The Ramsey Show - Smart Money Decisions Often Mean Sacrificing Today for Tomorrow
Episode Date: May 2, 2025📈 Are you on track with the Baby Steps? Get a Free Personalized Plan 📱 Watch the full episode for free in the Ramsey Network app. Dave Ramsey & Jade Warshaw answer your questions and disc...uss: How do we handle debts when dissolving a family business? Our mortgage is going to be 50% of our income Is it necessary to at some point get a credit card? Is it ok to enjoy our money while we're still young? Our landlord is starting to become hostile; should we move? When is an emergency fund no longer necessary? Next Steps: ✅ Help us make the show better by taking this short survey! 📞 Have a question for the show? Call 888-825-5225 weekdays from 2–5 p.m. ET or send us an email. 💰 Hurry—Your chance to win $5k is almost over! Enter the Ramsey Cash Giveaway today! 💵 Sign up for a free training with our EveryDollar team! 🎟️ Dave Ramsey and John Delony are going on tour this month! Get tickets today Connect with our Sponsors: 🛒 Stop paying more and start shopping smarter at Aldi 🌱 Get 10% off your first month of BetterHelp 📱Go to Boost Mobile to switch today! 🏥 Learn more about Christian Healthcare Ministries 🏡 Get started today with Churchill Mortgage 🔒 Get 20% off when you join DeleteMe 🏦 Go to FAIRWINDS Credit Union for an exclusive account bundle! 🥗 Save 15% on your first Field of Greens order with code RAMSEY ⛨ Find top Health Insurance Plans at Health Trust Financial 💸 To find out more about student loan refinancing, check out Laurel Road 💻 Visit NetSuite today to learn more 🗂️ Use promo code RAMSEY for 18% off at The Nokbox 💵 Learn more about Timothy Plan 🏛 Get started with YRefy or call 844-2-RAMSEY 🔐 Visit Zander Insurance for your free instant quote today! Explore more from Ramsey Network: 💸 The Ramsey Show Highlights 🧠 The Dr. John Delony Show 🍸 Smart Money Happy Hour 💡 The Rachel Cruze Show 💰 George Kamel 🪑 Front Row Seat with Ken Coleman 📈 EntreLeadership Ramsey Solutions Privacy Policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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 actual amazing relationships.
I'm Dave Ramsey, your host.
Thank you for joining us.
Jade Washaugh, number one bestselling author
and Ramsey personality is my co-host today.
Robert is in Washington, DC.
Hi Robert, how are you?
Doing great, Dave.
Thanks for asking.
Glad to have a little bit of time on this show with y'all.
Well, we're honored.
How can we help, sir?
So I have a family business that we've been managing for about seven years now. It's going
to be closing down in the next couple months, and we're going to be due to owe about $160,000
in debt. How can my wife and I attack our share of the debt while also protecting our
household finances?
Okay, who owns the business?
So the business is a split between my mother-in-law, father-in-law, my sister-in-law and her husband,
and my wife and I.
It's not exactly one-third all the way around, but it's pretty close.
Okay, so what percentage do you own?
Moif and I own 30 percent together. Okay and what is the nature of the 160 thousand dollars in debt? What kind of debt? So we're going to owe about 21.5 in the next six months of rent
to our lease agreement with the landlord. We owe 74,500 approximately through a PPP loan. Thanks
COVID for making things difficult, of course. And then the last part is about 70,000 that
my father-in-law, when we initially purchased the business, he fronted that through his,
you know, retirement account, take a loan on his IRA or something like that.
And even though that part's not, you know, like legally actionable debt, I think it's morally and ethically the right thing to do to pay him back as well.
Right. What percentage of the business does he own?
He and his wife together own 40 percent, with my sister-in-law having the last 30%.
So the 160 of debt, is that 30% of the overall debt or is that...
Is there more debt besides that is what I'm asking that others are on the hook for?
This is basically everything.
Now I understand that my father-in-law could kind of absolve that 70,000 if he wanted that.
That's his, I guess...
That's his percentage, it turns out.
Right.
Right.
So if he just took his percentage against his retirement and called it, he's out.
Right.
And it's just a death to him as well as a possible course of action.
Well, it's the natural thing to do mathematically.
Yeah. Why would you be on the hook for 100% of the debt if you own 30% of the business?
Yeah, you're on the hook.
He's on the hook for 40% of the debt and 40% of the debt is to him.
So that's just a wash.
I mean, it may be a little bit.
It may be a little bit off.
There may be a few thousand dollars.
It could be like five thousand dollars off, but it's pretty close.
OK. Then you've got the PPP and you've got the rent. Have you all tried to negotiate
with the landlord at all on the final rent?
Actually, I got notice about an hour ago that he's willing to do a little bit of negotiation,
so we might be able to knock that number down significantly.
The only other...
That does change the formula with your father-in-law then.
Yeah, yeah. And like I said, the last wrench in the gear here is that my wife
has that PPP loan that's about 70 almost 75,000. She is the sole guarantor on that.
Holy crap. Yeah, yeah. So she did it in the name of the business but she
only loses herself on the math. Wow. And you own 30%. Yeah, that doesn't equal 74. Okay, so, yeah,
depending on, okay, the total is going to change when the rent changes, so 40%
changes, and it's not going to be enough to cover father-in-law. So his is not going to be awash as the rent goes down.
You follow me on the math equation?
Not exactly but I'll go with it for now.
Let's just say you cut the rent in half and you got a 150 debt that you would apply 40%
to instead of a 160 debt.
You follow me?
Yeah, that's right.
Okay.
Then that's 60,000 bucks not
70,000 bucks so your father-in-law is still owed $10,000 you all still owe the
rent and you still owe the other so right is there any cash anywhere? Is the lease guaranteed at all?
I can't recall something.
Okay, so you got a personal guarantee on it by one of the other parties because I'm starting
to try to divvy this up.
Like your father-in-law is going to get his, you guys are going to get the PPP and somebody's
going to have to put some money on the PPP for you all because you don't owe all of it.
It's now half of the loan and you only own 30%.
So somebody needs to throw some cash at that for you all.
Does anybody in the picture have any cash?
We don't have a whole lot on hand.
I mean, my wife and I got through
the financial piece university a few years back.
We could potentially throw an emergency fund at it.
I know this is not an emergency.
It's close.
Quote, unquote, right?
But there's no, there's zero cash in the business after you close?
The business is doing not well right now. We could potentially liquidate, which is we're
going to have to do anyway, but we're trying to do some kind of, you know, fire sales on
the remaining items and wholesale things to other businesses in the area.
Yeah, it sounds like mathematically, it sounds like mathematically any cash you guys can sales on the remaining items and wholesale things to other businesses in the area.
Yeah, it sounds like mathematically, it sounds like mathematically any cash you guys can drag out of that business
needs to be thrown at the PPP.
If you can get the PPP down to where it equals your share,
then you guys just take it on and move it over onto your personal debt and pay
it off, right? That's your portion of it.
Right now it's double your share. So if you guys could find 20,000 bucks and or the other sister
in law comes up with that and then so you take the PPP, the father-in-law takes his and your
sister and your brother, other sister and brother-in-law, whatever they are, owe the
father-in-law a little bit of money and they owe the back rent. Yeah, it could be something like that.
Should I try to seek some kind of notarized agreement as to how we break this down?
Yes.
Yes.
I'm not worried about it being notarized.
I'm really worried about everybody agreeing to it.
Right.
I was going to say, do you foresee any issue with them understanding how we've broken it
down?
Because it's based on what you guys said, how it's divvied up.
Do you foresee any issue with that?
No, but I just, you know,
I always try to be cautious with this sort of thing
and try to get ahead of any problems that might come up.
Yeah, notarized won't matter.
What does matter is everybody signs it and is in agreement,
and that's all six parties.
Ooh.
Okay?
Yeah.
Three couples,
because I don't want the spouse
Bitching later that the deal wasn't done and they didn't speak into it. Yeah
Okay, right. So let's just let's run some numbers right quick. Okay, let's call it 150 because you get the rent taken in half
Okay so 30 percent is
60 K
No, it's not it's 45 K 40 percent is 60k. No it's not. It's 45k. 40% is 60k. And so we've got 30, 30, and 40, right?
