The Ramsey Show - Do You Have Too Much Month Left at the End of the Money?
Episode Date: March 21, 2024💵 Sign-up for EveryDollar today - The simplest way to budget for your life! Rachel Cruze & Jade Warshaw answer your questions and discuss: "Will this financially ruin my family?" "I keep getting ...rejected by rental companies around my credit score," "How much should I save for a down payment?" "How can we budget together and be on the same page?" "I'm scared to buy a house" Support Our Sponsors: NetSuite Zander Insurance BetterHelp Next Steps Check out the Ramsey Investment Calculator: https://ter.li/o3ig41 📞 Have a question for the show? Call 888-825-5225 Weekdays from 2-5pm ET or click here! 📢 Ramsey Network is working on a new show chronicling the story of real people doing the work to get out of debt. If you are interested in being a part of it, please fill out this survey and our team may get back to you: https://ter.li/hb48dv 🏦 Take Your 3-Minute Money Assessment - Get a personalized money plan! 📊 Dave Ramsey's personal playbook on investing and real estate. 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 Learn more about your ad choices. https://www.megaphone.fm/adchoices Ramsey Solutions Privacy Policy
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🎵 Live from the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions, it's The Ramsey Show, where we help people build
wealth, do work that they love, and create amazing relationships. I am Rachel Cruz,
hosting this hour with my good friend and best-selling author, Jade Warshaw. And we are here to answer your questions.
So give us a call at 888-825-5225.
And we'll talk about your life, your money, your relationships, your career, anything and everything.
We are here for you.
So first up, we have Ashley in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Hey, Ashley, welcome to the show.
Hi. Sorry, I'm really nervous.
No, you're good. Don't be. It's just us.
It's just us girls.
It's just chatting. You're great, Ashley. How can we help?
So I'm trying to figure out if I step away from work, if I'm going to financially ruin my family.
Let's talk more about that.
Why do you feel like that could be the case?
So I make about double what my husband brings in and he works at a small business.
So they don't offer like health care or retirement plans or anything like that.
And like he's never going
to leave that that is his life okay what what does he know and i love him like what are the
real numbers um so he earns about 60 and i weren't earn about 115 roughly and how old are your kids
um i have a four-year-old a three-year-old a two-year-old and a three-year-old, a two-year-old, and a one-month-old.
Oh, Ashley.
Oh, my Lord.
You're in it.
I feel like we should just take a moment and pray.
I just almost fell asleep just listening to that.
That's crazy.
Goodness.
Oh, man.
Okay, so, and I totally get this, Ashley.
Like, after my third, actually, when I was pregnant with my third, it was the moment I was like,
oh, man, do I want to go back to this work thing? What does this look like after my third actually I was pregnant with my third it was the moment I was like oh man do I want to go back to this work thing what do I what does this look like for me
so like this this heartstring that moms feel it is so real and so for you you're a month in to a
new baby you have three little ones around and um what does your husband say when you're saying, golly, I'm feeling pulled in this direction?
Well, he says that we'll figure it out and it'll be fine. But he feels like if I do step away that
I'm not going to feel fulfilled staying at home. He feels like I was meant to work and that
I'll get bored. Well, I think that you,
I feel like no one's going to know that better than you,
how you'll feel, right?
So it's possible that being new, you know,
after having a baby for the first time
and you're just a couple of months in,
it's possible that you're feeling more emotions
in the moment and that you could step away
and feel a little bit like, okay,
several months have passed now, I'm feeling better about this. That is possible. But I do think at the core, you probably do know yourself best. My question, like when I'm looking at all
of this, I'm just really wondering if you do get to the point where you decide I want to stay home,
can you actually afford to do it? Because I feel like that otherwise you wouldn't be calling the
show. So that's really the question is what's your financial situation above what
you both earn?
I mean,
we're,
we're doing the baby steps for,
we're honestly,
we're doing pretty well.
We are debt free.
We have a fully funded emergency fund.
We own our house outright.
Oh,
great.
For rental.
Okay. And can you, have you, have you done a budget with just his income just to see if, you know, from basic
necessities, if everything would be okay? We have and
it's tight. It's going to feel tight.
It's covered with my work. And so if we went
to his, we would be about $2,000 short a month.
Oh. If we start paying, if we get insurance on his. So, and I don't know where to cut or what to
do. Because $2,000, yeah, that's a significant gap. That's not $200. Is there something you
could do to bring that in to where you're still not working full-time but you're closing that gap while still staying at home um i'm not sure i
haven't really looked into that okay and why doesn't he look at for another job that's another
i know you said that that this is his life but like what what's the situation um i mean is this
his life.
He's known what he wanted to do since he was 12 years old.
Yeah, but what is it?
What is it?
What is it? Well, he partially owns the business.
He is a martial arts instructor.
Okay.
So is there a path to growing the business to where he's earning more, basically, is what I'm asking.
There definitely is, but it probably won't be for like another year or so.
Okay.
So, okay.
So I think what it gets down to, Ashley, is you guys, you and your husband, y'all have to sit down and decide what is, what is a priority for our family?
What does a priority look like?
What are our values?
When you both have desires that are conflicting, right?
He has a desire to stay in a job
where financially you wouldn't be able to do it.
It would force you to work.
And is that for him greater than having his wife
who doesn't want to go to work be forced to go to work?
Do you know what I mean?
Like there's a level for me where I'm like, man, there's something about, and if you work, be forced to go to work. Do you know what I mean? Like there's a, there's a level
for me where I'm like, man, there's something about, and then, and if you work, Ashley, I'm
like, you're paying childcare for four kids. That's a lot. So there's a point too, that your
income at that point, it starts to dwindle really quickly for that. And so I don't know, I, there,
there is something in me that I, I don know and jade you can you can correct me
on the other side i fight for the mom that wants to be home with her kids i really do because i
think some moms us jade and i we love to work and so we're working and it's great but when you have
that feelings i've had that feeling before actually we're like i just know this for this season this
is where i'm supposed to be and here's the deal too actually it may not be forever it may that
you guys do it for three years and then you know know, half of the kids are in school and maybe one has a five day a week program and,
you know, like, and you start going back, going back in. But motherhood is such a seasonal
time. And, and I really do, I fight for women to be able to honor that. And the thing that sucks
is that the math has to math. And so something has to give Ashley. So there for women to be able to honor that? And the thing that sucks is that the math has to math.
That's what we would say.
And so something has to give, Ashley.
So there either has to be a level that you say,
hey, part-time, I'm going to do something on the side
to bring in income, like Jade said,
or you go back to work full-time,
or he has to find a different situation
to sustain the life that you guys both want, right?
So when you're crunching those numbers, be careful, because I want to make sure that
you're crunching them.
If you're doing your budget, your lifestyle as it is with both incomes and you say, hey,
we could get this.
We just we're just two thousand dollars away.
That's pretty good.
That might just be the difference in you changing your lifestyle a little bit.
Does that make sense? Is this a lifestyle thing or is it hey jade even with our bare bones budget we're
two thousand dollars away i think those are two different questions right it might be it probably
is the lifestyle thing i mean there's definitely things that we could cut um like there's some
programs that our kids are in um but you have to ask yourself, like they do dance.
But you have to ask yourself about that quality of life, too, because there's part of this where I could look at this and go, hey, you go out and make an extra thousand.
He go out and make an extra thousand. Like that should be easy enough.
But if that still just gets you to a barely baseline, how much are you going to enjoy staying home with four kids when you can't put them in any activities?
Yeah. So you got things to weigh out yeah so maybe there's another option actually even for you for the time being or maybe you guys say for a season for three years we're
going to grind it out and you do and you cut the lifestyle way back um but yeah so thanks for the
call ashley i don't know if that helps but i think you guys sitting down and deciding what you value
the most because something is going to have to have a sacrifice and you guys need to
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Welcome back to The Ramsey Show.
I am Rachel Cruz hosting this hour with bestselling author Jade Warshaw.
And we are answering your questions.
And today's question, Jade, comes from Isaac in
Ohio. Yeah, he says, my wife and I are recently married and found a house that we would like to
buy for $600,000. We earn about the same amount a year, $600,000 a year, and we have zero debt.
Good. My wife has over $200,000 sitting in a savings account, and I own a home that I bought
before our marriage. I i proposed she put down
150 000 of her savings for the down payment and put the house in her name she comes from a divorced
household so it's why i suggested putting the home in her name her family thinks it should be the
man's responsibility to pay for the house and she should not be putting down any money i don't know
what type of world these
people live in, but it's not the 1950s anymore. They don't seem to comprehend that I already own
a house and can't just buy another one. What can I say to knock some financial common sense
into these people? Isaac, I'm gonna knock some financial sense into you, dude. Listen, you're both wrong.
All of you are wrong.
Here's the thing.
There's just a lot of I, me, his, her,
all these, this individual talk.
And we're married, right?
My wife and I are recently married.
And so I just think that the same way that you feel
that her side of the
family kind of has this outdated or erroneous way of thinking, I honestly think, Isaac, you have a
little bit of it too, because you guys are very separate. And I understand that you're in many
ways trying to honor some of her previous trauma and her previous pain with the divorce. But I
would think of that as even more reason to cling on to
the fact that we're together. I'm not going anywhere. We're making this work. We are one.
And that's the relational side of it that I see that I think no matter what you decide here,
I think you're going to run into problems until you solidify the oneness in your marriage. So
that's thing number one. Thing number two is, yeah,
$600,000 house. She's got $200,000 sitting there. If you've got some money to put in,
yeah, put as much down as you can. You don't have any debt. I'm all for that. I don't know
what the situation is with the other home that he owns. Part of me is like, there's just a lot
of singularity going on. Yes. And yeah, and the, the combination isn't happening like it should of the oneness.
And yeah,
because if I were you,
Isaac,
I would sell your home.
Yeah.
And you guys together go in and pull your money together.
See it all under one account.
And let's put down the biggest down payment we can,
regardless of man,
woman,
whose money it is. Like, yeah, is like yeah it it is you guys together and i
think people get in trouble jade sometimes there we could go down this rabbit hole a whole different
ways but just for one but but this that that way of thinking there's so many splinters i think in
it but one of them being that we don't honor personality enough. It's
honoring, are you a man or a woman? And there's something about you. It is a personality element
that is so key, you guys, when it's a married couple. Because if anything, people are like,
well, I'm going to let him take care of it. Or she just does it all. I'm just going to let her.
I'm going to be hands off. No, no, no. no. It is a, hey, who is, who is really good at this? Who actually enjoys the money? That's right. And here
at Ramsey, we call it the nerd. And it's the person that really genuinely enjoys doing the
budget. They really do like crunching the numbers. They like to feel in control. It is, it's fun for
them. So let them take the first pass at kind of creating a plan and say, okay, I found this
account here and this, this, let me, here's what I see. And then the free spirit, the one that may not be as excited about things like a budget or planning for
the future as much, they're still in the conversation. They have as much say as the
other person. But again, it's regardless of gender, it is truly how you're wired and how
you're created and honor that in each other. Cause you can learn from each other in both
ends of it. So absolutely. I don't know. I don't don't yeah i don't i don't like that yeah way of thinking
i i don't either i 100 and i love that you put it in that way it's just a personality trade it's not
a gender yeah um on that but they've got it they've got to get together yeah on both ends of
y'all are on both extreme ends her family's on one end and i think the way you view money and
relationships is that the other y'all need to find that.
