should finance that,
possibly put the consumer debt and the repair together.
I know you don't like debt and I don't want debt.
You're talking about doing a debt consolidation loan?
A HELOC.
What do you mean putting, oh, a HELOC.
Tell us more about, what are you getting every month
from disability?
Tell us more about the rest of your financial snapshot.
Okay, I get $3060 a month.
Is your wife on disability too?
She is not. In fact, she's never worked. She stayed at home and homeschooled our children. Is she able to work now?
No, she she is
Physically not able to okay, but not not on disability, but not on disability
Okay, do you have anything in savings?
We have $750 in our emergency fund.
Anything in retirement accounts?
No.
Okay.
Nothing.
Okay.
And I don't know, you know,
when you deal with disability and Medicare and Medicaid,
they like to tightly control your amount that you can save.
And so there's really no way for me to save this up without hiding it away somehow.
How much is it going to cost?
What's it going to cost to get the repairs you need
on this roof?
We have 14,000 in consumer debt
and the quote on the roof is just over 14,000.
Okay.
Have you gotten multiple quotes?
Yes.
Have you contacted your homeowners insurance?
We did and went through them, went to the people who put it on.
They only offered a two-year guarantee on their labor.
But you're saying they installed it incorrectly?
They did yes that feels beyond the scope of well. I'll guarantee it for two years
I would see if you can fight this between your homeowners insurance and the company that installed it
Truthfully mark that would that's this is your only option
And then you're gonna have to start looking around at maybe whatever you can sell. What are your vehicles?
Tell us about your vehicles. We have one vehicle, a 2002 Chevy Venture. What's it worth? We paid cash, oh, probably around
$1,500. Okay. The tough part here is, listen, we're never going to tell you to go out into debt to
solve a problem. There's a lot here, and you may need to reach out to some other places for help, but I'm with you.
I'm going to fight this because if I'm dealing with the fact that I got a new roof seven years ago
and it was not installed correctly, there's no way I'm paying full price to get it fixed.
I'd be contacting an attorney.
Yeah, this is the Ramsey Show.
Mortgage rates have dropped, so if you're thinking about buying a home in the next year, Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you.
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Thank you.
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Thank you.
Thank you.
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You're listening to the Ramsey Show. Thanks for hanging out with us. I'm Jade Warshaw. Next to me
is George Campbell. If you want wanna get in on the conversation,
the number's 888-825-5225.
George!
It's time, Jade, for our long learning segment,
Talk Nerdy to Me.
Hit me with that jingle.
Here is the nerd topic of the day
that I'm going to break down in less than two minutes
to help people out there understand it.
These $10 words out there that bother me
when they're thrown out like jargon,
but they're important, all right?
Today's word or phrase, dollar cost averaging.
You'll DCA as they call it in the biz.
No one calls it that but nerds,
I just want you to know that.
Yeah, Instagram nerds.
This is dollar cost averaging is an investment strategy
to save for retirement.
It's this simple.
It means you're making regular investments over time,
regardless of what the stock market is doing.
Yeah.
I don't feel like it even needs a term, but there is one.
Why do we need a fancy name for that?
I don't know.
It's focused on the consistent dollar amount you invest.
As opposed to dropping a lump sum every once in a while.
Yeah, irregular amounts or a lump sum once a year.
So we recommend dollar cost averaging
for your long-term investing,
because the longer your money stays in one place,
the more it's gonna grow.
And investing consistently over time in one place,
that's how you beat the market fluctuations.
So if you're scared of the roller coaster,
this one's for you.
I also think it helps build a nice habit, right?
You're building the habit of investing when you say,
okay, every month this is automatically coming out.
I know what the amount is.
I mean, we say 15%.
And then you live on less.
When you know 500 bucks is going out of your account,
you just tend to live knowing.
After a while, you don't think about it.
Yeah, exactly.
That aside, out of mind.
So if you put, let's say, 500 bucks a month
into your 401k or an IRA every month,
you're essentially buying shares of the mutual funds.
That's what you're doing with that 500 bucks.
But remember, the value of those funds
could go up or down each month.
So some time, some months, that 500 bucks goes a long way.
It goes farther because the prices are down.
Stock goes down, that means you're buying it on sale.
Think of it that way.
Price goes up, you're buying it at a more expensive rate.
But again, your dollar cost averaging.
So think of it like your gas tank.
Some months, your 200 bucks you budgeted for fuel
gets you 60 gallons.
But the price per gallon drops,
the same 200 stretches further,
you get an extra 10 gallons, you get 70.
And so if the price goes up, that's great too,
because your shares are worth more.
So it's very glass half full kind of mentality here.