Okay, so you guys take on 45 of the PPP. Your father-in-law takes 60 off of what
he's owed.
So now he's owed 10 and there's 10 or 11 or whatever owed to the landlord and they owe
you the PPP.
So that's the way to move it around.
Y'all start just assigning this, but you guys need to get some cash out of this to throw
out this PPP because I don't want you to get stuck with that whole thing because that represents half of the debt, not 30%
of the debt.
And that's a big, so you just got to talk it through.
It's just a math, it's a math riddle if everybody's of the right spirit.
It's just a math riddle and it's, you're getting rid of the personal guarantees or you're taking
on the personal guarantees where they actually belong. And
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I love a good math riddle, so I can't stop messing with it. If you happen to listen back to the podcast Robert when we play it back, here's the here's the formula. Okay
Father-in-law has 70,000 owed to him that he borrowed on his 401k. So his
40% if there's a hundred and fifty thousand in debt is sixty thousand dollars that leaves ten thousand owed to him
Okay, whatever the rent is it should be around ten thousand dollars with the landlord negotiation and whatever is owed to him. Okay? Whatever the rent is, it should be around $10,000 with the landlord
negotiation and whatever is owed to father-in-law and everything above $45,000 on the PPP is paid
by the sister-in-law. Sister-in-law is on the hook for $45,000 also. Robert's on the hook for $45,000
of the PPP. So sister-in-law owes father-in-law 10 grand
and she owes the rent.
And she owes whatever the difference is there,
that's gonna be another C10.
She should go borrow that money and throw it on the PPP.
The little bit of difference.
Yes.
And call it a day.
Yes.
And let them.
And they're free and clear, their name is no longer.
Yeah, they've got the PPP, they've got the remaining P,
they've got 45,000 of the PPP left. and that's if it's only 150. Now if you're
able to sell some stuff and do some liquidation sales and all that every
dollar you reduce this changes that formula. It does be yes it does that's
where you're taking the total down and you know what I'm gonna do is go ahead
and clear the rent off as quick as possible and then I'm gonna work on the
PPP as quick as possible and Father-in-law's
the last in line.
Yeah, because the cash that they get from the sale they have to also split that 30-30,
30-40-40.
Well, you throw it at the debt and it automatically reduces it.
If they reduce the debt with the cash they get from the sales, then it automatically
reduces by the exact same percentages.
That is true, but then they have to decide what goes first.
Yeah, the rent goes first, then the PPP.
Father in law is third.
There's only three items on there.
And he's last in line by far.
Why?
Because he's the easiest to work with.
Yeah, he's in control and he stepped up and stepped into it.
Much like Robert's wife did when she signed that PPP, but still a a problem But the PPP will come take you out. You do not want I know it
You know, that's why I was saying for the I'd want I'd want that PPP done
I want to thank God, but they're the only the rents only gonna be like 10 grand. That's true
They'll knock that out fast. Yeah, so if you could get 20 grand in liquidated dollars changes this formula pretty dramatic
So what kind of business it was so yeah, hopefully they have more than that
Yeah, I hope they can get some some money coming in but it's a sad situation.
But the good news is it sounds like they were doing it on a fairly
that the relationships are sounded he didn't he didn't bring up that they were all fighting. Yeah, that's true.
And I think if they were fighting he would have said so. Very interesting. Lee's with us in Spokane. Hi Lee, how are you?
Hey, great. Thanks for taking my call.
Sure, what's up? So I'm wondering if before I start my new job that won't
give me a paycheck for two months, it's unpaid training, should I pay off my
debt with my last retirement? And I'd love to give you context real fast if
that's okay. I wrote it out because I was so nervous. It's okay, sure. Okay, so...
A letter to Jade.
Okay, so I formally worked the baby steps with my ex-husband and I did the gazelle intensity
and then unfortunately went through divorce
and post divorce, obviously super difficult.
I channeled all my grief into buying a home and that was back in 2018.
And so I'm a homeowner.
Um, the last two years I've had some physical and mental health setbacks and
I'm back into debt, into that $7,500.
And now my assets, my assets are so I'm 41 single, I'm about to change jobs.
I have a house, I bought it for $410,000 and I owe $200,000 on it.
I have a paid for 2000 fit, no, excuse me, 2015 Honda fit. Okay. I have $12,000 in a Roth IRA, and then $10,000 from when I briefly worked as a teacher for a few years.
And that's in retirement. Correct. Okay. And see, I've mostly my career has been restaurant
work. So I don't have a lot of retirement.
That's the only one I had from the two years of teaching. But today being in today, you're asking, do I take the money that I have to pay off the $7,500 of debt? Or do I wait in two months until I start getting paid regularly and then do it? Is that the main question?
until I start getting paid regularly and then do it? Is that the main question?
Correct.
Do you have any other savings anywhere?
Or this is the only money?
Like what are you using to pay off this debt
is what I'm asking.
Well, I've been basically like the last year
been just barely making enough money to pay my bills,
just kind of recovering from the last two years of like physical and mental stuff
got you and and
I will be able to rent out my house when I leave for training for my new job as a flight attendant
Yes, but you didn't you didn't answer the question of do you have any money saved? Oh?
No, I gave you every I think $500 is sitting in my bank account right now
Okay, and so are they providing while in my bank account right now. Okay.
And so, are they providing, while you're doing flight attendant training, they're providing
food and housing?
Correct.
Okay.
And you're going to rent your house out for how much?
$1,700 a month.
Okay.
Why can't you just throw that at the $7,500?
Well, my total bills are about 2,500,
so I still have to come up with.
Oh, wait a minute, you gotta pay a house payment.
Yeah, if I were you, in many ways,
you're kind of in like a storm mode.
You're transitioning, but the transition isn't complete.
And if I were in your shoes, I'd wanna know,
okay, I've crossed over, I made it through training,
I definitely am getting a paycheck, and then I feel like I'd wanna know, okay, I've crossed over, I made it through training, I definitely am getting
a paycheck, and then I feel like I'd hit play
on paying this off, and...
But no, you don't cash out your retirement to do it.
No.
That's borrowing money at 30% interest.
It's gonna be a 10% penalty plus your tax rate.
So you're gonna get a minimum of a 30 to a 40% hit
in taxes and penalties, and that's like saying,
hey, Jade, do I borrow money at
40% interest to pay off the $7,500? No you don't. No, no, no. Yeah. What kind of debt
is the $7,500? Well my heater went out last summer and that was about $6,000. On what?
What do you owe it to? Who do you owe it to? I put it on a credit card.
So is this all credit card debt?
Yeah.
Okay.
All right.
And so you're going to be training for three months or two months?
No, training is six weeks, but we won't be put on the next payroll until the following
month.
And so I'll try to like... What will you be making? the next payroll until the following month.
And so I'll try to like...
What will you be making?
They pay $32 an hour and they guarantee you 90 hours a month.
So it's not big bucks either.
That's what's making me nervous.
I was going to say...
Why are you doing it?
It takes time to build up to be able to have that schedule, like a full-time schedule.
That's what I've heard flight attendants say, right?
Why are you doing it if it doesn't pay anything?
Well, to answer that question, so I'm single, I don't have kids, I know I can pick up more
hours and it'll provide me the retirement, travel benefits, travel benefits for my parents
and my siblings.
And is there something you can do alongside it until it does start to pan out?
Because there is a seniority play there. So is there something that you can do with it?
Because you can't, you can't.
I'm keeping my teaching credentials. So I've been subbing.
That's what I've been doing the last few months is a sensor-cheeked teaching which is great because it's flexible I can pick up
right when I can I can't do that in the summer obviously but maybe I could tutor
or something yeah yeah I think you have to I have to do two jobs until this
turns into a full-time job what was your plan to cover the house payment 1700
doesn't cover it my house payment is is 1300. Oh, okay, so it does cover it. Yeah.