There's a balance there.
So come more in the middle.
But thanks.
Thanks for the question.
Good question.
Yes.
All right.
Let's go to Gustavo in Denver, Colorado.
Welcome to the show.
Hi.
Hello.
Can you hear me okay?
Yes, we can.
How can we help? So my current situation is I am 30 years old trying to move out
and I have poor credit, except I don't really have any debts to pay off to build credit.
And I'm getting declined everywhere left and right. I'm not sure what to do.
Do you have poor credit or zero credit?
Poor. Low 600s, but everywhere I apply, that's all they really look at.
Yeah. Why is your credit low?
I have two derogatory marks, and I haven't necessarily been smart in the past,
but I started following you guys over a year ago.
And I've paid off a couple of credit cards.
And all that's left is two collections.
And so it's just dropped over time because I've been slowly paying everything off.
Yeah.
But you still have the two in collections.
Yeah.
Yeah. collections yep yeah i mean the fact is it's going to be low and bad until you get everything that was on your credit cleaned up and clear it off including the two that are in collections
and then after that once everything's off yeah once everything's off your credit it takes
yeah you know six months to 12 months for that to drop off completely and then you're at zero
and that's where you want to get to so i think it's just going to take you some time why are you trying to buy rental properties when you have two items and
collections no i'm just i'm just trying to move out uh trying to rent somewhere oh rental okay
have you had a consistent job at the same employer yeah uh i work as a trucker and i just actually a
year ago switched jobs so i've been employed at the same place for a year.
For a year.
Have you shown them proof of income at an employer for one year?
And do you have money saved?
Like, do you have first month's rent, last month's rent, a security deposit?
Do you have cash that you can be up front with?
Yeah, I have the cash, and I have all the proof for, you know, what I make and all the other bills that I pay on time.
And just nothing.
Yeah.
So then you're working at that point.
Honestly, you're just working with big corporations where there's probably a manager at that apartment complex.
And he literally doesn't have the power to to rent you something because it probably is.
Hey, if anybody's below 700 or whatever whatever you don't have the authority to go and
rent so either you need to get to somebody with higher authority and the power to be able to kind
of overwrite that or you need to look for somebody that's a landlord and they're a one-off and it's
not part of a big you know system like a big apartment complex but maybe it's a small you know
one bedroom something that that there's a owner that you can actually talk to that owner
and tell them about your situation have you tried that route or has it been just more like
apartments that you've been shopping i've i've been looking around in zillow and like all the
main like main places to apply for rent yeah um the only thing is so there is like a you know
i'm trying to move out within like two months and also i had an idea
to get a loan to try to build credit but i'm not i'm not really sure like i wanted to get
your guys's opinion on that as well i definitely would not go into debt to try to build your
credit um i think in this case to rachel's point you just got to find the right situation and going to basically, for lack of a better word, like big box apartment rentals may not be the move for you.
And yeah, finding a landlord that's an individual that is willing to look past that.
I also think no matter what you do, cleaning up these collections needs to be a one because as long as you have things in collections, nothing's going to get any better and the the faster that you do pay those
off the faster that you can get to a zero position which is still going to look better um yeah yeah
and that's that's the distinction here that jade's exactly right it it looks better to have an
undetermined credit score that they can't pull numbers for because they don't exist because it's
been over a year since you've had any level of debt. So there's at least a credible story there where what's being flagged for you, obviously,
is that there were issues and that number is showing, hey, he didn't pay back what he said he was going to.
And it is. It looks bad on you.
So I don't know if there's a situation, Gustavo, where you can stay where you're at for maybe six months to a year and
you grind it out you get that stuff paid off get that place where you are have
more of a clean credit history and then go out and try to rent or find an
individual that you can sit down with and just show them hey I'm a person
here's the situation and the more cash you have to be able to present hey I'm
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the better it's going to look for you. So I'm sorry you're in that situation.
I've been doing this show for over 30 years, and some of the saddest calls I've taken are from
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All right, up next, we have Victoria in New York City. Hey,
Victoria, welcome to the show. Hi. Hi. How are you? Good. Thanks. So the question I have is,
I wanted to know if we should pay off our car or buy or sell it and buy a van or something larger for our family.
What do you owe on the car?
$21,000.
Okay.
So you've got $21,000, and then the option was, or should we buy a van?
Yeah.
So we're a family of three, and, we have the the car that we have is fine
but I feel like we're just like busting out of the seams so I wanted to know if maybe we should
sell it I mean it's probably if we sell it and probably sell it for probably around the same amount that we owe. So break even.
Right.
And then how much do you have saved?
Nothing right now.
Okay.
So is there another car in the situation too?
Like, are you a two-car family right now?
Yeah, we're a two-car family.
Go ahead.
How much do you guys make a year?
About 160. Okay. And what other debt do you guys make a year? About $160,000.
Okay. And what other debt do you guys have?
We have that car and student loans.
How much in the student loans?
$34,000.
Okay. And no money saved at all?
Well, we have an emergency. We have $1,000. Okay. Okay. We can sell the other,
we do have another car, but it's paid off. And what could you get for that one?
We could probably get 7,000. If the, if the, if the goal is to get a vehicle that's large enough for your whole family to fit and pay cash for it, my first move, unless you can tell me why this wouldn't work because you know more about your situation than I do, obviously, is to sell the one that's worth something so you get a head start saving for the van.
So my thought would be sell car number two.
It's already paid off.
Clear $7,000.
You've already got the $1,000 saved. You'd be a one a one car family and and victoria you said we're a family of three
is it just you your husband and a baby no no i'm sorry we're family of five we have three okay i
thought okay victoria i think we can stay in this car a little bit longer i thought it was just a
family of three okay you have three kids yeah okay that's fair that's fair so what have you looked
at like these vans is there one for seven thousand can you find a junker for seven thousand and you
know is this dire straits i guess is what i'm trying to figure out right i mean we've been
looking at vans we're looking at like a 2015 um it's looking around 10 to,000 to $12,000
Okay
The only thing will be y'all have to save for it
Yeah you gotta just save for it
Victoria and it's one of those things that you're gonna put money
Aside month after month
And the fastest way to get there
Is what Jade said would be to be a one car family
If you don't want to do that then it is gonna be
Saving $10,000
To get to a point where you can just
buy it outright but then also that's ten thousand dollars that's not going to pay off just your
current car which i understand you you went ahead and traded i get it um it's just how urgent is
this because i'm looking at twenty one thousand dollars you owe on the first car thirty four
thousand student loans and i get that it's not comfortable for three kids in the back.
Like, I don't know, do their car seats not fit?
Is it that?
I just need to understand how urgent it is.
I mean, I guess it's not really urgent,
but I'm just thinking of like, you know, it's a growing family.
We have sports.
We have so many events going on.
And like the car that we do, it's a Toyota Highlander. I mean, it's just, it would be more,
and it would be more comfortable to have a van.
I mean, not a new van.
Wait, so you have a Toyota Highlander already?
Isn't that an SUV?
It is.
Okay, I'm changing this.
I'm changing my vote right now.
You told me you had two cars.
I'm thinking like a Camry and an ultima so you have a sport utility
vehicle that's fine and if i were in your shoes today i would not suck it up for i would not
be saving money to buy a new car if anything i would still sell car number two or whatever
whatever is not the highlander uh which one's the highlander by the way the paid for one or the 21 000 21 that we owe
21 okay then i'd sell car number two put it towards the highlander get that thing paid off
as soon as possible and can you guys survive as a one-car family for a while to pay off some debt
before you save up and buy a second one would be ideal however we are my husband and i both work
and we do commute okay So you're not seeing a
way to do that. I think it's just a sense, Victoria, you're going to have to just pay this
car off. You're going to have to pay off these student loans and y'all got, I mean, but you make
160. I mean, you're in New York city, so I know it doesn't go as far, but it's just going to be
you guys buckling down for 18 months, two years, and it will be uncomfortable. I mean, yeah, it will be uncomfortable. But trading in and the whole car situation, it's so hard for me because it's such a depreciating
asset that I'm like, these loans that are racking up interest and all of it. I'm like,
I just want so much of your effort to get these out of your life. And then we can go from there
to say, okay, the car is paid for for what does it look like in two years to
trade it in we can save a couple of thousand go to a minivan like you know I would make that move
later personally because again all your efforts and straining and saving and sacrificing lifestyle
I'd rather that go to debt than to go to a van to feel a little bit more comfortable yeah that's
going to be going down in value and pretty you know what I mean it's just's just another thing. But I get it. We have three kids and if they're
all in one row, they're going to be hitting each other and it's annoying and there is stuff
everywhere. Like it is true, but also I think you guys have different priorities. And if you're
going to follow the steps to get in control of your money, stop sending your income out to freaking
car payments and student loans and actually keep your income but let's get out of debt it's it's a thing she has a highlander that's plenty of space victoria i'm
getting you a little bit that's plenty of space it's not the same layout obviously as a minivan
because let's be honest i can't drive a minivan rachel but i know i have been in one and they are
humility the odyssey it is like a living room on it is the best thing ever you're not cool i get it
but it is a minivan it's so easy to get the kids in and out that is very very true but a highlander
will get it done it will get it done yeah the minivan has its luxuries and it was so cheap when
we went and priced out cars yeah we looked at suvs like we looked at you know all different levels
and i'm like i just couldn't stomach buying an SUV because I'm like, my children, God
love you if you listen to this later on in your life, kids.
But you're disgusting.
Like I'm like, they take sandwiches and spread them apart and put them on seats and there's
gum in the back.
It's just, it's just their kids, you know?
And I'm like, I just can't stomach a nice SUV personally at this stage of our lives.
So we went.
100%.
And the minivan was a third of the price.
Really? A third of the price. Really?
A third of the price of some of the SUVs
that we were looking at.
And I was like, all day.
It's like a mom set in that driver's seat, Jade.
Yeah.
The mom said, where do I want cup holders?
Where do I want storage?
What do I want?
You sit in a minivan driver's seat
and you think, hey, mom designed this car.
Thank you, mom.
Listen.
Honda Odyssey.
Minivan is great.
The worst part of it is people have to see you drive it. It's a minivan honda odyssey minivan is great the worst
part of it is it's a mini see you drive it's a minivan you have to drive it that's the worst part
but it's true rachel i know i know i'll get my cool mom suv soon yeah we'll see this is the ramsey show
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So give us a call
At 888-825-5225
Up next we have
Aurora
Beautiful name
In Portland
Hey Aurora
Welcome to the show
Hi
Thank you for having me
Absolutely
How can we help?
So my question is, do I pause baby step two in order to save up money?
I just got told last week that we're being laid off here.
Oh, no.
I'm sorry.
And so, yeah, it was a little unexpected. But I just, I'm a babysitter
too. So I'm like, do I save up money now in case, you know, for the future? Or do I just keep going
at the debt until it's paid off? Is it just you or are you married? Do you have a family?
Yeah. So my husband and I, we started this about a year ago. We paid off almost 50,000.
Good for you guys. Um, yeah. So we have $6,500 left to pay on one card. Um, and our last day
of work will for me is, um, August 30th. So I have a few months of, you know, paychecks. Um,
and so, yeah, we're just wondering like, do we continue to pay on it or do we save up money
and then come August in case I don't find a job right away
or don't get called back,
that we have a little bit of a fund, you know,
to live off of for a little bit.