And look at the numbers here,
40 years of investing 500 a month
at a 10% average rate of return.
It would have grown over to over 2.6 million
thanks to compound interest.
Yeah, wow.
And of that amount, get this, you only contributed,
you only put your own money, 240 grand is what you put in.
It turned into 2.6 million.
The power of time and interest.
So it over 10xed.
You made over 2.4 million of free money
because of the power of compound growth,
because you did dollar cost averaging.
And here's the great news for you.
We surveyed millionaires, over 10,000 of them.
Investment consistency was one of the most important factors in building their
million dollar portfolio. They were actually average investors. They weren't great. They
weren't prodigies. They just put the same amount away every single month for a long
time.
I love that.
So if you want to learn more, go to ramsysolutions.com slash invest. We've got a free complete guide
to investing, or you can click the link in the description if you're listening on YouTube or podcast.
This guide is gonna teach you everything you need to know,
including how to develop a personal investing strategy,
how to pick the right investments,
and using the Ramsey principles.
I love that.
There you go.
It was painful, Jade.
Painless.
Oh, you're right.
Painless.
I don't know why.
It was painful for me.
Was it?
Yeah.
Well, let's take it a step further.
So, I mean, somebody out here is like, yes, George, thank you for that, because I didn't know. But It was painful for me. Was it? Yeah. Well, let's take it a step further. So, I mean, somebody out here is like,
yes, George, thank you for that,
because I didn't know.
But how do they know when they're ready
to start dollar cost averaging?
They're way too millionaire status.
Oh, good question.
A lot of people go, I want to start now.
There's a time and place for that now.
And it's when you are out of consumer debt,
you have three to six months of expenses
saved in that emergency fund.
And that really becomes your never going
to debt again
insurance.
Now we're ready to invest
because we have our income back in our hands.
Before we were giving it out to lenders every month.
There you go.
And the big question there is George, why do I need to wait?
It would be nice to wait till I get out of debt.
You're saying it's so important to start early.
Why wouldn't I want to start now?
Tell us more.
Well, because when you do 17 things at once,
you never really get anywhere. And that's most of America. If you've heard the calls, they now. Yeah, tell us more. Well, because when you do 17 things at once, you never really get anywhere. That's true.
And that's most of America.
If you've heard the calls, they go, well, I'm broke.
And I go, why?
You make a great income.
Well, we were trying to pay off debt,
trying to save for the kids' college,
trying to go on vacation.
And that's why the baby steps are so powerful.
It's focused intensity for the one through three,
getting out of debt, getting emergency fund,
focused intensity.
Then we move toward intentionality in four through seven.
Yeah, because if you're investing the amount
that we suggest, 15%, if you have debt,
most people would not have that kind of income
at their disposal until they paid off their debt, which is-
That's the other thing I get in the comment section.
Where does this guy think we're gonna be able
to invest 15% of our income?
And I go, hey, what's your car payment?
Yeah, boom. Well, that's 600 bucks.
What's your student loan payment?
Well, that's 400 bucks.
Well, that looks oddly like a thousand bucks
that you could be investing.
Right, right.
There it is right there.
Which is 15% of an $80,000 salary,
which is the household median income now.
So it's possible, but you gotta decide
is our debt payments gonna be normal
or is debt-free living and investing
for the future gonna be normal?
Okay, so now you've convinced the person with debt
to pay off their debt before they begin this journey.
What about the person who's like,
okay, I paid off my debt,
why do I need to save up three to six months before I start?
That's the kicker.
Because you get thrown off the horse
at every little ankle bite or emergency.
You go, well, I kept my savings low
because I want to invest.
Well, the problem is life's going to happen in the meantime.
And the goal is we don't touch the emergency fund
unless we need to.
Unless it's urgent necessary.
And if you don't have an emergency fund,
if you don't have an emergency fund,
your investments become your emergency fund.
Or Capital One's credit card becomes your emergency fund
at 25% APR.
Yeah, how can you really build wealth
when you've got that counteracting anything
you might be building?
You can't, it's dragging you down.
Okay, so what you're telling us, George,
is there's method to the madness. You got me all riled up. I'm sorry, I wanted to. I like when I get George's nerdy wheels
turning. George is one of the smartest people I know. All right. You need to hang out with more
people, Jay. That's sad, but thank you. You're welcome, George. All right, let's go to Luke in
Montgomery, Alabama. What's going on, Luke? Good afternoon, guys. How are y'all doing? We're doing
great. Good. Hey,
I was just calling. I was, I've been struggling with this for a while.
I have been working in finance and banking my entire adult career career.
And I have been really good at it too,
which means that I have gotten a lot of people into a lot of debt.