Okay. Yeah, but my bills and expenses, you know. So while you're in school, can you
tutor? I doubt, they say the six weeks is pretty intensive training. So I don't think
I will. I'm trying to figure out how you're getting through that. I still feel like you're
going to end up with another $10,000 credit card debt.
So the stipend, the food stipend they'll give me is $800.
It'll be about $800.
Oh, that's good.
No, about $1,000.
Information I didn't have.
Okay.
I'm starting to see it now.
And then...
The other thing you could consider doing is selling the house.
Yeah, you're not going to be there hardly much once this takes off anyway. If you're going to be flying the friendly skies or whatever skies they are, you know,
I don't know why we need a $400,000 house.
Just get you a little apartment and go live the adventure.
Sounds like that's what you're signing up for is an adventure because you're not signing
up for pay.
I can tell that.
So yeah, I might sell the house,
and that solves the whole stinking thing.
But no, I would not cash out my retirement.
I'm going to weasel my way through this
and not take a 40% hit.
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free at everydollar.com slash webinar. Jerry is with us in Dallas. Hi Jerry, how are you?
I'm doing good, how are you?
Better than I deserve, what's up?
Right, bit of a situation me and my wife are in right now.
We're first time homeowner buyers
trying to purchase a home.
After doing the math, the first three years of mortgage
comes around to 45% of our monthly
takeaway income after taxes.
The area where the house is being built is really hot right now.
Everything around is being sold.
Major developments going on in that area. But I guess we're just in two separate minds
about do we take the plunge now or wait a year
and then maybe the price goes up even further
and then we're just stuck in the apartment.
Why did you say it would only be that much
for the first three, four years?
Depending on how the loan is working out. So we're doing the 2-1 option.
So this is not only 45% it's an adjustable rate 30-year mortgage.
Right. So if you're taking the average I guess from the third year onwards it's going to be...
You don't have any idea.
It's called an adjustable rate mortgage. from the third year onwards is going to be... You don't have any idea.
It's about, no, I...
It's called an adjustable rate mortgage.
Yeah.
It's going to adjust, you don't even know.
How old are you?
28.
What's on fire, dude?
That would cause you to do...
Be the stupid.
Yeah, yes.
What Dave said.
No, no, the mortgage is going to be 5,200
after the third year for the next 30 years.
So what do you guys make?
We take home 11,250 after tax this month.
And do you think your income is going to double in the next year?
No.
Then don't do this deal.
It's really, it's asinine. You're signing up for financial suicide.
The truth is, and earlier in the show we had Brian Buffini on and we were talking about this very
thing, okay? Real estate, I get it. It feels very expensive. Sometimes it feels out of touch. Sometimes it feels like it will never happen.
But that's not true.
However, your time horizon for when it will happen
may be different from what you expected.
And your neighborhood might be different
from where you're speaking. That's also true.
You said it's a very hot neighborhood.
They're building. You may not be moving
into that neighborhood.
You obviously can't afford it.
So what would it look like to look in a different neighborhood
or what would it look like to look in a different neighborhood or what would it look like to
just change your expectation a little bit because to put yourself in a situation where
you're at 50% for you to be trying to convince us that that's a good idea.
It's not sustainable.
You know everything that comes up because you don't leave enough room in your budget
because you're what we call house poor.
You're signing up for poverty and everything that comes up that you guys want to do
or need to do that is not, that you don't have room for in the budget is going to
be new debt. And so you're gonna run up a pile of credit card debt, a car debt, and
you're gonna run up some other debts here and there because you pinched
yourself with this house payment. And let me get, let me tell you, the way the
indexes are set on adjustable rate mortgages, they're
set, the interest that they give you going in is a bait and switch because it's not
even covering the index, meaning if interest rates don't go down, interest rates would
have to go down for your payment to remain the same.
So there's a very high likelihood this payment's going up substantially as soon
as it's ready to adjust. And so you've signed up for a rat and a wheel that's skinny. That's
what you've signed up for.
And let me tell you something else, Jerry, because we get this call all the time. You're
married, probably newly married, yes?
What happens when you decide to have a baby and what happens when suddenly
a wife or a spouse decides to stay home and say, you know what, I want to stay home with
the baby. Now you are locked in.
You can't.
And so the best advice I can give you is to think about that future now.
Oh, and you can't afford daycare either. There's not room in the budget.
Yeah, that's what I'm saying. There's no foresight here and we're here to help you
with that. You gotta think about daycare.
You guys are so desperate to buy a house
in that particular neighborhood.
You got house fever and you need to go take a cold shower.
This is a no, it's a hard pass, no.
And it's not because I don't want you to have a house,
I don't want the house to have you.
This transaction's going to screw up
the next decade of your life minimum, if you do it. You can just go back and say
the mean old nasty guy in Tennessee told me that this was going to screw up my life and
he was right. You can remember that if you go forward with this. Please son, I love you.
Please don't do this to yourself and to your new wife. You're signing up for trouble. You can't afford to live in that neighborhood today.
We know that because you had to put it on a 30 and you had to put it on adjustable and
it's still too high a percentage of your take home pay. There's nothing in this formula
that makes sense. Everything in here screams don't do it, including me over and over. Was
I unclear? You weren't and we don't even know Jerry, you didn't tell, including me, over and over. Was I unclear?
You were, and we don't even know, Jerry.
You didn't tell us if you have no other debt.
My guess is you probably already have other debt.
Oh my goodness.
Yeah, so we're not the cosmic killjoys here.
We're trying to keep you from signing up for what you think is a dream, and we're real
sure it's a nightmare.
No, it is.
That's all it is.
We just want good things for you, brother.
I want you to reconsider this and not do it.
And then I want you to back up, pan back, zoom out, start looking further out, look
for something a little older, get your foot in the door on homeownership after you're
debt free, have an emergency fund, and you put down a good strong down payment, and you
buy a fixed rate 15 year where the payment's no more than one fourth of your take-home
pay and so the translation is it's gonna be a lot less expensive house than the
one you're looking at is gonna gonna be nearly as cool as the one you're looking
at but you're brand new married in Dallas freaking Texas and for new listen
for new couples that's some of the best advice that I can think of what Dave
just said and think about what your life will be once you have children,
because most, you know, I'm not saying it's for everybody,
but most people get they get married and they plan on having children.
And daycare is expensive.
If you have two kids, you're at least spending $2,000 a month on daycare.
Think about that now.
Think about what it does.
Somebody want to stay home?
Could that possibly be in the future?
Because a lot of times we say, no, I'm going right back to work
and you don't know what you're going to do. So please consider
that because I hate those calls, Dave, when they call in and they just they feel like they're
between a rock and a hard place because there was no foresight on really what they wanted their life
to look like in the future. Well, there's it's all becomes about the house fever. Yeah. And it's got
to buy a house, you got to buy a house, you got to buy a house, everybody's got to buy a house and
everything makes sense if you buy a house.
It's the same stupid thing that we sign up for
with education.
No matter what it costs, I gotta go get a degree.
No matter what it costs, I gotta get a degree.
Because you can't get ahead without a degree.
And so I'm going $200,000 to get a degree
in left-handed puppetry.
And it'll all work out.
It's the same kind of, it becomes illogical
because you're assigned a value to something
that it doesn't have
That's right. Home ownership is good. It's not all good when you do it wrong. It's all bad And you know, don't don't do this. That's why they call them brokers broker and broker and broker
That's what you're gonna be don't do this
Don't do this. And so I'm sorry if I disappointed your realtor or your builder
But you shouldn't have told you that by this house a person Of course a person with ethics would look at a young married couple and go honey. You can't afford this
You don't need to do this. Yeah, and
Instead they're just trying to get a commission
Yeah, so it will be more painful to get this house and have to let it go in two years
You know saying they'd say no now closed Well, her words, it gets foreclosed on. But it puts strain on your relationship.
It puts strain on your career decisions going forward.
It puts strain on everything.
You do not have margin in this deal.
And then you start to resent the house because it's got you locked down.
Yeah, it's not good.
Well, maybe she resents him for talking her into the house.
Or he resents her for saying, I want, I want, I need, I need.
Remember?
I need, I need, I want.
Remember that from, what about Bob?
That was it.
That was it.
That was the movie.