Yeah.
So you've got $6,500 left and then you're done done?
Yes.
Oh, wow.
Oh, that's awesome.
How much will you guys be,
how much will you make between now and August?
Or how much per month would y'all bring in?
Yeah, so we bring in about $6,000.
It could be between, you know, $55,000 on a slow month, but usually it's about $6,000.
Okay.
And we're in March, so we got April, May, June, July, August
So
For your living expenses
I'm just curious, what margins
Do you guys have left? How much are you throwing at
Debt every month?
That if you paused it, that would go into savings
How much would that be?
$1,400
So my little calculator
That I have on my tracking
Sheet shows that we should be done with this by August.
OK. Then you have no savings. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. What do you do for work?
So I'm a secretary and they've yeah, they've laid off about half of us.
So we don't know if we'll be called back. So I guess we're just kind of waiting.
I don't want to quit just now and find a new job because, you know, we just never know what could happen.
Can you, sorry, can you just clarify what do you make versus what your husband makes each month?
Yeah, so I bring in $2,800 a month and he's the rest of it.
And that amounts to $6,000?
Mm-hmm.
Okay, got it.
Okay. okay got it okay um i think that you've got to do a budget here and figure out what's going on
because you've got 1400 left that you're putting towards debt i do want you guys to have savings
the real question is what does your lifestyle look like just on his income and is it something
that you guys can live on for a while until you find something new or is it something that you guys can live on for a while until you find something new? Or is it something that's going to put you in a state of emergency?
One thing I do want to highlight is congratulations for paying down this debt and answering that call when it came.
Because this would feel so much different if you had $50,000 of debt laying around.
Am I right?
Exactly.
Yeah.
And just a quick shout out.
Like you guys gifted me financial peace last year,
and it was just, it's been a relief.
I'm so glad.
Me too.
I'm so glad.
Yeah, I think my first, yeah, my first reaction would be what Jade said of,
hey, could we live off, if we had no debt, right, technically you'd be debt free,
could we live off of his income for 30 days 60 days until you find
a job if you can't find one sooner uh than that i just feel like your skill set it's so versatile
i'm like you know you know admin stuff you're able you'll probably be able to get something
so could so for the worst of the worst could you guys live off of his salary for 30 to 60 days and
if you're like no we can't then i would be okay saying yep we're
gonna put we're gonna put one to two months away just for safekeeping because we know this is
coming um and and again if there were if these were different numbers i would probably have
different opinions right but because you guys are so close right and your income is well it is
it's pretty much half of what you guys bring in he's got 32 and you've got 28 so we would be very it'd be tight we'd be very limited um and just just right on the cutoff
which i would be like worried to just live off of well here's the thing yeah sure no the blessing
you have here is you know this is happening and you know it's not happening till august
so there's nothing it's not to say that you have to wait till august to find a new job right you can start
looking yeah closer and closer and really truly have something lined up so that you have a smoother
transition yeah do you love the job you're at because you keep saying if i get called back
what does that mean is it because another department would need something yeah so we're
with our school district we we have unions, so there
is a possibility of being called back once, you know, the school year is, we're getting closer to
the new school year. They're like, okay, well, if we have extra students, like our number of students
go up, then we might be able to hire some of us back. The other thing is that... I don't think I would
count on that. Yeah, the other thing is that I would want to look, even if it wasn't a secretary position,
I would look at a different, like a teaching assistant or something else in the district
because of just the benefit of being able to bring my son to work with me.
He works at the same school that I work at.
And even if I move schools, I could bring him with me or a school closer.
That's the benefit of being able to work in the district.
And just the benefits in general, like medical, dental, all of that is taken care of for us.
Yeah, so there's a lot of benefits to your overall life for you to stay if you can.
Yeah, I'm not worried about not being able to find another job.
I know that I could do it.
But you want to go back to that school for all of that
Which I totally get
Okay so honestly what I would do
Is I would save up
Maybe two months worth of
Of it and you won't have it all paid off
By August you'll have two more months
Of that debt but I'm okay with that
In the season because it's not two years
It's two months and again
The benefit of you if you do get
called back because I can just hear it and I'm like I get it the convenience of your life overall
what that looks like for the next year or two for two months of waiting is worth it to me yeah so I
would be okay with you guys saving two months worth of expenses uh to the side which means you'll delay
your debt snowball a little bit which is okay and. And we say this, you know, if you're pregnant, if you know, if you see an upcoming job loss, if you're having
to move, if there's situations that you need to pause the debt snowball for, we're okay with that.
I just don't want you to lose momentum. And y'all are so close. That's why it's so hard for me.
Where I'm like, oh my gosh, y'all are like right there. Well, let me ask you, are you guys,
is anybody doing a side hustle of any sort to make this go faster? Yeah, we do. On the weekends, we're doing Instacart.
I am helping my dad with his business.
Good for you guys.
We've already cut so much out and we're already doing so much.
I would hate to just lose this momentum.
I'm like, do we stop?
Do we keep going?
Yeah, so we're doing a lot.
The momentum is just going to, you're going to still save at the same speed
and the same rate as you are paying off debt.
Right. So that momentum goes and that momentum is still for a big why.
It is to say, hey, you know, I can get called back to the school where my kids are at and my son's at.
And that's a big why to continue what you're doing.
So. So, yeah, I'm good with you guys saving two months.
What do you think, Jade?
You know, I'm with it. My thought was going to be, is there some way that you guys can pick up any extra work so that you can keep almost like doing
both? You're, you're still able to maybe to pay off this debt, but you're also able to stack up
some savings. And then the other side of it is, is there still a way to have something,
just be in talks or have something lined up just in case? I mean, I hope you do get called back,
but if you don't, I want to make sure there's something there and you're not elongating this process any longer than you have to.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
If your confidence is high, you can plug into something.
Yeah.
So there is.
So we get the month of July off for summer break.
So there are summer like summer school jobs and stuff that we can pick up.
Yeah, that's it. That's great. So that's what I was thinking of doing. I'm like, okay, maybe I can pick up a
few extra, you know, summer school hours. And also, I have, there is a possibility of being
able to find another job. I have somebody who can help me with that. Good. Okay. Like medical
offices and stuff. Yeah, that's great. I'm just preparing.
I just.
Yeah.
And you know, yeah.
And Aurora, you guys are doing an incredible job.
I mean, and this is why you do this.
This is why you do this. Man, what?
You're not stuck in $50,000 of debt trying to figure this out.
So there's a lot more peace, a lot more control in planning.
And I'm just kudos to you guys.
You're doing it.
Doing the extra work.
Paying it off.
And I'm so excited for you guys.
You're so close. You are so close. Well, thanks, Jade, for a it off. And I'm so excited for you guys. You're so close.
You are so close.
Well, thanks, Jade, for a great show.
Thanks to all the guys in the booth.
And thank you, America.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Live from the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions, it's The Ramsey Show, where we help people
build wealth, do work that they love, and create amazing relationships.
I am Rachel Cruz hosting this hour with my good friend and bestselling author Jade Warshaw,
and we are here to answer your questions. So give us a call at 888-825-5225. We will talk about your
life, your money, relationships, career, anything and everything. So give us a call.
Up first, we have Lisa in Clarksville, Tennessee. Hey, Lisa, welcome to the show.
Thank you for having me. Absolutely. How can we help?
Hi, I'm 54 years old. I have no debt. I paid off all my student loans, credit cards, and my house. Good for you. Wow. Yes.
I have $72,600 in the money market, and I want to know how to start investing.
All right. That's good. So are you currently investing any of your paycheck every month
when you get paid? No, ma'am. I am am not we don't have that option at our at my job
okay so they're not offering like a employee sponsored 401k that's okay you can still
start investing 15 of your income today by just investing in a Roth IRA right so is it just you
or your husband no ma'am I'm single you're single okay so yeah you're technically I mean you've gone
beyond you know baby step four five I mean, you've gone beyond,
you know, baby step four, five and six because you've paid off your house. But let's go back
to baby step four right quick and jump that one in place, which is 15% every single month.
In your case, yeah, just start with a Roth IRA. You could start there and max it out. I think you
can do 7,000 this year. And if you have money to go beyond, above and beyond that, we can look into what that
means for you.
But that's the first place to start.
So that's thing number one.
And then since you've got this big chunk of money sitting in this money market account,
I would differentiate what's going to be your three to six months of expenses.
And I would put that in a high yield savings account.
So what do you think three to six months?
In your case, I'd probably do six months,
to be honest with you.
What six months of expenses for you?
Well, I only make about $32,000 a year.
Okay.
And I pretty much use all of that
to live on and pay the bills I do have,
the living expenses.
I do have a little bit left over from each paycheck, but I have not
been putting that in savings for about, I got divorced in September, so I haven't been putting
anything in savings since I got divorced. I see. Well, the good news is, like you said,
you've got the $72,000, so you don't necessarily need to set any more aside into savings per se,
but the retirement piece, I do want you doing that because you've got to keep actively adding to this nest egg.
Do I take any of the $72,000 and put that in a Roth IRA or can I do that?
You can, but you can only do it up to a certain point.
And then you're going to have to go into a brokerage account or you're going to have to work with an investment professional to see what's the best option for you to open up. But I do want you to go ahead. I'm sorry. No, you go. I got on
SmartVestor and I have an appointment with, I guess he's called a financial professional. Yes.
I guess I'll speak with him. Yes. So when you work with that SmartVestor Pro, they're just
going to give you the options and the
best options for you and your situation. But at the end of the day, the thing I want you to hear
me say is, I think you've done a great job with the $72,000. But what you've got to do is you've
got to take some of that as your three to six months, because I don't want you investing all
of your money. You've got to keep some of it liquid. And so whatever six months of expenses
is for you, take that and just set it
aside, put it in a high yield savings account. So if something goes wrong, Lisa, you can have that
money. You know, if something happens with your roof or something happens with the car, you've
got money that you can have access to without you pulling from invested money. Does that make sense?
Yes. What is a high yield savings account?
It's a savings account. Most of them, the good ones are online accounts.
You could check out ally.com. We don't endorse them, but it's just the one I use. I know George
uses Marcus by Goldman Sachs. Yeah, we use an ally. Yeah, it's similar to a money market account,
Lisa. So it's an account that it usually, I think now is actually getting a higher rate of return
than money market accounts, but a high yield savings account. And so what it is, it's basically a savings account
where you're making more money, but you can't withdraw money up to a certain point in so many
transactions per month. So there's some limits on it, but that's okay. Because again, that money's
going to just sit there unless you really need it. And if you really need it, it's probably going to
be one check that you write out of it if it's an emergency. And then everything else. So a Roth IRA is a great retirement vehicle.