We've even done equity lines and everything. And it puts more money in
my pocket. But over the last few years, me listening to, you know, all of your
financial advice and everything, it's starting to kind of become a little bit
of a conundrum to me to continue working in this field. The retirement's great,
the income is great, you know, and I do my best to help people, you know, some people come in saying, I need this, I need this, I need this.
But I tell them, well, you think you need this, but here's really what you probably
would benefit more from.
Um, and only recently I had helped somebody with an equity line.
Um, and they came back in after paying off what they paid off with their equity
line and it was all swiped right back up.
And I was like, this doesn't feel good anymore.
Yeah, you don't want to sell them dead anymore.
You're getting a front row seat to people's misbehavior
and you feel like you're a part of it.
Absolutely.
You helped them sign the dotted line.
So that's understandable.
And let me say that it's not evil or immoral
to work in the banking industry.
You can do good work and serve people and help people, but you have a personal value,
a personal value, a principle line that you've drawn, and I think it's eating away at your
soul.
And that's what tells me, okay, how can we shift your skills?
Because your skills are not getting people into debt.
Your skills are helping people with their needs and serving people.
And so how do we shift that to a different type of role, maybe a different sales role
in a different industry or selling a different product that you can sleep well at night for?
Yeah. What do you think?
Yeah, it's just a weird thing. You know, as I've gone through more intense, like intensifying
my own budget and getting out of debt and increasing my own investments and things like that.
I start to want to share that with other people.
But in my own industry here, they don't want that.
They want more.
I assume you're heavily incentivized
and commissioned to sell these debt products.
Sure, sure.
And so that's where I go.
Is there a job where you could be on salary and your job is not
to push loan products, but you could actually help people make the right financial decisions?
Maybe that's the mortgage industry, where you help steer them toward the 15-year mortgage
and you help them do it the right way to where you can sleep better at night, but you're
still in the financial industry.
It sounds like you enjoy being in the overall industry, but this specific niche of, you know,
getting them lines of credit and equity, not fun for you.
Listen, I dig into this further because the fact,
and I don't say this in a negative way,
but the fact that you're calling us lets me know
that this is really kind of bothering you.
And rightfully so, I think there's moments
in all of our lives, to George's point,
you're not bad, you're not evil, you're not,
nothing like that, but each of us kind of comes up on these moments in life where we decide that something
maybe that once was for us is not for us anymore. Like there's, there's certain shows. I probably
at this point in my life, I'm like, I'm not watching this anymore. Like it's total crap.
I just, for me, I would feel a sense of guilt spending my time watching certain things on
television or, you know, eating certain foods. It's like I've outgrown it or I've realized the error in my way or whatever that
could be. And I just call that maturity. I think it's a great thing. I think it's a great
thing to explore. If I were you, I'd be like, all right, Lord, what you want me to do with
this? This is the Ramsey show.
I think we'd all agree that it's a lot harder to run a race if you don't know
where the finish line is. But nearly half of all Americans have no idea how much
money they'll need to retire with dignity. If you're ready to stop hoping
for the best and start planning for your future, then check out the SmartVestor
program. A SmartVestor Pro can teach you everything you need to know to get in
the driver's seat of your own financial future. Connect with a pro at
ramsysolutions.com slash SmartVestor.
Ramsey Solutions is a paid non-client promoter of participating pros. Learn more
at ramsysolutions.com slash SmartVestor.
Thank you for hanging out with us on the Ramsey Show. I'm Jade Warshaw. Next to me is
George Campbell. Hey, if you want to get on the Ramsey Show. I'm Jade Warshaw. Next to me is George Campbell.
Hey, if you want to get on the line, we'd love to hear from you.
888-825-5225 is how you get involved.
Robert is involved.
He's in Fort Worth, Texas.
Come on, Robert.
What's going on?
Well, first of all, let me say it's an honor to speak to both of you guys.
My question is, what is the difference between a high yield savings account and a
money market account, and then where would I open one, and which one's the best one to
put the money in when I'm building my step number three, you know, the three to six month
emergency fund?
Yes.
I love that you're even asking these questions.
Yeah, it's a good question.
So, largely, as far as the actual definition goes, there's not much of a difference anymore.
There's two things of note with a money market account
that is different from a high-yield savings.
Number one is that money market accounts,
many of them include a debit card
and check writing privileges,
which high-yield savings account, they don't have that.
The other one that's a downside
for the money market accounts is a lot of them have
required minimum deposits and balances.
Whereas a high-yield savings account, many of them have gone away from that balances. Whereas a high yield savings account,
many of them have gone away from that.