Wow.
Look at your callback.
Look at that.
I want, I want, I want, I need, I need, I need.
I need you to get that. Good old movie. Richard Dreyfuss, Bill Murray.
That's right.
This is The Ramsay Show. Hey guys, what's up?
It's Jade Warshaw and look, if there's anybody who knows about student loan debt, it's me.
My husband and I had $280,000 of it.
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student loan refinancing. Again, that's LaurelRoad.com, Ramsey personality is my co-host today.
Thanks for hanging out with us America.
Let's face it, our money and relationships work together to help us win or they work
against us, cause us to lose.
You don't have to stay stuck in this area.
I'm going out with Dr. John Delaney on a six city tour.
We're going to do the Money and Relationships Tour in this coming Monday.
We are going to be in Louisville, Kentucky, April the 21st.
Durham, a week from today, April the 23rd on Wednesday.
Atlanta, a week from Friday, April the 23rd on Wednesday, Atlanta, week from Friday, April the 25th,
Phoenix, May 5th, Fort Worth, May 7th, and Kansas City, May 9th.
Tour starts next week.
Kansas City and Fort Worth are almost sold out.
Do not wait.
Get your tickets right now and go to ramsaysolutions.com slash tour or click the link in your show
notes either way. Spencer's with us in Dallas, Texas. Hi Spencer, how are you?
Doing great. Hi Dave, hi Jade, thanks for having me on. Hope you're doing well. I've
got a question for you. So I'm currently on step two and expect to make it through step four within the next 12 to 15 months.
Great.
I'm looking ahead here and I've got kind of a unique mortgage situation and that's kind
of what I'm wondering and kind of wanting some insight on.
So about four and a half years ago, my in-laws helped us purchase a house and essentially
bought the house for us. And they're our lender.
And so we pay them a mortgage every month, which doesn't include any type of
escrow or anything like that.
But I set up the payment based on what we could afford and we're never
going to pay it off.
And my in-laws have had that conversation with us and they're,
they're in their late seventies now.
So it's basically going
to get folded into some sort of inheritance.
Is it in my best interest to essentially avoid step six in this situation?
I'm a little conflicted because it's not really in our best interest to do that.
So what do you owe your in-laws?
So we owe them $348,296 right now.
And they have no intention of receiving that from you before their death?
No, not at all.
And what's the size of their estate?
I don't know that exactly.
I've never had that conversation.
Well, millions or tens of millions? I would venture it's probably in the millions. I mean, he retired in his late 50s.
And how many siblings does your wife have?
She has one sister, older sister.
Okay. All right.
And my suggestion is you all quit pretending that this is a mortgage. All of you.
And so what I would do is sit down with them and say, look, we need to restructure this.
Okay. We either need to go get a mortgage and pay you all off and then we'll get the money, of course, when you pass away as an inheritance. Or you guys can just take advance us her a portion of my wife's
inheritance by just forgiving this loan.
Of course.
That's what should happen.
That's something I thought about but it's certainly an awkward situation to have.
You know, no one ever wants to have that conversation.
Yeah, I don't want to have it but you all signed up for this awkwardness.
And it makes sense. to have that conversation. Yeah, I don't want to have it, but you all signed up for this awkwardness.
And it makes sense.
It feels presumptuous to go in and say that I understand that, but it does make sense.
And if they're logical people, I feel like they would understand that.
And they can do that with what's called the Unified Estate Tax Credit File, a one piece
of paper with their tax return.
There'll be no gift tax on it.
And then just your wife's portion of the estate
is reduced by 350,000 bucks.
And then you have a free and clear house
and we have jumped ahead to Baby Step 7.
Of course.
Which is a wonderful gift.
And then you guys say, we promise to pay,
they put the equivalent of house payments into investments
so that your grandchildren
are multi-millionaires.
That is the goal.
That's what you would tell the parents.
You tell them their grandkids are going to be multi-millionaires because we're going
to pay a house payment and then some into investments almost immediately.
Because you guys are just pretending.
This is not a real mortgage. It's a form of denial
Exactly no it is it's
It's kind of an oddball situation. I'm not sure how often you've counseled somebody in this type of situation
I've counseled in plenty times where they had a regular mortgage with the in-laws, which is a mistake, too
But because it changes the flavor of Thanksgiving dinner,
have you noticed? The borrower is slave to the lender and it's weird and it's awkward.
And now every time I'm looking at my father-in-law, I'm looking at my master, not just my father-in-law.
And it's weird. I borrowed money from Sharon's dad one time when we were broke, and he's the sweetest, nicest guy possibly to ever live.
He is a sweet man.
And I felt like dirt drug into the floor
every time I walked in that house
until I got that thing paid.
He never said an unkind word,
he never rolled his eyes, he never,
but I felt like poop.
Same.
And it's just awful.
I didn't there, that's so true.
It just, I mean, and Sharon, she didn't care as her daddy.
It didn't bother her.
I was the only one with my panties in a while.
You know, I mean, it was just, my God, I felt awful.
And so y'all, you know, and that's kind of, he's being pretty chill about it, but he's
got a little bit of that going on.
So yeah.
He can't avoid it.
I would say, look, I would say this is an awkward conversation, Mom and Dad.
I want to have it because the plan is for us to never pay it off, so let's just change
the structure of it and reduce the thing and go ahead and release the lien and make it
a gift, an advance gift against her portion of the inheritance.
And she needs to lead that conversation, no?
I agree.
I agree.
I agree. But you need to be sitting there too.
And mom and dad, look, it's silly
because you don't ever expect to get the money.
So since you're never gonna get the money,
we don't have a plan to get out of debt.
We have to wait on you to die to be debt free.
And we don't wanna do that.
So we're either going to get a mortgage
and pay it off ourself.
Yes.
Or we're gonna pay you guys off
or you're gonna forgive it.
So what do y'all wanna do? because this thing that we're gonna pay a payment
It's not enough. That's not enough to do anything and I'm just stuck like a rat and a wheel. No, thank you
Yeah, it's a mess our question today is brought to you by why refi why refi refinances defaulted private student loans
Which are different than federal student loans and it means you can't even make the required payments. If that describes you
contact YREFY for a low fixed rate loan customized for you.
YREFY.com slash Ramsey that's the letter Y. R-E-F-Y dot com slash Ramsey might not be in all states.
Okay in honor of Financial Literacy Month today's question comes from Ava at
Agape Christian School.
She says, is it necessary at some point
to get a credit card?
My mom says it is, but I want to think otherwise.
Well, you are very wise, Ava, to want to think otherwise.
Yeah, it's not necessary, and it's not wise,
really, to get a credit card.
If you're getting a credit card,
you're probably doing it for one of three reasons.
You're doing it A,
because you think you're gonna build credit.
B, you're doing it because you have no money and you're relying on credit for one of three reasons. You're doing it A, because you think you're gonna build credit. B, you're doing it because you have no money
and you're relying on credit cards to fill the gap.
Or C, you've convinced yourself
that the points are worth it.
And so my guess is that you're probably thinking
about building credit.
And I would tell you that-
Or your mom is.
Yeah, your mom is.
And the truth is, people don't talk about it enough.
We're some of the only ones out here saying
that you don't need credit to get through life.
You can get through life just with the cash that you earn from your income.
And a lot of times, people fall back on, well, how are you supposed to get an apartment?
How do you get a car?
How do you get a house?
Those are the three things that people are looking at.
And the truth is, you can't have an apartment without a credit score.
Darrell Bock Not a big deal.
Most of them will take you.
Kasey Panera Most of them, yeah.
If one doesn't take you, you go to the next one. Obviously when it
comes to buying a car, we would say the best way to do that is to save up and pay cash.
The first car that you buy is probably going to be-
The only way to do that.
Yeah, what did I say?
Best.