Your money will grow tax-free, which is amazing. So as it's growing and as it's investing,
as it's invested, you're going to be actually making so much money on your money. It's kind
of one of those accounts that you put in. And because the market, you know, averages, you know, 10% or so, you'll be making money while you sleep, if you will, Lisa, which
is a great thing for retirement. Lisa, you said you went through a divorce in September. And so
you're back in the workforce. Were you working before that? Or did you go back to work because
of where you're at? I went back to work. You went back to to work okay um so I'm guessing this is one of the
first times you're handling everything on your own huh yes okay well you're doing you're doing
great you're doing a really good job Lisa are you uh what are you doing for work I work in
in a finance office um so I do the accounting work okay that's awesome so my only you know
other thought because of your age and
because you don't have much in retirement, would what it would look like to up your income. And
I don't know, you know, what opportunities are out there for you in your area and with your
experience and all of that. But that is something I mean, 32,000, that's on the lower end. So I
would encourage you to see what else is out there. And I think,
you know, there's a level of confidence, Lisa, I could only imagine that you now are starting to
have. And even when sitting down with the SmartVestor Pro, you know, even listening to him
and have him teach you, Lisa, okay, do not go in and just nod your head and just say whatever you
say. I want you to learn. This is going to be some of the biggest changes of your life and things that you're dealing with now that you never probably had to. And so you're going to
be a sponge. And I don't want you to put your money in something that you don't understand.
And so I want you to really, really learn. And I think over time, there's going to be a level
of confidence that is built. And I think that that can translate into more income. I think that
you're going to feel like, OK, I can actually step out and apply for something and make more. But I think upping your
income is another great goal to look at in the next, you know, three, six, 12 months. Absolutely.
Because if you can make even 50,000, right, 20,000 more, that's going to make a significant
difference to what you can put away for retirement. But you're in a really good spot
to have everything paid off. You have no bills. I mean, it's only up from here, Lisa. So I'm really
proud of you. Thank you so much. I really appreciate your time. Yes, absolutely. Absolutely.
Really good. Yeah. And that's, again, learning about this stuff and understanding, okay,
what is a Roth IRA? And I even love, it's like, what is a high yield savings account?
Yeah, great questions. Yes, getting to these basics and really having this knowledge. Knowledge
gives you power. And when you have knowledge, you usually have options and you're able to see
you're not pinned into one thing. And because, oh my gosh, this is the only thing I got to do.
I don't even get it, but I got to do it. And it's this like fear cycle, all of it, right?
That's right.
When you have peace and you have knowledge and you're learning and you're experiencing,
it does give you some confidence. So Lisa, I'm really proud of you. I think that
I think you're doing a really brave thing and I'm excited for you to sit down with somebody and
actually look at your specific numbers, have them teach you and show you and they're going to run
numbers for you to look out and say, okay, you know, in 10 years, here's where it's going to be
in 15 years. And I think it's been to be really motivating and empowering, Lisa, for you.
So I'm sorry you went through what you went through in September, but we believe in you.
Thanks for the call.
Welcome back to The Ramsey Show.
I am Rachel Cruz hosting this hour with Jade Warshaw.
So it is tax season, Jade. it's approaching it's here it is
approaching and taxes are confusing we get it but we want to unpack one question from one of our
listeners and it says what's the difference between a tax deduction and a tax credits
so tax credits cut your bill dollar for dollar. So if you owe $1,000 in taxes, you have a $500 tax credit,
you only pay $500. A tax deduction lowers your tax bill by lowering your taxable income. So again,
you simply subtract the deduction from your income, less taxable income means less taxes
owed. So it's more on your income, not on the actual taxes there. So listen, again, there's a
lot of ways you can go about this. And again, there's like, okay, I could self-file. Should I
sit down with someone? I mean, there's just a lot of questions around taxes. So if you are confident
though on filing on your own, make sure to head to Ramsey Smart Tax and that's ramsesolutions.com
slash tax. And there you will find Ramsey Smart Tax, which that's ramsesolutions.com slash tax. And there you will find
Ramsey Smart Tax, which is our no-nonsense tax software with low upfront pricing, no hidden fees,
and we will connect you with a tax pro if you need that. So if you've had a big life change,
or maybe you're re-looking at something if you own a small business, you know, you've had a child,
adopted a child, like if something as big has happened in your life you may want to sit down with a tax pro and again you can
find that on our website at ramsey solutions.com slash tax and you can get connected uh to a tax
professional who is ramsey trusted so again you can file on your own using ramsey smart tax or
sit down with a tax pro who is Ramsey trusted at
ramseysolutions.com slash tax. Love it. Up next, we have Morgan in Tucson. Hey, Morgan,
welcome to the show. Hi, thank you all for taking my call. Absolutely. How can we help?
So my wife and I are buying a house. It's down to, we got it down to $635,000, but it needs a little bit of work.
We do have to put a new roof on it, which we estimate to be about $30,000.
However, that's on the, that's our lowest estimate.
So it could be as much as $40,000.
We also have another $3,000 to $7,000 for radon.
So we're looking total at $33,000 to $50,000 that we have to put into the house before we move into it.
Originally, we were going to put down $335,000 on it by doing $235,000 down and then recasting $100,000 afterwards because it got us a half percent savings on the mortgage rate.
Now, we're trying to figure out, do we go ahead with that original plan? We have the cash
to do the roof and radon, but if anything goes wrong, then we're going to be short on cash.
We'll have the cash, but we're going to be short on it. Or do we hold off a couple months for the
recast and make sure that we have everything squared away, moved to New Mexico from Arizona and all of that.
So you're going to put $235,000 down. And when were you saying that you're going to do this
recast? How long are you waiting? We originally were going to do it the next day, which we were
allowed to do. I don't understand why. Help me understand that. The only reason that we wanted to do it
was because they gave us another
half percent discount on the mortgage rate.
That's all.
To the next day put another
$100,000 down.
Correct.
And there's no
I mean obviously with the recast you're not closing
again. There's just
you're just putting a $100,000
payment.
Correct.
I don't know.
I want to know if there's a loophole there.
Like, I want to know something more about that.
It just feels weird that you would hold on to your down payment.
From what we can tell, they market you hard.
They try to get you to spend that money on something else
and not recast it.
It just gives them one more chance to get the money from you.
And this is all to save a half a percent?
Half a percent and, yeah, half a percent on the mortgage, 15-year.
Yeah, because, I mean, if worse comes to worse, Morgan,
what would happen if you guys you put 235 down
the next day they're like oh this isn't gonna work the recast oh gosh oh gosh could you just
throw the hundred thousand on the house yeah yeah so i mean either way i think you're you're
gonna be okay but you're asking with all these repairs do you do you take 50 000 of that hundred
thousand and save it and put it to the side?
Or what was your original question?
Right.
So that's what my original question was.
We have, I mean, to be on the safe side, $50,000 worth of repairs.
We'd like to put down as much as we can on the house, but we also don't want to get into a cash crunch.
Yeah. So the question is, if you save the $50,000 out, I'm not really concerned about the recast and all that. My thought is, can you afford the, here's my two questions for you. Can you afford the house if you don't get the extra percent off? That's5 down and then you keep 50 000 will you still be
able to will it still fall under that parameter of it's no more than 25 of your take home on a 15
year fixed rate conventional mortgage yeah yeah it will so then if i were in your shoes based on
what you said i would probably be like okay we need this money because like you said, I would probably be like, okay, we need this money
because like you said,
radon, the roof's got to get fixed.
Was it radon?
Is that what you said?
Yeah, radon and roof.
The roof's got to get fixed.
That's $50,000.
I mean, you need to get that done.
So I would just keep that money out,
have those repairs done.
You put $285,000 down on a $635,000 house.
Which is great
because you're putting almost 50% down.
That's awesome.
Yeah, I mean, you guys are in a great position.
So I would rather have the
cash fix what you need
and then aggressively pay down
the house because do you guys have any other debt?
No, we don't have any
other debt. We have very good income.
What do you guys make a year?
Before
taxes and everything, $480,000.
After taxes, $401,000, $22,k 22 a month and then the good news is i
mean you said it's 50k on the high side it sounds like you're like being estimating this aggressively
which is good and if you get out on the other side you're like hey we still have 10 or 15 000 left
throw it towards a mortgage yeah right yeah okay so so you you guys would suggest then
recasting less and then recasting or paying down quicker after everything is settled with what's what's remaining.
Well, would they let you read? Are they going to let you recast it even though it's now going to be less than one hundred thousand?
Yeah, they don't care. They that was part of the deal we signed with them.
OK. Yeah. Yeah. I'm OK with that that and you guys make insane money morgan too so i'm like if you have you'll have um roughly 330 000 left on the mortgage and you guys
making 480 which again is before taxes and everything but i'm like y'all could have your
house paid off in three years if you really did it so yeah um so yeah i think you're in a great
position i think you're in a great position but i would have the cash on hand to do the repairs
that are necessary and i'm thankful that you know that
they're coming because for some people it sneaks up on them and they don't have the cash to fix it.
True that. You know, usually when I hear recasting, I kind of, my radar goes up because
a lot of times people are doing that really just to get a lower payment. And it's in their mind,
they're thinking, this is great. I don't have to close again. I'm not paying those closing costs.
I can just have them recalculate it now that I've made this giant payment and get
a lower payment. But at the end of the day, the whole point is to pay off your mortgage and get
it out of your life, not lower the payment. And so that's kind of, I was wanting to ask those
questions, but it seems like they understand. And for them, the motivation was to get the lower
interest rate, not to get necessarily get a lower payment. That's right. That's right. Yep. No,
that's good though, because I think,
again, with the housing market where it's at, it is it is it's so expensive. I mean,
everywhere. I just feel like it's insane and rates still are high. And so the whole mortgage
conversation is one that has continued to be had. And it's still a hard you know, it's a hard
situation for a lot of people. But't for a lot you know for them in
this situation like you said it is more about getting a lower interest rate because they're
going to pay it off quickly and it's not just trying to finagle the system to just get in a
house where we barely can get in but we're barely doing it because that when you're stretched that
to that point the only way we can do this is if we do a recast. Right. Like if that's your only option, there's some desperation there.
And if anything goes wrong, it's going to be so stressed and you're going to hate this house.
And you're going to think, why did we do this when we did it?
Why didn't we wait six, eight, 12 months and save more?
So give yourself some breathing room, you guys, in this.
And I know people are like, get in the market, get in the market, get in the market.
There's a lot of incentives out there.
Incentives out there right now, too, that can lure people away from better judgment.
Yes, exactly.
So be careful with some of this, you guys, as you're out house hunting and all of it.
We love houses.
We love real estate.
We want it to be part of your life, but we want it to be a blessing, not a curse.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Welcome back to The Ramsey show.
So I feel like one of the things we're known for, Jade,
is the anti-credit card people,
where so many people try to play the game.
Yes.
Try to get the points and the cash back and all of it.
And we're just like, you know what?
Live your own life, people.
Live your own life.
Don't have the bank involved.
But credit card late fees this has
been in the news a lot they've been capped now at eight dollars eight dollars part of the biden
administration crackdown on junk fees where a lot of people were paying a ton of these fees
especially with late fees and everything yeah um they're cracking down on the credit card companies
it's crazy it says this is from CNN dot com.
It says federal regulators finalized a rule on Tuesday to cap most credit card late fees at eight dollars as part of a broader push by the Biden administration to eliminate junk fees. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau estimates the new regulation, which was first proposed in February, will save families more than 10 billion a year by cutting fees from an average
of $32. It comes as Americans continue to pile on credit card debt. Guys, we know Americans are in
1.1 trillion with a T of credit card debt, which is crazy. More than 45 million people
are charged late fees on credit cards each year, which by the way, that means for all the people who say,
I have a credit card, Jade,
but I pay it off every month.
Someone's lying.
Someone's lying
because somebody is being charged these fees
is all I'm saying.
It says these individuals
will now save an average of $220 per year.