Now there are money market accounts out there
that may have no minimum balances,
but that's largely the biggest differences you'll see.
They're both gonna have a competitive interest rate.
I found that high yield savings accounts
have been edging out many of the money market accounts
as far as interest goes.
They may have withdrawal transfer limits on both.
So there's that caveat there.
And they both should be insured by the FDIC or the NCUA
if it's through a credit union.
Okay, and then would that be through a bank
or a financial institution like that?
Yes, high yield savings accounts are generally going
to be with online banks.
They have less overhead and they can pass on the savings
to the consumers.
But you can go to your local credit union,
they'll have one, you can do one online.
And I personally have an online high yield savings account
through Laurel Road.
And they've been a great partner for our YouTube channel
here, we have a new partner, Fairwinds,
that's great as well.
Jade's got one through what, Ally?
Ally, and I have Marcus by Goldman Sachs.
So there we go.
There's a lot of them out there and you can, a lot of people, Jade,
wanna just hop as soon as one interest rate
is a little higher than the other.
And I'm like, you're talking.2%
on your $10,000 emergency fund.
That's right.
I don't know that it's worth doing all the legwork
for the extra $10 you're gonna get
over the course of the year.
But if you've got, you're saving up for a house
and a high yield savings, you've got 100,000,
and it's 4% or 4 1⁄2%, okay. Yeah. Now we're saving up for a house and a high yield savings, you got 100,000
and it's 4% or 4 1⁄2%, okay.
Now we're talking.
I mean, when I switched to Marcus,
it was because you were like, oh.
That's right.
They're at 5%, and I think mine was at like 4.25,
and I thought, well, I could make the switch.
Yes.
So depending on where you're at.
Now, some people, here's the key,
whether it's money market or high yield savings,
that's great, but some people have their money
in a regular old savings account with their bank.
It's costing the money and it's like 0.001% interest.
You can do better.
And remember, the point of the emergency fund,
Robert and everyone listening, is not to make money.
It is insurance, not an investment.
That's the key to remember.
So I don't look at this as a money making scheme.
I just want it to be growing if I can
versus losing money with inflation. And I like the fact, I just want it to be growing if I can versus losing money
with inflation.
And I like the fact, I think that if you have savings and you've got check writing and you've
got debit cards and you can easily transfer the money, I feel like in many ways, depending
on your personality type, let me talk to the Jade personality types because I'm the type,
if I see the money, I want to get to it.
And if I have easy access to it, I wanna get to it.
And so I learned early on, I gotta put the money away
so that I don't touch it.
And so I want an account that I'm gonna have to work
to get to the money.
And that was just me understanding my personality type.
You might be the type that George is looking at me
like I'm weird, so maybe.
No, not at all.
George, am I weird?
No, but if you do wanna check out
the new Ramsey partner we have, Fairwinds Credit Union,
you can go to fairwinds.org slash Ramsey,
and they won't try to remarket with debt products.
They've got a custom account bundle just for Ramsey fans,
so be sure to check them out.
Like it, all right, let's talk to Mac real quick
in Austin, Texas.
What's going on, Mac?
Hi, I hope you guys are doing better than you deserve.
We are.
Good, good.
So I'm debt-free 25-year-old living in Austin, Texas,
and I'm looking to buy a house in the next year.
And really what I'm looking for
is guidance on setting my budget.
Ooh, okay.
Well, let's talk to your financial picture.
How much do you have saved?
Oh, okay. Let's let's talk to your financial picture. How much do you have saved?
So I will be buying the house probably next July
And per kind of the way I'm paid I will probably have about 200 to 250 K saved Wow amazing
And how much are you looking to spend outright?
Well, that's that's kind of where I'm calling in for guidance because I could kind of buy a three-bedroom house probably be good for the next five to
seven years and come close to paying cash. Mm-hmm. Or I could go to take out a
loan by kind of like a four to five bedroom house and probably be good for
the next ten plus years. I mean there's part of this it's choose your own
adventure but I think-
You said you're single, right?
Correct.
Okay, whoever is next in your life
is going to hate your house probably.
So just know that they're gonna want something different.
And so I wouldn't make a 10 year bet on a house.
I would go, what's the right house for me right now?
And if you can pay cash, that's great.
If you take on a 15 year mortgage
that you knock out in a few years, that's great too.
So I don't want you to feel, it's an awesome goal to have
and you might be able to do it,
but I also know Austin area housing is similar to Nashville
and that it be cray.
Yeah, at the end of the day, you want something
that's no more than 25% of your take home pay
and that's with HOAs, insurance taxes, all of it included.
That's what you're looking for.
