The Ramsey Show - You Can't Out Earn Bad Financial Behaviors
Episode Date: June 4, 2026❓ Have a money question? Ask Ramsey is here to help.�...� 📈 Are you on track with the Baby Steps? Get a Free Personalized Plan. Dave Ramsey and Jade Warshaw answer your questions and discuss: “My friend offered to pay off my $73,000 debt and become my lender—is this a good idea?” “I spent $10,000–$15,000 on Pokémon cards using a credit card and can’t sell them. What should I do?” “My mother-in-law wants us to help pay for her vacation home—should we help or walk away?” “I make $200,000 a year but still use credit cards to make ends meet. How do I stick to a budget and get out of this?” “My new job pays only a third of my previous income—should we downsize our house to make ends meet?” Next Steps: ✔️ Help us make the show better. Please take this short survey. 📞 Have a question for the show? Call 888-825-5225 weekdays from 2–5 p.m. ET 📩 Email Dave On-Air With Your Questions on Debt and Finance 💵 Start your free budget today. Download the EveryDollar app! ❤️🩹 Get trusted insurance coverage that fits your budget 🏠 Get organized and prepared to buy or sell a home Connect With Our Sponsors: Get 10% off your first month of BetterHelp Go to Boost Mobile to switch today! If you want your car to keep going and going, trust Christian Brothers Automotive. Find a local shop and get an exclusive Ramsey discount of 10% (up to $250) off 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! Debt collectors hassling you? Take back control of your life at Guardian Litigation Group Find top health insurance plans at Health Trust Financial Use code RAMSEY to save 20% at Mama Bear Legal Forms Visit NetSuite today to learn more. Try Quo for free, plus get 20% off your first six months. Quo: no missed calls, no missed customers. Get started with YRefy or call 844-2-RAMSEY Visit Zander Insurance or call 1-800-356-4282 for your free instant quote today! Explore more from Ramsey Network: 💸 The Ramsey Show Highlights 🧠 The Dr. John Delony Show 🍸 Smart Money Happy Hour 💰 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)
This is an ad for BetterHelp.
Stress from money problems doesn't just stay in your bank account.
It shows up everywhere in your life.
Talking to someone can help you sort it out.
Go to BetterHelp.com slash Ramsey to get 10% off.
Brought to you by the Every Dollar App.
Start budgeting for free today.
Normal is broke and common sense is weird.
So we're here to help you transform your life.
from the Ramsey Network and the Fair Wins Credit Union Studio.
This is The Ramsey Show.
I'm Dave Ramsey, your host.
Thank you for joining us, America.
We're so glad you're here.
Jade Washaw, Ramsey Personality.
Number one, best-selling author, is my co-host today.
We're glad you're here.
Open phones at AAA 825-5-225.
T.J. starts us off in Kansas City.
Hi, T.J., what's up?
Hey, guys.
I'm glad to have me on today.
I'm doing good.
We're honored to have you.
How can we help?
So just in kind of a position where my family's living paycheck to paycheck kind of thing.
And we tried all kinds of stuff.
We've gone through financial advisors and coaches at our banks and all that.
And we're just hitting a wall where we just feel stuck and know that some patterns or behaviors somewhere have to change.
So when you looked at that with the various coaches, did you find that there was a spending problem or did you find that there was an income problem?
What I heard most was it looks like you need to generate more income.
That's what I heard, but we never could, you know.
What is your income?
So I gross around 69,000 a year.
And what do you take home monthly?
Monthly, I net around 5,026, I think, something like that.
Okay.
What about your wife?
My wife doesn't have an income.
She homeschools our kids and takes her motherly responsibilities pretty seriously.
Okay.
How old are the kids?
9, 11, and 5.
Okay.
I agree.
You probably are facing an income issue.
you're below the national average there. And so you are going to feel that. I'm assuming there's
debt involved as well. Correct. Yeah, you know, that's definitely the biggest hurdle is if we could
get out from underneath like one thing, it'd probably give us some wiggle room for other things.
Absolutely. You'd feel that snowball effects. So tell us about the debt that you have.
We do, I say own loosely, but we do own our house through mortgage. We have a, we have a
couple of different credit cards, a vehicle loan and students.
How much?
For...
Tell us the credit cards.
Tell us the car and tell us the student loans.
Okay, gotcha.
So the student loans are only mine, and they total about $62,000.
The mortgage, the remaining balance, is $200,500.
Okay.
The vehicle loan is about $19,000.
Okay. And both credit cards are around about 8,000-a-half thousand each.
Okay. So 16,000.
You guys are normal, but normal sucks.
Correct.
Yeah. I mean, you got like the same kind of debt most people have.
Card debt, credit card debt, a student loan that's been around so long. I think it's a pet.
How long have you all been married?
12 years this August.
So the student loan's 14 years old?
I graduated in 2012 with those, and so...
It'll be 14 years old.
Are you using that degree, T.J.?