I think that's a lie.
The new rule aims to close 20 uh 2010 loophole um so basically
i do you know rachel when i hear things like this there's part of me that thinks
there's goodwill here like there's good intent oh yeah i do think that the administration is
going how can we like families are hurting people are hurting economically we don't want credit card
companies take advantage yes of them being in a tight situation. Yeah. So how can we kind of, you know, close in the gap on that? And so
eliminating junk fees, I think in one way, it's great because some people might look at $32 a
month or $18 a month ago. That's nothing. But we do know that a lot of folks who are using credit
cards, not everybody's using them to live a lavish life. Some people are just trying to keep the
lights on, trying to keep groceries in the house.
And so there's part of this that I know
a large population might be going,
oh, great, like I could use an extra $32.
But I really do think that at the end of the day,
we have to realize that this is not something
that we should cling to for hope.
Like this is something for us to go,
listen, I gotta get out of this cycle.
If $32 is what's meaning the world to me listen i gotta get out of this cycle yeah if 32 dollars is what's
like what's meaning the world to me i gotta get out of this and honestly what i think is the way
the credit card companies on they're gonna find another way to charge you right like they're not
gonna do you think that they're really gonna let go of 10 billion dollars a year no they're not
gonna let that slide they're gonna find another way whether
it's increasing their interest rates whether it's charging other fees they'll figure out a way to do
it they're not gonna just lay down and say yeah sure yeah 10 billion i know so and what's crazy
too and it's interesting to think about and and i hate to say this because like you said i'm like
there are people hurting and that this is the thing that's somewhat keeping them afloat, if you will, but still in the cycle.
Is it these fees hurt less?
So does it keep you in a cycle because it doesn't hurt as much?
Yeah, you're not being charged that heavy late fee.
So it's okay if you're late.
It's okay.
But then your credit score keeps getting dinged.
I mean, like all of it.
So it's just being aware that this still,
like you said, Jade,
can't be the thing that motivates you.
It has to be out of this willpower of a higher will, if you said, Jade, can't be the thing that motivates you. It has to be out of
this willpower of a higher will, if you will, to say, oh my gosh, I don't want this to be my life.
And I don't want this cycle in general, regardless of what, you know, what legislation has passed or
not. For myself, I want to take control of something greater than this. I just wish, you
know, some part of me goes, if you really want to help people,
show them the way out. Don't show them the way to stay in it and stay comfortable. Like, honestly,
I mean, Ramsey here at Ramsey, we're always showing people how to get out of debt,
how to get out of a cycle. And I'm just like, stop giving people money and show them the way out.
Yes. But anyway, governments on both sides are not known for that. Y'all. So we got to.
Yeah.
You got to take the matters into your own hands.
That's right.
And just get out of it if you can, if at all you can.
And we're going to show you how to do that here on the show.
So, yeah, absolutely.
All right.
Up next, we have Joshua in Mobile.
Hey, Joshua.
Welcome to the show.
Hey, how are y'all doing today? We're doing great.
How can we help?
Yes, ma'am.
Me and my wife, we purchased FPU about three days ago,
and we've been following through, and we had about $6,000 in savings.
So I couldn't talk her into just having $1,000 in emergencies.
So we got $2,000 in emergencies since we just had a one-month old.
So I said, I'll take what I can get.
Listen, you've got to sleep at night. I hear you.
Exactly. So I took that $4,000 and I paid off my credit cards.
Good for you. How'd that feel?
And I paid off. Oh, it felt amazing. It's just a never ending cycle, it seems like. So
I thank God that I found a way out of that. That's awesome.
But I also paid off a washing dryer that i had to purchase
due to an emergency that popped up in our home and the thing is is instead of just having you know
uh like eighty two hundred dollars of debt left over i bought my wife this car that you that i've
seen to hear about all day long and y'all keep getting asked about uh and this car was uh forty one thousand dollars
yep and uh i still owe thirty seven thousand but instead of paying off my debt in six months now
i'm looking at you know a couple years and i'm just looking at what y'all recommend i spoke with
a dealership trying to see if i could come in and uh maybe trade it in for something a little less. Have you Kelly Blue Booked it, Joshua?
No, ma'am, I haven't.
Okay, because I'm curious.
How long ago did you get it?
We've only had the car for like four months,
and then I ran across y'all, and I was like,
man, that was perfect timing.
Okay, yeah.
Four months too late, a little bit.
I know, I wish we were there earlier.
Was it brand new?
Yes, ma'am.
Okay, so it's taken a hit, ma'am. It's still only got a...
Okay, so it's taking a hit.
And I'm curious, though.
You owe $37,000 on it.
I'm hoping there could be a wash there.
You know, if you could sell it.
I would Kelly Blue Book it and see what you can...
It's a four-month-old car.
It's a five-year loan at 2.9% interest.
So it's not a bad loan considering, you know, other loans.
No. How much do you guys make a year?
We made $120,000 last year.
Okay.
Annually.
Is this your only car?
When I look at the total, I'm like, yes, her only car.
And then my truck's paid off.
And then what other debt do you guys have?
I have a $7,000 personal loan and then $1,800 on a stupid computer that I bought.
Okay.
So you'll get that paid off this month, I'm hoping.
Yeah.
Oh, God, Joshua, I'm selling the car.
Yeah.
I couldn't stomach having a $41,000 asset that is going to continue just to drop, drop, drop, drop, drop,
as even we're talking on this call right now.
It's just continuing to drop.
And for you guys just to be out, it's not worth it.
It's not worth it.
A car, it's not worth it.
And so I would sit down with your wife and be like,
hey, what does it look like if we save up some money
and we sell this?
I'm hoping you can get more than what you owe
just to get a few thousand bucks out of it.
And then pair it together.
Go and look on AutoTrader.
Just look around at a private sale of another car.
You can get a great car.
And a car is a car, right?
It needs to get you from point A to point B.
And so much of what...
She had a 2008 Nissan Sentra.
And like I said, we got a one-month-old daughter.
And I was like, you know, that thing ain't safe.
And she was like, well, let's get this $20,000.
The thing is, you go from one extreme to another don't do that I hate when people do this
and I get it's out of the love of the baby but a Camry is safe yeah an eight-year-old Camry's safe
it's gonna be fine it's gonna be fine and so be and and Joshua run the numbers just for yourselves
and just say let's put this car payment let's just say we just did we just did the norm which i know you're not doing because you're you're wanting to
aggressively pay off debt so i hear that but just put a car payment put your car payment in an
investment calculator and see what it's costing you and that's what people you really need to
understand is instead of your money working for you and when you sleep at night it's making you
money and it's making you wealthier all of that is going to a
dealership and going to the bank and you're paying interest on something that's going down in value
so it's not a car it's not worth it the car is not worth it to me what is your car payment i'm
just curious on this 41 000 vehicle yeah it's like a 750 a month oh lord that's messed up like
i said i got the short loan. That's still horrible, but
I don't care. Joshua, sell it.
Now, a few months later, I'll see you guys. Lock arms,
sell it, and then go get an awesome other
car in 18 months once you're debt-free.
But get this $41,000
of debt in a stupid car out of here.
You guys can do this. I feel the motivation,
Joshua. You guys are on track. I mean,
you're four days in, so I'm going to give you some grace.
But you're making traction, and just go all in and if you hate the plan if you hate it Joshua
you can always go back and get a $41,000 car payment car loan if you want to later if that's
what you want to do you can go back but try our way first welcome back to the Ramsey show we were
just talking at the break as we're right coming on hot on the air.
Yes.
Of just, you know, especially you young families that have kids
and you're in this season of just, golly, it's just, it's a lot of work.
And the kids are just, there's goldfish cracker crumbs and peanut butter
and jelly and crustables squeezed everywhere.
It's just, you know, you want to be able to enjoy life.
And I think for some people, it can be like, we want the nicest thing.
We want a brand new X.
We want this, this, this, this, and this.
Can it even be taken care of, though, the way it's supposed to be is the question.
And there's a level of like, you know, and I can be like this where I'm like, I just don't want to spend money on something that I can't enjoy in life because I'm so scared it's going to get destroyed and maybe one day once
they're teenagers or I don't know parents and teenagers can correct me yeah there's a point
that I'm like okay great that's not going to get spilled on or for the most part like you you can
handle x y and z all I know Rachel is I watched my son take a piece of pizza and take every piece
of topping off of the pizza into his
lap in the car and then when i leaned over to see what he was doing i watched my daughter spill her
piece of pizza on the carpet oh yeah and i'm like i can't drive a lexus truck it's done i never can
it is uh it's a real thing so we want to enjoy life to people so some people go get the brand
new thing because the the new baby.
And I'm like, I don't know.
They're going to spit up on it.
Yeah, 100%.
The car seat is going to put those deep indentations into that nice leather.
Even if you put down the little mat, it's still going to put that deep, you know, you
put the little kick pads.
By the time you baby proof it, you put the kick pads on the back of the seat.
Then it's not even, it's not even an oh
it's not even what it was intended to be anymore i'm like listen i'm gonna just i'll just wait
we'll wait we're gonna have delayed gratification trades and these kids are not gonna ruin that
that truck when the time comes that's right that's right all right up next we have erica
in gainesville hey erica welcome to. Hi, thank you for taking my call.
Absolutely. How can we help? So my husband and I sold our first house two years ago
because we wanted to buy some land and we had $150,000 in equity in our house and decided on
our path to be debt-free, we were going to buy a property outright. We didn't want
to have a mortgage at all. So we did. We found a five-acre property with a double-wide mobile home,
and we were planning on fixing up the double-wide, but now we've decided we hate it,
and we want to build a house. So we have $20,000 in debt right now, and that's student loans, consumer, and medical.
And I guess, so we want to pay all that off first before trying to get a loan to build a house.
But we're worried that it's going to drop our credit and not be able to get a loan
to build a house. Go ahead, Rachel. I heard you. Yeah, no. Well, I was going to say, you know,
yeah, your credit will lower as you pay off debt, but it will get to a place, Erica, where it's
undetermined, basically. And so it'll take about six to 12 months once you pay off that last debt
for it to get there.
And then from there, you would do a process called manual underwriting. Now, that's usually for already a home.
And so you would have to take out a construction loan and then roll it over to a mortgage once the construction is done.
So you would have to work with somebody to make sure with the manual underwriting process, which people still do that.
So that is still an option for you.
But yes, you will have your credit score lowered as you pay off debt because mathematically the way your credit score
is calculated has to do with debt. And so when you're getting out and you're not accumulating
new debts and you're, you know, but you're aggressively paying it off, you will see over
time as you pay off these debts, it's going to go down. So yeah, you guys will just have to be
patient in that sense. Well, the good news is
the time is built in because the time that it's going to take you to save up for the down payment
is the time it'll take for your score to roll to zero. Yep, that's right. So there's part of that.
So my husband's a veteran, so we were planning on doing a VA loan. And I guess we may have to
look into that more if they will do an underwriting,
manual underwriting process for VA loans. I'm not totally sure about that.
Well, typically we would suggest a conventional loan. There are some instances where a VA will work, but a lot of times they have a lot of extra fees that end up making it more expensive. So
really do your research on that before you settle in on a VA loan simply because usually I think the biggest
benefit is the you don't have to put money down correct correct yes and we want you to put money
down because we want you to have almost like instant equity when you're going forward yeah
so at least five percent for your first home is what we say five to twenty percent is ideal
but you guys too Erica I'll just you know just say it because I have you on the call.