And if you can put, I mean, you're gonna be well above this,
but if you can put 20% down or more, which will be you,
you're winning.
So regardless of which route you go,
as long as you hit those marks, you're doing well.
But I like what George said, and I think he's exactly right.
That's a hefty down payment, and I would use it
as a down payment.
I would put down as much as you can.
All right, today's Ramsey Network app question of the day
is from Brian.
By the way, Ramsey Network does have an app
and we do the third hour there.
So if you're listening on radio, stay where you're at.
But if you're watching on podcast or on YouTube,
you'll have to head over to the app to enjoy the next hour.
But our question of the day is from Brian.
He says, Dave recently took a call
from a whole life insurance agent
and said something I was hoping to get clarification on.
I bought $100,000 whole life policy 20 years ago
and it has a cash balance of 17,000.
Oh my gosh.
Did I understand correctly that when I die,
my family will get the 100,000, but the 17,000 is gone?
Yes, you did.
And here's the deal, Jade.
I see the whole life people in the comments
and they're going, Dave's lying, it's not true.
Listen, with almost every policy you see out there,
this is the case, what Dave said.
The cash value goes away.
Can you set up the policy in such a way
that you do get the cash value?
Yes, there are scenarios.
But what a terrible investment that over 20 years,
that investment portion only made 17,000, that's a crock right there.
I know, I'll tell you, Jade, well,
you gotta let it cook, Jade.
It's gonna take many, many years
for that account balance to grow,
because the first five years,
you're just paying commissions
to the guy who sold it to you.
Right.
So it's being eaten up by all the fees.
But yes, this is how it works,
and they're often pitched to you
by these folks that are,
they sell themselves as like wealth strategists,
like tax-free wealth strategists.
They're like really disgusting, creepy names.
And what they do is they lock you in
for years of high costs and commissions.
And if you stop paying, your cash value that you've built up
and the insurance vanish.
And with most policies, your family won't get
the cash value like Dave said, when you die.
It goes to the insurance company.
It's a little parting gift.
Because they go, hey, you're getting your face value.
That's what you paid for, Jade.
And while you're alive, you can use the cash value.
Well, meanwhile, on my 20-year term life insurance.
That cost you a fraction.
A fraction, where if something, God forbid, happens to me,
forget $100,000.
My family is going to be nice and covered.
Yeah, I don't know, the whole life policy is,
I mean, you're getting 100,000, 200,000,
what we're talking about at Ramsey is
10 to 12 times your income.
So if you're making 50K, you should have 500K or 700K.
And if you make 100,000, you should have a million dollars.
Minimum. Minimum.
And it's not that expensive.
You go, a million dollars, that's,
no, you're not paying a million.
You're paying 30, 40 bucks a month for this coverage.
Yes, and get it sooner than later,
because obviously when you're healthy,
those prices go down.
And so, yeah, 15 year, 20 year term.
Yeah, the way the term works is they go,
hey, we know the average lifespan.
We're gonna take the total cost it costs to insure you
and then divide it out over the years as a term.
That's right.
As a level policy rate.
So it's that simple.
You're gonna pay the same 20 bucks for the next 20 years
and when it's done, it's done and you'll be self-insured.
Yeah, and I'd rather take the money that I'm saving
because again, we talked about it,
with term life insurance, you're paying less for the policy
and so you've got this extra money allotted to you,
you could be investing that money
and instead of making a three or 4% return,
you invest it in the S&P 500
or you're making a 10 to 12% return.
That's easy math.
This guy, George, I don't have my calculator pulled up,
but if he had done that over the 20 year term.
Your calculator would blow up if you did this.
It would blow up.
Make sure if you guys don't have term life in place
or you have whole life, cancel it, get term life.
Go to zander.com, they're the folks we trust.
It's who I have my term life through,
Jade, Dave, the whole gang.
We trust them that much to protect our families.
And hey, don't forget, if you want to finish the show out,
we've got another hour.
We're going to do it inside the Ramsey Network app.
We've got some great calls coming up.
Jeremiah from Dallas, Texas, he says,
"'How much is a reasonable investment
to start a side hustle?'
We've got John coming up.
He wants to know how to get a financial advisor,
all this and more on the Ramsey Network app. Hey, you're still here?
What are you doing?
You do know that the rest of today's show is playing right now over on the Ramsey Network
app, right?
All you gotta do to finish the episode is search Ramsey Network in the App Store, Google
Play Store, or just click the link in the show notes to download the app for free.
Yep, you heard me right, for free.
Then right there on the home screen, you can watch the rest of today's show.
Bada bing, bada boom.
All right, I'm getting out of here.
Enjoy. We'll see you on the app.