Oh, the only. Yeah, Dave got me on that. The only way. Yeah, your first car is probably
going to be a junker. Maybe you pay $5,000 for it, but you save up and you trade it in and you add cash with it every time
and before you know it, you're going to be driving the car that
you want to be driving. And then of course, with the house, Ava,
we suggest manual underwriting, okay, and that's just them
looking at your actual income to decide if you can borrow this
money. And they're looking at things like trade lines, and
they're looking at things like your income, your actual money. And so that's how that works. I say all the time, credit, it's a product. It's
something that's being sold to you and people benefit from that. What we're teaching, the only
person that really benefits from it is you. It is for you. We don't get paid because we tell you to
live a life with a zero credit score. So that's one good way to sniff it out.
Only one reason to have a credit score, borrow money.
If you don't want to borrow money, you don't need a credit score.
Pretty simple.
This is The Ramsey Show. You want to know more about something?
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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
actual amazing relationships.
Thank you for joining us America.
We're glad you're here.
Jade Washoe, Ramsey personality, number one bestselling author, is my co-host today.
The phone number here is 888-825-5225.
The call is free and some say the advice is worth exactly what you pay for it.
Sarah is with us in Canada.
Hi Sarah, how are you?
Hi, I'm well, thanks.
How are you?
Better than I deserve.
What's up?
So, my husband and I make a very good living combined and savings is important to both
of us for our children's future, for our own retirement.
But we seem to have different philosophies, I think, about how we enjoy the fruits of
our labors as well.
My husband feels like we could always be saving more, but I like the finer things.
Yeah, me too.
And I want to buy the nice clothes while they still fit.
I hear that.
So, I guess what's your advice as far as finding a middle ground?
Is it okay to splurge a bit on vacations and nicer things in our youth?
You know, what has helped... I got a feeling you guys are out of debt.
Yes.
Well, we have our mortgage, but that's it.
All right.
And so you're in what we would call Baby Steps 3, 4, 5, and 6.
You've got your emergency fund.
You don't have any debt except the mortgage, right?
Correct.
And how much is in your nest egg?
We've got about $500,000 and what do y'all make?
I'm in sales so it fluctuates between three hundred and three fifty a year
alright cool
so there are three things you can do with money
and you should do
all three
at this stage
four five and six.
You can have fun with it, which is lifestyle and things you're talking about, Sarah.
You can invest it, which makes your husband grin,
and you can be generous with it, generosity, giving.
You should be doing all three.
And so what we teach folks to do at your stage,
you're still trying to get the house paid
off is another one of the things, okay?
At your stage is to not necessarily be intense, but to be intentional, which would include
some fun things.
And so the tradeoff is not how much we invest, because you shouldn't be investing more than
15% at this stage.
15% of your household income should be invested.
More than that needs to go on the house.
Anything beyond that, okay?
Now in that budget then, we need to budget some enjoyment.
We make several hundred thousand dollars a year.
Sounds like you probably got a net worth
north of a million dollars,
counting your home equity and so forth, or close.
You're in control, you're not flopping around
out there spending like you're in Congress or something.
Right.
Listen, I'll take that one step further
because my husband and I were working to pay off our house
so in a similar situation,
and I kind of have this checklist Sarah
that I go through in my head when it's time to buy something
or spend money on something.
It's a financially responsible adult checklist, all right?
And if you check green on everything,
then it's usually a yes,
and then it's just deciding what the parameters are.
So A, if you're a person who's debt free,
which you are, green check.
B, if you're a person who is consistently budgeting,
like you are a budgeter, you live on a budget,
you've practiced the habits that a budget
puts in place for you, green check.
Are you a person who carries the proper insurances?
Have you done your checklist, you know,
your coverage checkup and you're making sure
that you have everything in place?
Yes, green check.
Are you a person who values and is saving for the future?
And Dave went through that.
Or do you have your three to six months emergency fund?
Yes.
Are you investing 15%?
Yes.
And are you actively paying more towards your home,
which is a forced savings account? Yes, screen check. And then finally, are you a person who prioritizes generosity?
So if you're checking green on all five of those things on that checklist,
that is a really good indicator and it kind of gives you-
Buy some clothes.
Yeah. It gives you the peace.
Buy some clothes. Go on a trip.
You're not doing anything wrong. You're doing everything right. And that's what it's reminding
you of. And then you can go okay yeah so if you spend to the point
if you spend irresponsible decisions in there no it's not irresponsible if you
spend to the point you're doing no extra on the mortgage and no generosity that's
irresponsible yeah it'll tell you if he saves and pays down on the mortgage and there's no fun in a $350,000 household income, that's
wrong. Right.
Because you need to budget something for fun. So we need to, you know, you actually make
enough to do all of it, it's just a matter of how much goes to each.
Mm-hmm. Okay? But there's something has to go on generosity
that you feel it, something has to go on the house that you feel it,'s something has to go on generosity that you feel it, something has to go on the
house that you feel it, and something has to go to fun that you feel it.
And you've got the money to do all three.
Right, yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, and that's a matter of you all budgeting together.
Except we're working for freedom 55.
Yeah, it's not a matter of age.
If you're 55 and you call me up and you've got $80,000 in car payments, we're not even matter of age. It's a matter of, I mean, if you're 55 and you call me up, you got
$80,000 in car payments, we're not even having this discussion. I don't care about your clothing
desires. You have a disaster and you, you know, screw it. You have to wear what's in your closet.
All right? But that's not you, okay? That's not your situation. And, you know, and the next thing
that will happen is the house will get paid off. And then the next thing that will happen is the house will get paid off, and then the next thing that will happen is his savings bent will, that gift that you have a husband that
saves will start to have fruition.
And you're going to look up, you've got several million dollars in a paid-for house.
Now your generosity and your fun is going to go to a whole other level while still building
wealth.
And that's the baby step seven when you hit up there and you've got
the house paid off. It frees up yet again. It does it again. But always in baby steps
four, five, and six be intentional and do Jade's adult financial checklist.
Financially responsible adult checklist.
I like that.
That's what I'm doing in my mind.
Financially responsible adult check list.
Yeah. A frakul. A frakul. Okay, you need a frakul. You can keep that one. Yeah, I think
that's probably bad. I just made that up here and I think we'll let that die today on the
air. We can. We can. Well, that put that one behind us. But yeah, I like that though. I
mean, because what that's telling us is we're touching the bases and
we're being a grown-up.
Because when we look at our screen, y'all don't know this, but we have a call screener,
Christian and the folks in our booth, the booth people do the call screening in there,
and they put up here someone's name, where they're from, in one sentence about what they're
calling about.
So my husband and I disagree on our fund money. Is it okay to have fun? When we see that line, most of the
time it's a different answer than she got.
That's right because they've been irresponsible.
And they want to be.
Yeah.
And they're having a little princess fit.
That's right.
Or a little prince fit, whichever it is.
But I love telling people yes when we can see.
I work hard and I deserve it. No, you don't you deserve it
If you got the freaking money
That's not cuz you worked hard. We all work hard, you know get a little cheese with that wine
seriously
Unbelievable, right? I mean we all work hard. That's not the issue. That's right. Are you a grown-up? Do you have a freckle?
Do you have your freckle?
Do you have your freackle in place?
No, that's right.
Oh, that's so good.
That is so good.
Because, I mean, the deal is, Sarah, the answer, you know, the thing is, what we might have
judged you before we brought you up and asked you questions was not true about you.
You're a very responsible person.
You all have done a great job together in tandem.
And I think the answer to your question overall is you win the argument.
Your husband needs to loosen up a little.
That's what it sounds like.
You all enjoy this.
And these days, Sharon and I look at each other when something comes up and we go, why
wouldn't I?
Got the money.
Why wouldn't I?
You got your frakkle.
I got your frakkle.
I hope that dies with me.
I hope that dies with me.
I hope that dies with me. I hope that dies with me. I hope that dies with me. I hope that dieskul. I got your frakul.
I hope that dies with that segment.
This is the Ramsey Show.
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That's ramsysolutions.com slash giveaway. Well, let's face it, our money and our relationships are intertwined and sometimes they're both
out of whack.
We're going to help you.
Dr. John Deloney and I are coming to six cities with the Money and Relationships Tour.
Raising great kids, handling money fights the right way, making real friends in the
21st century.
Is marriage a good idea still?
Is wealth evil?
Subjects we could cover.
We're going to cover a lot of different stuff.
It's going to be a lot of fun.