When you go into this build process, again, it'll be in a few years,
but this is a situation that you'll go to the bank,
and they're going to be able to say, oh, my gosh, you qualify for this.
And you're going to think, oh, we don't need that.
And then you're going to start the home build process.
And you're like, oh, we can upgrade here.
We could add a little square footage there.
And you start ticking your way up. And it's so easy during builds. It's usually more expensive
than you think. Your standard can start to really waver. So I always say this to people that are
building homes, have a budget, be firm on it and say, we're not going over this. And that's what
Winston and I did when we built ours. And it was hard. There was stuff that we said no to that
we're like, man, we wanted it, but we just at this moment in time we can't
pay for it so we're not going to do it but it's easy to creep that budget up when it happens so
and if you can get your loan a construction to permanent loan the first time that way they know
hey I'm getting this loan for this it's going to automatically convert and you're not having to go
through that closing process twice or get to the point where you've taken out this construction loan. To Rachel's point,
if you've gone over budget and then you're going over here to try to get that to convert to a
mortgage and you're not approving, you can get in trouble there. So make sure you're doing it
all in one from the beginning and there's plenty of mortgage companies who will do that for you.
That's right. Up next, we have Nicole in Kansas City. Hey, Nicole, welcome to the show.
Hi. Hello, hello. How can we help? Okay, so I am calling. My husband and I live very frugally.
I mean, we're kind of the joke of everybody because we drive the old cars, but we have
secretly been able to put money away, and I'm just putting it away in CDs and in cash. And I've just been
following Dave Ramsey for like the last year on Facebook and listening to you guys.
And I'm going, okay, we need to do something more because it's great that we have this money in CDs,
but that's making us what a thousand dollars a investing. And it appears to talk a lot about Roth IRAs. And I'm
like, is that what I start doing? And we probably make, both of us together, maybe $90,000 a year.
And we probably have $90,000 savings. Okay. Well, do your employers offer any sort of investing
opportunity? 401k, 403b? Yeah, we do both have that. And we have like employer match 5%. So we both do the max of 5%
both. So you are doing that currently? Yes, we are doing that currently as well. And so my thing is,
like I said, I'm putting away about $1,500 a month, sometimes $2,000 a month. And I'm going,
I need to be doing something more with this money because I'm going to be 37 this year. And I'm going, I need to be doing something more with this money because I'm going to be 37 this year.
And I'm like, you know, retirement's really not that far out in the future.
Do you guys have any debt, Nicole?
That's right.
No debt.
Okay.
So what I would do, Nicole, is remember this formula.
Match beats Roth beats traditional.
So the first thing you're going to do is your match.
And you guys are doing that up to 5%.
And we want you investing 15% of your income into retirement.
So 5% of that 15% is done, which is great.
So you have 10% left.
So then I want you guys, yes, to open up a Roth IRA.
It grows tax-free.
The max, I think, is $7,000 this year that you each can put in.
You each can open one.
So I want you to open one, Nicole, and I want your husband to open up one.
So you guys will be investing money into that. And then after that's done, run the calculations and see,
okay, is out of that 10%, after we max it out, how much is left? If there is any left,
go back to your 401k and put that money in. And you just do that formula of 15%.
And then anything extra that you guys have in your budget that you're able to throw out your house, pay it off early, and you just keep doing that.
And that, Nicole, your 401k and a Roth IRA, you guys doing that from 37 to 67, you're going to be fine.
It's going to be fabulous.
If you want to go to RamseySolutions.com and hit our investing calculator and put some of these numbers in and just say, hey.
Yeah.
And this $90,000 that you have, keep some of that cash
and put it in a high yield savings account.
I would do six months of expenses.
And then the rest of it,
you can use to fund your Roth if you need to.
You can put it in a brokerage account,
some type of Vanguard account even.
So there's some other options there, Nicole.
And you still have time.
You can fund 2023, let's see,
2023's Roth and 2024's, Nicole. And you still have time. You can fund 2023. Let's see, 2023 is Roth and 2024 is Roth
for each of you.
You have until April tax day to do that.
So big opportunity.
Absolutely.
Thanks, Nicole, for the call.
Thank you, America, for listening.
Thanks to everyone in the booth.
Jade, always a pleasure.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Live from the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions, it's the Ramsey Show,
where we help people build wealth, do work that they love, and create amazing relationships.
I am Rachel Cruz, hosting this hour with bestselling author and my good friend,
Jade Warshaw. And we are here to answer your questions. So give us a call at 888-825-5225.
And we're here to talk about your life,
your money, your relationships, your career,
anything and everything.
Speaking about money, Rachel,
we're doing here at Ramsey Solutions,
we're doing a money documentary coming up
and we're working on,
it's like a new show that we're doing
and we need you guys to be a part
of it. And I'm not giving any like spoiler alerts, but I'm going to be part of it. It might have to
do with somebody coming into your home and helping you with your budget and your life and getting
your money together. It's just a little something going on is all I'm saying. Now, here's the
criteria. If you are interested in this, you've gotta be somebody who's in debt, right?
You've gotta be in debt.
Maybe you and your spouse are not on the same page with money
and you need help with that.
Perhaps you're having a hard time making ends meet
and you're living paycheck to paycheck
and your income is a problem.
Or maybe you've said to yourself,
man, I make too much money to feel this broke.
If you're in that camp,
we want to walk with you for 90 days
and help you turn things around. Like this is a very immersive documentary style show, I guess
is the best way to say it. So if you're interested, we'll put a link to a form in the show notes. So
you can check out the show notes if you're on the podcast and you can fill out the form and we may
or may not get
back to you i'm just saying this is a casting call all right so put your best foot forward
don't say anything or do anything weird but definitely be honest and we'll be able to tell
anyway if you're weird so anyway put it out there we want to do this this is going to be so so fun
and hopefully we'll help a lot but jade's't say a lot, but Jade's pretty good at budgeting. We'll just say that much.
I might help you budget a little bit.
We'll say that much.
Oh, so great.
And where did they go again, Jade?
They need to go to the show notes, right, James?
That's the best place to look at it.
Yeah, we'll have the link in the show notes on YouTube and podcast.
Perfect.
So make sure to check that out, you guys.
All right, to kick us off this hour, we have Leah in Dallas, Texas.
Hey, Leah.
Welcome to the show.
Hi. Thank you for having me absolutely how can we help um so a few questions that I wanted to bring up but the main one is how
to get my husband to be um okay and um supportive of me leading our debt payoff journey and the budget and just managing the
finances. He views it as because he's the man of the house that it should be his job.
And I am okay with that, but he does not budget. He does not track anything.
He doesn't, you know, if we say, how much did we spend on X last month?
He has no idea.
So you're just a little better with money.
Like you're more nerdy.
Yes.
I do the budget and I track and I know how much for everything.
And he just doesn't do that.
So he's viewing it more as a gender role rather than a skills role, like skill set.
Right.
Individual skill set.
And that's not a great way of looking at it.
So I hope he watches this call
because we'll just get right to it.
I'm being so blunt to it because truly, Leah,
because it's not him.
And I think that viewpoint is,
they hold this esteem of I should be the one leading
all of X, Y, and Z, you know, spiritual conviction part of your life is where that comes from.
Listen, a good leader knows how to delegate.
That's all I'm saying.
Yes.
And to understand that you guys are a team, Leah, you are a team.
You both have equal say in this.
You both have the ability to look at money and you both have ability to say, hey, here's where we think our money should go. Naturally, one of you is going to be better at
that than the other. It's just like when you're planning a trip. One of you naturally is going to
be more detailed and plan the trip. Let that person who enjoys it and likes it, let them do it. Let
them thrive in that. And that's what this money is. It's not cutting him out. And it's not an
insult. No, it's not cutting him out either. It either it's saying hey we're both coming to the table but let me take the initiative because i love doing this i'm good at this
and let me do this let me work in my strength here and um and again i think out of the name
sometimes jade of of um and leah you're right here we're talking with us yeah out of a um you know a
spiritual conviction if you will you know they i think i think we get
that tangled up with oh my gosh we have to live this life together the man is the head and i've
got to lead out on the finances and i've got to take and he sucks at it yeah and he doesn't want
to do it and that's okay do you know what i mean and that's okay so like call a spade a spade
and again it's not one is better than the other. It's just more equal that you guys are working as a team together in this.
So I can't, you know, I appreciate his heart in it.
But I just think when you go about it that way, it can get dysfunctional really quick.
And you don't make progress because the person that's good at it isn't the one that's saying,
hey, let me like take the first couple of steps and then we're going to do this together it's almost like when it's almost like when you let like the legalism of something
yes keep you from enjoying the fruit of what you're actually there for amen do you know what
i mean yes and in this case it's like you both have clearly agreed that you care about getting
your finances in order and you both have right there both of you have said this is something we
probably need to do but he's getting so caught up in like like i said that legalism of it initiates it or something
and it's it's both of you guys it's both of you talking uh you guys responding and me talking
about it right now um and it kind of made me realize that I think part of where his issue comes from is that I am trying to do it y'all's way.
Like, so you're on two different pages.
We're on like half of the same page.
So he semi agrees.
But where we're different is he wants to keep, we have a pretty significant amount saved, a little over $10,000, and he doesn't want
to touch that even though we have an overwhelming amount of debt. And I don't like that. And then
he also doesn't want to close one of the largest credit cards we have because he wants it there as
a cushion, like a just in case if something happens. So I feel like a lot of what he's wanting is very fear-based.
Yeah.
So how much debt do you guys have, Leah?
Not counting the house, $104,000.
$104,000. What's it in?
What kind of debt is it?
Credit cards, my student loans, and one car loan.
Let me ask you this.
Would you say, if he were on the call with us,
if we asked him, are you happy with where you are financially,
what would he say?
Yes, absolutely not.
Okay.
So here's the deal, Leah.
Here's what has to happen.
And something that he, again, I hope you're listening,
husband of Leah, because I'm sure you're great.
But what people have to understand is,
if you're not happy with where you are financially, that means you have to do something different. If you
keep doing what you've been doing, you're going to keep getting what you've been getting, which
is the definition of insanity. And so change is hard. It's scary. It's uncomfortable. But in order
to get a different result, you have to do something different. And this plan that we walk out with the
baby steps is there for a reason.
It's not like it just was poof, we just made it up.
It's three decades of people doing this.
Jade and I both in our personal lives have walked this out.
I mean, millions of people have done this.
And if you walk the baby steps
and you do exactly in order what it is,
you're going to feel so different
when it comes to your money.
So hold on the line, Leah,
because Austin's going to pick up. And I want to give you guys Financial Peace University,
which is our nine-week course, and Every Dollar Premium, so you guys can start budgeting together, both of you, and start this. Because again, it's the idea of getting on the same page
with your values and the principles that's important.
Welcome back to The Ramsey Show.
I'm Rachel Cruz, chatting here with Jade Warshaw for the hour,
answering your questions at 888-825-5225.
And one of the best ways, if you have enjoyed the show via the radio, podcast, YouTube,
please tell your friends and family.
We just met a fun mother-son at the break.
Yes.
And he's 23, introduced his mom to the show via YouTube. And she just binged everything she said, watched all the videos and paid off everything, mortgage and all.
And I'm like, see, so all you watching on YouTube, if your parents are out there, just send them some clips.
You know, if you have friends, parents, send your kids some clips, you know, neighbors, friends, family, spread the word.
Because our hope and our prayer for doing what we do is for you to take control of your money, create a life that you
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doing this plan and the baby steps that we know the answer. We will do. And it sounds prideful,
but we really believe that this plan, it helps you guys. So we want everyone to experience that
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And the way to do that is to, again, enjoy the show.
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Share it, leave a review if you'll do that as well.
Subscribe to the podcast,
subscribe to the YouTube channel.
It helps us out a lot.
And again, it helps spread the word
because we want people in control of their money.
So true.
And Rachel, you said, I'm going rogue for a minute.
You said something and it's true. This has been a proven plan for 30 years.
People have been taking this plan, using it and changing their life. And, you know, we get call
after call every show. And, you know, the last call that we got, it was they had $10,000. They
weren't sure if they wanted to put that towards debt or people want to keep around credit cards.
And I can say like as a person, I mean, like you said, all the personalities have walked through this plan.
And I think that there's always a piece of it that when you first start out mentally,
you wrestle with, right? Like there's whether it's the cut up the credit cards thing or the
buy a car in cash thing or the zero credit score thing or the take your savings to pay off the debt
thing. Like everybody's going to come up against that wall that feels counterintuitive or feels very uncomfortable, very uncomfortable. And the truth
is when you face something that's unknown, you can feel a little bit of fear or like, you know,
I'm not sure if I want to take that next step, but the thing that, and this is a thing that I
embraced and hopefully it helps somebody listening. I never, before I found Ramsey,
I never helped anybody get out of debt or have a million dollar net worth or save up three to six.
I never was able to do that for myself, let alone anyone else, which means I did not have a plan
that worked. Yep. And some of you need to stop a moment and go, does my plan work? Is what I'm
doing working? And the truth is, if it were, you wouldn't be calling us or you probably wouldn't be,
you know, listening to the show for the very first time. So there is a little bit of pride
that has to come down and go, listen, my way of doing things is not working. This show has been
here for 30 years and this method has been here for probably even longer and it's helped people
and it's helping people and it actually works and sometimes you just have to accept that and go okay
and I love that like you said uh Rachel the young lady and young gentleman in our audience she
looked at this and goes oh this works I'll do that yes you know and it's honestly it's just as simple
as that and I promise as as you keep walking through that plan, you'll start to see, oh, it really
does work.
And this really does pay off.
And, you know, that's right.
That's my little two cents for you guys today.
No, I love it.
I love it.
And change is hard.
It's uncomfortable, but it's the way.
And it's just common sense.
You guys, we say God's and grandma's ways of handling money.
So it's not the new exciting trend that you're going to see on TikTok and like all of this, oh, well, you just do this backdoor thing
here. It's pretty much common sense, but it works every time. It does. With every debt level,
every income level, regardless of where you are, it works. Yeah. All right. Up next, we have Carla
in Los Angeles. Hey, Carla, welcome to the show. Hi, Rachel. Hi, Jade. Thanks for
taking the call. I'm happy to be here. How are you guys doing? Yes, we're doing great. Glad you
called in. How can we help? Yeah, so similar to what you were just talking about, I have a bunch
of student loans that are coming up. They were unfrozen after that long student loan freezing during COVID.
And I have a pretty high payment coming up.
And I've been listening to you guys.
I'm a relatively new listener, but I'm fully bought into taking the baby steps and tackling one goal at a time.
And I'm just thinking through, I have a plan for this year to get really tight on my budgeting and to cut down the debt as much as possible. And I think I can, I have $89, a lot of stocks, singular stocks, even a little
bit of crypto, and then some other Vanguard, and it's about $38,000 worth of stocks, and I'm just
not sure if I should liquidate them. Some of them are a little bit undervalued for what I bought
them, so I just am a little bit uncertain about taking a loss if I was to liquidate them and put
them towards the student loan debt. But I feel like I know it's the right thing to do, but kind
of just wanted to hear your thoughts. Well, you tell us what you think the right thing to do would
be and we'll validate it or not. Okay. I do think the right thing to do would be to liquidate it,
even if it is taking a loss, just because I do believe in the mindset of like focusing on the debt first and then full force investing later.
Yeah, I agree with that because I don't think that these stocks were ever intended to be that long term investment that's going to get you through retirement and set you free because they're just not, you know, single stock investments would not be.
It's just so high risk and it's so up and down. So for me, because it wasn't the time or the right place for me to invest the money, I would liquidate it for that reason and use it for
much greater purpose to pay off this debt. So I think you're right on.
Yeah. How much do you make a year, Carla?
Take home pay after taxes and 401k contributions is around 80K. Okay. That's great. Yeah. And I just see this as just like a jump
start to paying off this 89,000. I'm like, man, if you could get it, you'll get it down. You'll
pay taxes and stuff on some of the things, but you know, anywhere from, you'll have 50, 52 or so
left in student loans. And that just feels like, oh my gosh, a totally different mountain to climb
versus almost 90. You know what I mean? Like there's a, there's something about that.
Now it's less than your yearly income instead of more than your yearly income.
That's right. Yes. Yeah. So how old are you?
28.
28. Okay. You're really smart carla there's not i mean
just the fact that you even were thinking about all of this during covid and you're at least being
proactive doing something with your money and i think that that is going to serve you really well
uh later on so let me just say this too on the investing side you have plenty of time yes ma'am
you have plenty of time and i would want you to run some calculations yourself because you're a numbers person.
And I want you to see it for yourself.
If you go to ramseysolutions.com,
pull up our investment calculator
and just plug in some numbers and just say,
okay, what if I did this?
What if I liquidated everything, put it to the debt?
What if I got an extra job, a side hustle,
and I really worked hard to get this paid off in two years
and you really started investing 15% of your income,
let's say at age, you know, 29 or 30, then run those numbers from, you know, 30 years old to
55 years old, investing 15% of your income into retirement, knowing that your income is going to
increase over time as well. And just look at it yourself and just say, okay, I'm going to be okay.
You know, and so I think we hold on to this level of security, especially when it comes to saving or investing.
And the truth is there's a lot of risk with this payment of your student loans
going out every month, right, and having this payment that if something
happens to your job, you still owe someone something.
So that debt freedom is huge.
It really is with the peace of mind.
So I would get there as fast as possible.
Okay. Yeah, thank you. I think it's just shifting the mindset from trying to do so many things at
once to just one thing at a time. I also was trying to save for a home and I'm just, I'm
having to like refocus my mindset really, but I do believe in it. Yes, absolutely. Well, I'm so glad
you called Carla because I think that's also normal, right? I mean, what you're, what you're
thinking through and processing. I mean, the truth is, you called, Carla, because I think that's also normal, right? I mean, what you're thinking through and processing.
I mean, the truth is, you know, she's making $80,000 once she gets this debt paid off.
If she invests that money from age 28 to 68, that's 30 years.
Average rate of return, I mean, she's going to have $2.2 million just investing 15%.
And that's assuming everything stays the same.
Everything stays the same, which of course is not because she's a genius and she's going to go on and do make a lot more money.
So, I mean, there you have it.
It's awesome. Well, thanks, Carla, for the call.
This is The Ramsey Show.
So we have different events here at Ramsey Solutions that we put on throughout the year that we want you all to come
hang out with us here at our Ramsey Solutions headquarters. You know, stay for some teaching
and we always want to create a great experience for you. So we're so excited because we have a
weekend of that coming up the total money makeover weekend. And it's going to be here in Nashville at the Ramsey Solutions
headquarters. And it's a brand new event, May 10th and 11th. So in one weekend, you're going
to get a complete crash course on everything when it comes to your money. We're going to be doing
brand new talks. All the Ramsey personalities are going to be there. Dave Ramsey, George Camel,
Jade Warshaw, me, Ken Coleman, Dr. John Zaloni. And we're all going to be talking about
this subject because we find that when you are in person with people, there's a level of connection
there. There's a level of energy. And when you're with like-minded people, something just changes
differently than just watching us via a screen or just listening to us in a podcast. So we really
encourage you to come out. We're really excited about this. It's going to be a full weekend. So we're actually going to do a live taping
of Smart Money Happy Hour. Me and George Camel, one of our favorite podcasts. We're going to be
doing that on Friday night and then all day Saturday. We're going to be hanging out with
you guys. We're doing Q&A throughout the day. Again, different talks from all the Ramsey
personalities. So get your tickets Because our Platinum Plus tickets
They're already sold out
But you can still get Platinum or VIP
And you have to get them now
Because again, they're selling pretty quickly
So go to RamseySolutions.com
Slash events
And check out our Total Money Makeover weekend
We are so excited
It's coming in May
Come hang out with us
All right, we're going to the phones
And we have Hayden in Phoenix.
Hey, Hayden.
Welcome to the show.
Hi.
Thanks.
So I have a house question.
A little bit of background.
Me and my husband, we're 29 and 30 years old.
We have a five month old son.
We're currently completely debt free.
No student loans, no credit cards, no car payments, no nothing.
And we have about
$130,000 in cash. Great for you guys. Congratulations. Yeah. So we are in Phoenix.
My husband's job has been really good and that's keeping us here. Long-term, we do want to move
closer to family, which is up north in in idaho or utah but we anticipate
being here for at least five years um we're actually currently under contract for a house
supposed to close tomorrow um however we got a late disclosure um with the condition of the house
and we're kind of questioning whether or not we should move forward and close
or back out and other places what's the late disclosure yeah so the house is old it's built
in 1959 so we're aware of electrical issues indoor plumbing issues roof issues wonder what issues i
could basically a full gut job okay okay um but do. Like it's basically a full gut job. Okay.
Do you have the money for the full gut job?
So we have that $130,000. We were planning to put about $50,000 down and then have about $50,000 for
different projects and kind of cash flowing a lot of it because from what we
were told, a lot of it is livable and we could told a lot of it is livable um and we could just
kind of get to the projects as we needed to um however the the late disclosure is um with the
condition of the septic so it's not on city sewer it's on a septic and it's basically like a homemade
septic system um That this is not.
The least homemade thing I think I would.
Listen, there's many things that can be homemade.
Oh no, Hayden.
Septic system should not be one of them.
There's a lot of things I want to say right now.
Okay.
Yeah.
That stinks.
Okay.
And Hayden, this house, sorry,
is close to where you guys want to move with family?
No. Okay, and Hayden, this house, sorry, is close to where you guys want to move with family? No, so it's actually a little bit further away from where our current life is.
It's about 40 minutes away from my husband's job.
So it's definitely doable.
Why do you want to move there?
Honestly, just due to the price.
Okay.
We would love to be right can i tell you uh work
yeah there is a and this may not be you hayden so just correct me but there is a um romanticized
fixer upper and we get to go in and have the before and after pictures with the great music
and put it on the instagram reel and that's what we we see. And that's what we, Oh, it just looks just so kind of just like,
Oh my gosh,
it's just a great adventure.
It's terrible.
Hayden.
And you're going to be living there with a baby.
And it is not with a homemade sex septic system.
It's a crappy situation.
I'm telling you it is.