Louisville, one week away, April 21st. Louisville, Kentucky, Durham, and April 23rd. That's a week
from Wednesday. And Atlanta, a week from Friday, April the 25th. Phoenix, May 5th. And Fort Worth,
May 7th. And Kansas City, May 9th. Tickets are not sold out. You can still get yours. Please come.
We would love to have you
We're gonna laugh together. We're gonna cry together and you're gonna leave with information
That's life-changing and a lot of interaction in this it's gonna be a lot of fun
Ramsey solutions comm slash tour if you're on YouTube or podcast click the link in the show notes, please
Josh is in San Antonio.
Hi Josh, welcome to the Ramsey Show.
Hi Dave, how are you?
Better than I deserve.
What's up?
Yes, so I'm calling to see if I need to sell my car or not, for your opinion.
Okay, what do y'all want?
I owe, well, what's my car?
I owe $7,000 on it, and my wife has one for $8,000 as well, I'll my car? I owe 7,000 on it
And my wife has one for 8,000 as well. I'll be 8,000. Okay, what's your car your $7,000 car worth?
About 19. Okay, and what's our $8,000 car worth?
About same. Okay, and what do you make?
Together our household income is after taxes about 83,000. Is this the only debt? No, I also have $82,000 credit from a home security and $23,000 in student loans.
Okay.
Yeah, I mean, I'd probably, I definitely would offload one of these.
Did you pick yours just because it's a little bit older?
It's actually newer and it's smaller and we have a child and got it.
We were expecting another one, but not anymore.
But we have a we have a child and maybe more soon.
OK, I mean, yeah, I would definitely do that.
Truthfully, if you wanted to, you don't have to.
But if you wanted to, you don't have to, but if you wanted to, you could offload
the other one and maybe take 10 of it and finish out the debt completely and then buy
another one with the other nine.
I don't know if you want to get that extreme.
You don't have to because you're going to have these paid off so quickly, but because
of the equity in them, it's kind of nice to have access to that.
How long have you been working on this stuff, Josh?
As long as getting out of debt, just a couple months.
We've done a good amount, about over $6,000 I think.
How long have you all been married?
Been married two years.
And when did she lose the baby?
Oh yeah, very recently.
I'm so sorry. Yeah, a couple months ago, about two months ago.
Yeah, okay.
When you guys get on a detailed every dollar budget and you get fired up, you're going
to plow through this debt pretty quick, okay?
Because $50,000 makes you free.
Yeah.
And you know, you could make $25,000 next year, this year at a side hustle.
I am trying to.
Plus tightening down the budget.
And so hypothetically, you could keep the cars.
But if you have a car that doesn't fit with your family plans anyway, yeah, that's an easy one to offload. I don't
recommend if your wife has gone through what she's been through and you all have been through,
I don't recommend selling her car right now. Just let her.
Yeah, that's why I only did mine.
Yeah, I think that's, I don't think we need to Throw sacrifice at her today
Okay, but I think we do need to sit down get on a written plan and make this money behave for the first time ever in
your lives and
Get in attack mode. And so since you're probably gonna need to do something different on your car anyway
Yeah, sell it and buy buy something for5,000 and throw the rest of it
At debt and for a little while while you get out of debt the next year and a half or so
You drive a hoopty whoopee. No big deal
You can do that
For $5,000 you can get a very reliable Honda Camry or something like that. Not necessarily pretty, might need to give
it a name, but you know it's that kind of car right? But it's my get out of debt car
while I'm getting my getting the financial foundation laid for my family growth. That's
called being a grown up and being a good man. I like your question a lot. I do have one thing to add though.
Okay.
We do also have 17,000 just sitting
in our bank account right now.
Oh, well.
Thanks for burying the lead.
Okay. That's important.
That changes things a lot.
We're just afraid.
Okay, so here's what we're gonna do.
Today, we're gonna talk about selling your car,
and we're gonna pay off her car and the stupid home security loan.
That was dumber than a rock.
It is.
And then we're gonna start attacking the student loan. You have 12 and 7, you got 24 and 10 is 4.
We got, hey man, you only have $19,000 left on your student loan.
Wow.
And that's it.
And you're driving a $5,000 car.
We put the difference on the student loan.
We pay off her loan and the other tonight and we're going to put you
on the baby steps.
Baby steps are you take all your savings down to $1,000 and you attack your debt like your
life depends on it.
Because if you didn't have any payments right now, you would be breathing different as your
family's going through this tragedy and this sadness. But you've got this stuff
hanging over your head and the grief. Agreed? Yeah, exactly. Yeah. So let's clean
it up, man. I think that's a real gift to this emotional situation to pay off her
car tonight. I agree. And the home security loan oh my gosh it's kind of a no-brainer
and and then we're gonna throw you know everything else down to a thousand
dollars at the yeah you're gonna make a lot of progress this is so great.
Instantly. Yeah you're gonna knock you're gonna knock it down in 25 26 tonight and
then when your car sells you buy a $5,000 car,
you're going to knock it on down to 19.
Oh my gosh, you're going to be debt free by football season.
Oh, that's great because I'm a teacher that's very involved in marching.
Good, good.
Great.
That doesn't mean you get to go to any games, but you'll be debt free by football.
No, you get debt free by foot.
No you get debt free man.
When you want any payments but a house payment the next thing you do is you take that $1,000
account and you raise it up to three to six months of expenses.
He's going to do this.
Yeah he's going to do this.
I'm glad he told us about the $17,000.
You know what?
Babies and the promise of babies will wake you up.
100%.
It will get your butt in gear.
It's like, oh no, this just got real.
100, yes, yes.
I have to feed this thing.
Yep, it ain't going anywhere.
It has to buy diapers.
Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, wow.
Yeah, it's a good thing.
You have that moment, we had a dead free scream
in a different segment that the guy said, when the kids got ready to go to college, I had a debt-free scream in a different segment
that the guy said, you know, when the kids got ready
to go to college, I had a little crap moment.
When you have that moment, you go, oh man,
this just got real.
And then you kind of start getting disgusted.
We make too much money to be this broke.
And then you say, I've had it!
And when you finally say that, oh,
your life is about to change. It's so wonderful.
That was the main motivator when Sam and I were getting out of debt is I was like, how
can we have a family? We have to clean this up. And I mean, that was our choice, but there
was no way I could foresee us starting a family with that amount of debt. And so it was necessity.
Yeah, yeah. In that case, an emotional necessity.
Yeah, that's right.
But that's a fair necessity, you know?
Good stuff, good stuff.
You're a good man.
Hang on, buddy, we're gonna give you a copy,
or we're gonna give you every dollar,
is what I'm trying to say,
the premium version to help you get started on this budget.
I'll send him a copy of Total Money Makeover, too,
so he and his wife have got a roadmap
to follow those baby steps and do exactly what I just told him to do.
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People ask me all the time, George, what's your number one
money saving hack? I'm glad you asked. Nothing makes me happier
than helping another frugal friend. So here's the hack. Get
on a budget. Seriously, how are you supposed to save
money if you don't know how much you're spending in the first place? And that's what makes the
Every Dollar budgeting app a game changer. With every dollar, you'll get a clear picture of your
spending. And from there, it's easy to see where you can get more intentional cut back and save
more money. So how much money are we talking here? Well, the average every dollar budgeter frees up $395 in their
first budget. That's the hack. And if you ask me, I think
you're way above average and you'll save even more. So what
are you doing still listening to me go download the every
dollar app for free and start saving more money right now. Nicole is in Jackson, Mississippi.
Hey, Nicole, what's up?
Hey, how are y'all doing?
Good.
Great. What's up? Hey, how are y'all doing? Good. Great. What's up?
My question today is very simple, kind of.
Whether my husband and I should move
from apartments or not.
Oh, what's causing you to consider this?
What's going on?
Basically, there's just lack of peace in our life right now,
and so we're trying to strive
towards peace.
And so we're considering a budget change.
That was pretty vague.
What is going on?
Yeah, what's causing the lack of peace?
So just to give you a little bit of a background, right now we are at an apartment that we've
been in for four years that costs about $800 a month is all included.
It even has a storage unit downstairs
that we can put a bunch of stuff for free.
It comes with all utilities, everything.
Sounds great.
And it's really spacious.
And it has allowed us to get debt free.
We have our emergency fund.
We've even saved for school for my husband and I
to both go to get our master's degree
in pursuit of also more peace.
Great. And we are now in the process of saving to get her master's degree in pursuit of also more peace.
Great.
And we are now in the process of saving for a down payment.
And the problem is our landlord, we have been having a little bit of a conflict with him
and he also hates conflict.
So his communication skills are very, very poor.
What's the nature of the conflict?
Well, things like our toilet broke recently and he told us,
I'm sure you all can figure it out. You all have a blessed day.
Stuff like that. Not have a blessed day. OK.
Yeah. And we also don't have a contract with him.
So things can change at any moment.
Notice we think like the washer and dryer.
The apartment doesn't come with a hookup
and so we have to use his dryer and washer.
And every time we need to use it,
we have to ask if it's available.
And then we put up with it.
Did this recently change?
Did this, I mean, you said you'd been there for four years.
Was it fine and then suddenly it just kind of got weird
or has it always been like this
and now you just can't take it anymore?
I think it's gotten more, I think the boundaries between professional and personal have kind
of blurred to where because there's not a contract, there's not really a line as to
what he will take care of or what we are taking care of.
Was there before?
A line?
No, was there a contract?
No, no, sir, there wasn't. Okay, so you're saying that's the only thing that's been going on? or what we are taking care of and trying to align the contract.
No, was there a contract?
No, no sir, there wasn't.
Okay, and so that didn't change.
You brought up contract three times, but it hadn't changed.
Yeah, no.
So what's changed is that his behavior has just gotten a little weird.
Yes, it has. And we've confronted him. I had a conversation recently with him about it.
It doesn't seem to have changed at all.
Now the scary part here is that we are looking at moving at other apartments
and we found an apartment that is connected to the school that I'm going to be with.
It is about 1,300, about 1,, about 1300 to 1400 a month. And so that
is calculating within the two years that I'm going to be in school.
What do you all make?
We make, it fluctuates because my husband has a contract, he's a contract rescue technician or rescue technician. And so it goes between 80 to 170.
But we have already chosen that we're going to go part time here at the end of April,
also for peace because he travels a lot for work and in for long experience.
Expended. So what would you be bringing home every single month?
We have decided that we're going to work just enough to pay for bills and put a little bit
of a pause on saving for a down payment until we find another job.
How much is that?
We're thinking about 50.
From 170?
Yes, sir.
That's a lot of peace.
What's causing the non-peace? Like, what about working is causing the non-peace?
Help me understand that.
He travels.
He travels.
But you don't have to cut it by two-thirds.
No, no.
We are open to him continuing to work, but the only difference would be that he has the
more of an option to say when he can go and when he
Doesn't yeah, does that make sense? Yeah, so cut it. Yeah, you don't make 170 makes 140
Oh, well, but not 150 no not 50 and sit at home and twiddle his thumbs
Okay, but and call that a master's. What's he want a master's degree for anyway?
In counseling we both are going towards mental health counseling.
Okay so let's put all the pieces together. So we're about to take a major pay cut,
we're about to increase rent because you can't live with old boy anymore, there's no contract,
and since there's no contract you can basically leave at any time? No you have to give 30 day
notice. You still have to give 30 day, okay so Those are the the pieces of the puzzle that I see and you mentioned that you want to save for a down payment on a house
So it feels like you're wanting to do a lot of things that are going to cause that are gonna need more money
They're inconsistent. Uh-huh. These things are inconsistent with each other. You want that does not bring peace
That's called dissonance in the counseling world. That's very good. Yes
not bring peace. That's called dissonance in the counseling world. That's very good. Yes. Yeah. I guess the question is, is it worth spending more money and not
putting $12,000 in the down payment, which is what we would not be saving? Or do we just
put up with it for two more years?
See, they're not all on the same spectrum.
Right.
Okay? You move because you're dealing with a twerp, but you
work a little more so you can still hit your goals. That's right. And that's called peace.
Peace is not lack of working. Yes. Peace is lack of money. Lack of peace is lack of money.
That doesn't bring peace. Being poor is not peaceful.
No.
Okay. And so, you know, I would move, get yourself in a different situation, you're
over this guy, and you're done with him. I don't know exactly what he did, but you're
done with him. We can tell you.
So far all you've said is he didn't fix a toilet. That's the only thing you said. And
he's a little whiny about when you use the washer and dryer that you've used for
four years.
But that's it.
So, yeah, move.
That's fine.
And you're going to pick up a little expense and you're going to start on your masters.
And in order to pay for your masters and the extra expense, you're not going to get to
cut your work down to 50k from 170k.
You're going to cut it down to maybe 100k or a little bit.
Take some of his time off the road. can get a problem with that but he's not working
himself to death I'm sorry and you're gonna have to prioritize what's more
important these master's degrees or saving up for a down payment you're
probably not gonna be able to do all of it at one time so yeah yeah I'm thinking
just to remind everybody hard work won't kill you right before you
die you pass out.
That's not, you can go get stuff done.
I mean the stuff you and Sam did while y'all were getting out of debt was not, you were
solving for peace by getting out of debt.
That's right.
Not by cutting your hours down to nothing.
You added 70,000 hours to the middle of the thing, and you went bananas.
That's right. You're right.
And Sharon and I did the same thing, because we were solving for peace,
but it required an amazing amount of hours and sacrifice. We lived like no one else so that
later we could live and give like no one else. No discipline seems pleasant at the time,
but it yields a harvest of righteousness, the Scripture says.
time, but it yields a harvest of righteousness, the scripture says. So yeah, one of the things we've learned over the years, Nicole, is that Earl Nightingale
used to say this, that the things you're willing to do to get to your goals are not the problem.
The things you're not willing to give up to get to your goals.
You've got to give up some stuff to get to your goals.
You've got to pay a price.
And you're going to pay a price, so choose your hard, Delaney says.
Choose your hard.
Which hard thing do you want?
That's very accurate.
Pick one of them and take it.
And I don't care.
If the hard thing is putting up with the landlord and staying in the 800, fine.
That's the hard thing you chose. And you wanna pull back on the hours
and pull back on the income, okay, you chose your hard.
But you got a new hard,
it's gonna be a long time before you get a house.
Yeah, that's right.
You got a new hard, one of you is working on your masters
and the other one probably isn't right now.
Cause you probably don't have the money to do both
if you do all that.
So you gotta choose which thing is gonna be hard. And you can't do it all, it's if you do all that. So you've got to choose which thing is going to be hard.
And you can't do it all.
It's not fruitcake.
That's not an option.
You can't put it all in there.
Yeah.
I like to think of it as trades.
You are trading.
You're always trading one thing for another thing and then you get to decide, what would
I rather have?
But you can't do it all and it all work.
It doesn't and call that solving for peace.
It's not. The Money and Relationships Tour is halfway over and the energy in every room has been
unreal.
Each stop has been packed with real talk, big laughs, and life changing moments.
Now it's your turn.
Come hang out with me and Dr. John Deloney in a city near you for a night that could
change your money, your relationships, and your future.
This is your last chance to join us in Phoenix, Fort Worth, or Kansas City
the week of May 5th. Grab your tickets today at ramsesolutions.com slash tour.
Our scripture of the day, the Lord will fight for you. You need only to be still.
Oh, shut up. I can't.
So hard.
Will Rogers said, the road to success is dotted with many tempting parking spaces.
Oh, you can park or you can drive on the road.
Okay, I got that, Will.
It was classic.
Crystal's with us in Portland, Oregon.
Hey, Crystal, what's up?
Hi, Dave and Jade.
Thanks for having me.
Sure.
How can we help?
My husband and I will be retiring at the end of the year.
Congratulations.
Thanks.
We followed the baby steps for multiple years and we're debt- including the house and have a fully funded emergency fund. But it's always been our understanding that the
emergency fund is to tie us over if we ever had a loss of income. So once we retire and
are no longer dependent on the employment paycheck, do we continue to keep the same
level of cash on hand or would we be better off investing that money?