And again,
some people can do
the renovation thing but we talked to more people that took out helox to do it they get halfway
through it's too much work they have to hire contract i mean it just ends up being it ends
up being another job i mean you end up literally having a part-time job and it's romanticized
because of tv shows and instagram but it's a lot and 50 000 may not go far how many square feet is
this home um so it's about 1700 square feet okay so it's a lot okay not not too bad i don't know
hayden and what do you guys know about i mean with the septic tank thing do you guys know what your
path forward would be like how do you get on the...
Yeah, so that's...
We've reached out for additional quotes,
and because they got the disclosure late,
they're able to push closing late.
But me and my husband are both looking at each other like,
ah, like this seems...
Are you able to get out of it without penalty because of that?
We should be able to, yeah.
I think the way the contract is written,
that we should be able to back out
without having to lose any earnest money or anything like that listen for me this is
this is a brown flag which is also a red flag like I I'm gonna make jokes all day about this
but for me that's enough for me to back out I sound like a money pit too yes it's I don't
literally want to have to deal with someone else's crap there's enough things to deal with in the world and so i think that guys i can go all day on all
day all day i won't i know and hayden i know you guys are probably so itching to get into a house
and the motivation you did it is because of the price yeah and i think it's going to end up costing
you guys more in in finances and emotionally and exhausted and I mean it's just a lot I mean you're
just you're going right in to live in a fixer-upper and um I just don't think it's uh it's the baby
too with a baby I just feel like that feels like a lot and he's currently waking up from his nap
right now so I'm like oh my gosh I wouldn't have time, like I think, to do it.
So yeah, that's kind of where we're leaning, but it's just.
Yeah, have some patience.
Have some patience.
We've looked at so many houses and we just want to get into some.
Yeah, but a home is one thing you don't want to go into going, I don't know, ooh, maybe, maybe not.
A home is one thing you want to go into being like, yes, this is it.
This is the one.
We can afford it.
It's the right place.
Like, you want to feel that and here's what i want for you guys to hayden is i want you i i want you to have three
homes on the table that are in your price point that are in a situation that you're like okay this
would be good for our family this this or this which one do we want when you have choices and
options you make better decisions when you get pigeonholed into like this is the only thing this
is it we looked at so many houses this is the only thing, this is it. We looked at so many houses. This is the only one. You make really bad decisions. And that's with anything
in life. So slow down. You guys have the time. Okay. And you're in a great position, Hayden.
That's why I'm like, I don't want y'all to screw this up because you're in a great position. You
have no debt. You have cash. Time is on your side. You are the one that's on like the right side of this, right?
And so take your time.
I would keep looking.
If it were me, and again, maybe you're Joanna and Chip Gaines,
and this is like, this is what you do and you love it.
And maybe it's fine.
It just sounds like a money pit to me.
And then there's things like a homemade septic that I'm like, I don't know.
I just don't think it'll be worth it.
Your hard-earned money, I'm scared, will not go as far as you think it will in a situation like
this. And I would be patient and wait it out. I'm with you 100%.
Yeah. It is hard though, because when you do feel like, oh my gosh, we are in a financial
position to do this. We want to, but then all these things keep coming up uh-huh listen to those
things listen to your gut listen to your gut and it's uh again without other options on the table
where you can fully confidently say this is where we want to put our money and this is where we want
to land and be here and i don't think that late disclosure was on accident i'm just saying that's
a great point if they loved their septic system,
they would be, that would be first thing. You should see our amazing septic system that
my husband built. It's great. I've said no one ever. That's so true. There's a reason. Hayden,
there was a reason for that. Oh, good luck, you guys. We're excited for you. This is The Ramsey Show. James Brown said, I'm trying to do one thing, bring people joy, just like church does.
People don't go to church to find trouble.
They go there to lose it.
Okay, James Brown.
So good.
Well, I'm Rachel Cruz, and this is Jade Warshaw,
and we've been answering your questions.
So let's go out to Los Angeles, and we're talking to Blair.
Hey, Blair.
Welcome to the show.
Hey, y'all.
I'm a big fan of both of you and excited to be chatting with you.
Oh, I'm so glad.
So glad you called in.
How can we help?
So I have a question about Baby Step 3B.
I'm at a point in my financial journey that I think intellectually the next prudent step is to buy a house or at least,
you know, with my sights set on that, but I'm pretty averse to risk and I'm scared to.
So a little bit of background. I'm 36. I'm single. I don't have any kids and don't intend to.
And I live in Los Angeles where homes are very expensive. I don't have any debt.
My current net worth is around $350. I have about $150 in investments like 401ks and stuff.
And then around $200 in a high-yield savings account, which I realize is too much to be holding onto in a high yield savings account if I'm not
planning to buy. Um, but I'm just scared. I really like not having any debt and because I am single
and homes are so expensive, I'm just scared to, um, you know, take on such a big, you know,
like such a mortgage that I think would require in LA. What's keeping you in LA?
Is it your job or you just love it there? You have family? It's my job. I'm a lawyer. My practice is
here. My clients are here. Have you priced out things, Blair, like townhomes, condos even?
Because when we say buying a home, it doesn't necessarily mean a single family. Single,
standalone house. Yeah. I mean, have you looked at other options because you are single yeah
you know you don't need a ton of room so it's like yeah have you looked at those have you
priced out things like that yeah for sure i don't think i'd be comfortable buying anything
more than like a one bedroom okay and what are they going for even that is gonna cost
probably like three quarters of a million in the area that I live in.
Sure.
That seems about right.
Yeah.
And that's more of a mortgage that I want to take on with the current cash I have.
And I guess, should I just keep saving and moving in that direction?
I feel a little bit like, I know 36 isn't that old, but it feels a little bit old in retirement age.
Like, I feel like I should be investing more.
What do you earn every year? What's your income?
This year will be about 320.
Here's the thing.
Good for you, Blair.
You're killing it. Like you've got a great, even in Los Angeles, like 320 is a good income.
And you've got this money saved. And there is a part of this that is prudent because for most of us, when we look at our budget,
when we look at what we're spending money on, housing is the biggest ticket item.
And if you can find a way to stabilize that, because rent can always go up, it can always
change, there's leases involved and you have to go here and there.
But if you can stabilize that item by purchasing a home or purchasing, you know, in your case, a condo, there's something that does actually provide peace within that, even though it is, you know, like you said, it's a lot of money to spend.
But on the end of it, you're also building equity.
So, you know, my screen says, should I invest or should I, you know, buy a house?
Then I would say it's in many, you're doing the same thing when
you're buying a home. It is an investment, you know, so hopefully that gives you, I mean,
does that help you in any way to kind of see that this is, this is you making an investment?
Yes, you're spending money, but it's, it's invested money. It's not going down a black
hole. And by doing that, you're stabilizing your lifestyle. Yeah, that makes sense, I think. I think I just needed to hear that it's okay.
And listen, if you do it by the parameters that we talk about, you're right. There is a scary way
to purchase a home and there is a right way to purchase it to where it's a blessing. And if you
follow our parameters, I'm telling you, it's going to feel like a blessing. You're going to be like, oh my gosh, this is great.
No more than 25% of your take-home pay. That's what you're looking for with your HOA, taxes,
insurance, everything all in, no more than 25%. And on a 15-year fixed rate, that's what you're
looking for. And with your income, you might have to save up a little bit more money to make this
happen. I'm not sure you'll have to run those numbers, but that's what you're looking for.
And if you can accomplish that, then that's chef's kiss.
Yep, for sure.
And you know, Blair, we always say facts are your friends.
And sometimes these things can be so emotional.
And sometimes the math is what helps us.
The math can give us permission and the math can give us a big red light, right?
And that goes on either side of the coin.
Some people want to rush into something,
but you're like, look at the math.
It's not going to work well.
But in your case, thankfully,
you're kind of on the other end of it
where I'm like, well, the math could work.
You know what I mean?
So actually like run these numbers out and see them
because the numbers, they don't have emotion.
So just look at them and say, okay,
is it within these parameters?
Because we're a pretty conservative bunch when it comes to
we want you to do it really, really well. And so again, it may take you Blair another year or two,
but the more you're in that mindset and the more you're working towards some things,
I do want you working towards home ownership. I do want that to be part of your overall financial
picture. That may give you some peace too, right?
That you're not having to do this tomorrow.
You may say, you know, it's March now.
Maybe March of next year is my goal to really say,
okay, I'm going to start looking and, you know,
or whatever it is, right?
You can have a timeline.
But I think those things will help you
when you actually look at the numbers,
give yourself that permission
and give yourself a great timeline.
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. I appreciate it. I think, yeah, it's helpful to hear too that
this is a pretty conservative strategy and it's going to be okay.
And it's okay for you to do both at the same time, by the way, if you wanted to stack up more
to put towards this down payment and start your 15% investing.
Totally.
You can do both.
Yeah, I am doing, I'm investing 15% of my income. Okay, great.
So yeah, you don't have to stop doing that in order to save up the down payment. You can,
because I heard you say, you know, with your age or 36, like you don't want to,
you know, get behind or anything like that. So you're you're you're doing very well.
Okay, awesome. Thank you all so much. I really appreciate it. Yep, absolutely. Blair,
thanks for calling. We're excited for you.
All right. Let's go to Jennifer in Toronto. Hey, Jennifer, welcome to the show.
Hi there. Thanks for taking my call.
Absolutely. How can we help?
I'm calling about an insurance claim. I suffered some water damage in my home and I'm expecting an insurance claim of about $30,000.
I'm on baby step two.
And I had three possible ideas as to what to do with that insurance claim and hoped you could weigh in and let me know what you think.
Okay.
So first one would be simply to repair the damaged areas of the home.
Second one would be to accept a cash payout, which would be 60% to 70% of the amount, and put that towards my debt.
And the third option would be to use the funds to put in a basement rental unit, because currently in our area, there is a shortage of rental units, and I know I could rent that out for about $1,800 a month.
I would not do C. How much debt do you have?
Fifty one thousand. It's a line of credit at one. Yeah. One point nine nine percent line of credit.
What repairs do you need to do to actually have a functioning house? You know what I mean? Like,
I'm sure some of it was damaged. So what would you if you priced it out?
Surprisingly, I've been lucky.
It's really quite functional. I'll definitely need a new kitchen floor. Yeah. And the basement,
it's not pretty, but it's still functional, warm and dry. So I would be okay to live with it for
a few years if need be. But eventually you are going to have to deal with the damage though,
right? Well, the kids are getting older and they're moving out.
So potentially, no, I could leave it unfinished.
Okay.
Yeah.
As long as it's not doing more damage to the home,
I would fix, you know, the flooring,
fix what you need to fix.
And I would throw the rest of the debt is what I would do.
Here's the thing though.
You're only getting 60 to 70% of the $30,000 claim if you do that, right? Correct. So does that, what's the numbers on that?
How much is that going to leave you to pay off? I'm trying to figure out if it's worth it. If
it's only going to leave you a few, you know, a couple of thousand for the debt, I'm almost like,
just fix your house. Yeah, yeah, yeah. If the floors come back and they're 20,000 or something,
but they won't be that,
but like,
yeah.
Yeah.
So run those numbers.
That's a good point.
Run those numbers out a little bit further.
All right.
Thanks Jennifer for the call.
Thank you America for listening.
Jade Warshaw.
Always a pleasure.
Thanks to all the guys in the booth and thank you America.
And remember to take control of your money and create a life you love. If you're a leader, your personal growth matters for your organization
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