To start with, the emergency fund is not to tide you over in the case of loss of income. It's to cover
emergencies. One of those could be a loss of income. Another could be the
transmission goes out. Another could be a family member's ill and you need to buy
some airline tickets instantaneously to fly across the nation to see them.
You can have all kinds of things that have nothing to do with loss of income.
A medical emergency would not be a loss of any, it could include a loss of income, but
it doesn't necessarily.
And so that's the first thing.
Then the second thing is what ends up happening, and Sharon and I have experienced this, and I know Jade and Sam have too, is that as you move along, and you guys have done a wonderful job, Crystal,
Thank you.
Your likelihood of actually, what is defined as an emergency that's big enough to touch the emergency fund gets bigger and bigger. When we first started a tire going out on the
car was an emergency. Now we yawn and fix the tire, you know, because we don't have
any payments, there's plenty of room in the budget. It's not exactly an emergency,
but when we were broke a blown tire was an emergency, you follow me? And then you
know, when you, and now that you guys have a substantial net worth you can do just about anything you
want to do. You've done a great job of paying off everything. You don't have a
house payment and so if your heating and air goes out and it's $15,000 you
probably can just cash flow that agreed? Agreed, yes. So you're you know you
wouldn't touch the emergency but can you imagine 10 years ago if the heat and air went out and it's 50, yeah, you'd be touching
the emergency fund. You weren't at this stage then. So the, what is an emergency that is
big enough to touch the emergency fund? It's got to get pretty big the more wealthy you
become. So your actual need for the cash emergency fund does go
down the wealthier and more debt-free you get. Does that make sense?
It does, yes. So yeah, so you're holding how much cash now and calling it an
emergency fund? About $25,000. And your household income is what? $205,000. And your net worth is what? 3.2 million. Okay, 25 is not bad. I
Mean you could just keep that in a cache in the safe. It wouldn't be a big deal
That terrifies me, you know, I'm not telling you do that was joking but
You know and I wouldn't but you know, you see what I'm saying it's not a
You know, and I wouldn't, but you know, you see what I'm saying? It's not a, but 20, if you took the emergency fund to 5,000 and invested the other 20, it
doesn't change your life.
Okay.
It doesn't really change anything.
So if you want to, you can, because if you needed more than 5,000, then you could go,
you know, just take some money out of that mutual fund that you put it in, right?
And if it happened to be when the market was down because maybe the president screwed with
the market with the tariffs and all that garbage, then, you know, at that moment you had to
pull some money out, well, you might lose a little bit.
Oh, well.
You know, instead of 3.2, you have 3.199999.
Oh, well.
You know, I mean,'re gonna be okay, so it doesn't it again it
It doesn't do away with the emergency
I still would have one because some liquid cash to lay your hands on if you need something quick
I think that's a good thing
It's a good thing to have and I don't think 25 is too much in your world if you told me at a hundred grand
I'd tell you to back it down to 25. Yeah, yeah. But yeah. It's a good question.
It's a good question.
You do, but I have noticed,
have you noticed that too,
with you and Sam,
that as you get further down the baby steps,
Yes.
what we used to call an emergency now is a yawn.
Yeah, it's just, okay, I'll just cash flow it.
Yeah, you know, the kid bumped their head
and we gotta get staples in the emergency room, you know.
Yeah, I don't wanna dip into the emergency fund.
Yeah, I mean, one of the grandkids bumped his head the other day
and that's part of raising a kid.
They split their head open, so you gotta go fix it, right?
Gotta put staples in it.
Some of it too is like a, I don't know,
I don't know if it's, I don't know the right word
to describe it, but we hate touching the emergency,
it's in a completely different bank.
Yeah.
And it's just there.
Well, I mean, Sharon, because we went completely bankrupt, we had an emergency fund for the
emergency fund.
Yeah, same.
I mean, and she told me if I touched either one of them, I was going to die.
That is, yes.
I mean, she can't stand it.
It's like that touches her nerve from the old days.
That's Jade and Sam.
It's over there.
I will do anything to never touch that money.
I just want to look at it.
Bob's in Birmingham. Hey Bob, what's up?
Hi Dave and Jake. Thanks for taking my call. Sure. How can we help?
My question is, I'm 61 years old. I got about six more years before I retire.
I currently have a traditional 401k with the government and I'm trying to find out we have now paid off both
our houses and we have about $2,500 a month more to invest. Should I max out
the $31,000 a year into my current traditional 401k or would I be better
off taking that $2,500 and possibly getting a smart investor investing you
know into a Roth? Well your gains are gonna... oh if you investor investing into a Roth IRA.
Well, your gains are going to...
Oh, if you do it into a Roth, that's fine, but you can't get that much into a Roth.
Can you do a 401k Roth with the government?
We cannot.
No, so it's a traditional form.
My wife has a Roth IRA with the company she works for in the government, though.
Can you load that one up?
We could, but she's only 50 years old. So we only have so much we can go with that.
But you don't sound like you need money.
Well, I'm trying to play catch up.
You know, my current situation in my condition
How much is the size of your nest egg?
The size of the nest egg is about 600,000 700,000
How old are you?
You told me you're 61. Yeah, and your wife's 50. Okay. Well, okay, so there's two options use the Roth
I would not use traditional because it's gonna be subject to RMDs when you're 72
Required minimum distributions. Okay, or 74. I think I moved it forward. But anyway, either way you're gonna have to when you're 72. Required minimum distributions, okay, or 74 I think I moved
it forward. But anyway, either way, you're going to have to be, you're going to have
to, it's going to screw up your taxes late in life and I wouldn't do it. So I would
either put it, get with a SmartVestor and put it in a low turnover mutual fund to where
the taxes don't come due, and if they do it's very few of them. Or I would load up her Roth or both.
Okay. Any of those are fine but I would not put it in your traditional
because that traditional as an inherited IRA has to be distributed with your heirs in 10 years
because they're going to clean it out and all the taxes are going to come due.
With a Roth there is none and so it's all tax-free. It's tax-free in an inherited IRA
So it doesn't cost anybody anything
We're done. So that's why I love the Roth aspect of this
So I would do two individual Rod to load up your raw is in his I'd load up your Roth and her Roth for sure
I might load up some over in her
fund you got 30,000 bucks to work with and you know
You could do a lot what's called a low turnover mutual fund so the taxes aren't activated. That's good. That's good
I do the same thing. Yeah, that's um
That's a good way to do it
No, the low turnover means they don't sell the mute sell the stocks inside the mutual fund very often so the taxes aren't activated
Turnover means they don't sell the stocks inside the mutual fund very often so the taxes aren't activated. Got it, got it.
They're not activated until you sell the fund itself.
And when you do it's taxed at capital gains rate, which is 15% rather than ordinary income,
which the traditional would be taxed at ordinary income.
So we're going to do a low turnover mutual fund and or some mix of her Roth and individual Roths and I would sit down and
run the numbers with your SmartVestor Pro clicking at ramsysolutions.com on SmartVestor
to find out who we recommend in your area.
And run the numbers out and see how that's going to work out for you.
But I don't want to be subject to the problems of traditional which is full tax bill, RMDs,
and inheritance problems.
It creates all of those.
So I'm always gonna move over to Roth for those reasons,
especially at your old age.
So, good stuff.
That puts us out of the Ramsey Show,
and the books will be back with you before you know it.
In the meantime, remember, there's ultimately
only one way to financial peace,
and that's to walk daily with the Prince of Peace,
Christ Jesus. You know the rest of the show's happening on the Ramsey Network app, right? So you got to jump over there to continue watching.
You can download it for free. Just go to your app store, type in Ramsey Network.
It's completely free.
And I'll drop a link in the show notes to make it easy for you.
So if you're watching on the app, you're in luck.
But if you're watching anywhere else, this show is over for you.
So jump onto the app and let the fun continue.
All right. Go on now.
Don't make it weird.
Okay, I got nowhere to go, so you need to go.
Okay.
Bye-bye now.
All right, this is getting weird over there, guys.
What do we do?