Not directly.
Everybody wants you to have one.
So I actually work for an antique store that specializes in antique books and firearms, very high collectibles.
What do you do?
Just your retail clerk there?
Kind of sort of.
I'm the shipping coordinator.
I also do a lot of the research for the individual items and things like that.
What's your degree?
I graduated from a Bible college with a youth and family degree, a youth and family ministry degree.
Okay.
So the part about you using your degree is you're not, which is okay, but you're not at all.
I'm using it in that it's a placeholder on a resume.
The reason I asked is because I do agree with what everyone else has said, which is you do need to get your income up because when you get your income up, you're going to have more margin available to you, and then you'll be able to use that margin, which is extra money after everything is minimum payments and everything else is satisfied.
That extra margin is what you use to pay off your debt using the debt snowball.
And you were absolutely right.
If you listed these out from smallest to largest, so in this case, one of the $8,000 credit cards would be $4,000.
first. If you freed up one of those credit card bills, that's a little bit more margin that
now you're adding to your life a little bit more room to breathe. That allows you to pay off
then the next $8,000 credit card. You see how this works? So I agree with you. So the question is,
how can we add more income? There's you who can go out and get some temporary side hustles, right?
I think that you've got, something tells me you've got some extra hours in the day that you could
do that. Not ideal, but you've got the time. And then I'm
I'm also looking over at your wife who's got some margin for time.
She's homeschooling, and I do want to call this out.
That's a personal choice.
That's a values choice.
But as she's homeschooling, it's also meaning that she's not adding a paycheck to the mix.
And that's a choice that you guys are making.
So everything, if I'm looking at your situation, suddenly everything is on the table.
Yeah.
And we can say.
Here's the thing.
Nothing changes until something changes.
So Jade's exactly right.
and what the people that you've been with before have not told you,
and we're going to be brave enough because we love you to tell you the truth is,
you're going to have to get radical to break this cycle.
Beans and rice, rice and beans.
You're not going to see the inside of a restaurant unless you're working there as your extra job.
You're not going on vacation because you're broke people,
and broke people aren't going on vacation.
You're going to get the stinking car paid off or you're going to sell it.
She's going to pick up a side hustle.
You're going to pick up a side hustle.
a side hustle. You guys are going to sell so much stuff the kids think they're next. We are going
on a mission to clean these debts up. And tonight, you're going to get both credit cards out and look
at them together with a candle lit and have a ceremony, a plastic surgery party, and chop those
stupid butt things up. And we're going to get on an every dollar budget. And we're going to get
so fired up and wired up because I'm sick and tired of being sick and tired. When you get that going,
you'll get out of debt. But you will not get out of debt doing what you're doing.
because what you're doing is running like a rat in a wheel getting no traction.
I do.
I have two very specific nuanced questions that I think could at least like me a bit better of a passing.
Yeah.
Ask them.
One, the first one regarding the credit cards, I did recently do a balance transfer from one card to another, regardless of how we feel about balance transfers.
that specific card has a 0% interest rate until October of 2026.
Am I better off paying towards the 0% interest rate?
It's your smallest debt anyway.
It's your smallest debt anyway, so it honestly doesn't matter.
I don't care about.
Interest rates are not your problem.
Cash flow is your problem.
You need rid of the debt so you don't have payments.
The number one thing.
And when you don't have payments, you're going to have margin.
That's what Jade's been saying.
The number one thing on your checklist, T.J.
is tonight you sit down with your wife.
You need to make sure you both have this equal level of intensity
on what it's going to take to get out of this.
And the two of you are going to brainstorm,
what are you going to do with your extra time to make money
and what am I going to do with my extra time to make money?
And you don't stop the conversation until the two of you,
the two of you have lists of jobs that you'll be applying for in the morning.
And 10 years from now, what are you going to be doing
that's not a clerk in an antique store where you make 169, not 69.
It's good.
Listen, identity theft doesn't just happen just because you're careless.
You can do everything right and still become a victim, whether your information is skimmed online, stolen through a scam, or exposed in a data breach, which happens every day.
Then it becomes your problem, your time, your money, your paperwork galore.
That's why I've told people for years to have identity theft protection.
And the only plan I've ever recommended is from Zander Insurance.
monitors for signs of fraud, even home title fraud, and they send alerts when something looks
off. Most important, if something happens, you're not stuck spending hours on hold, filing
forms, and arguing with companies trying to fix it. Zander's dedicated restoration team
steps in and does the hard work to help restore your identity. You can even protect your kids
for free on their family plan. Go to Xander.com or call 800356-42-82 to protect.
protect yourself today. Identity theft is everywhere. Zander is how you fight back. Zander.com.
Carl is in New York City. Hi, Carl. What's up? Well, if I push the button, we can talk to you, Carl. I'm sorry. Let's try again. What's up, Carl?
I'm making about $200,000 a year, and I'm having a real hard time budgeting. I was in trouble with a credit card debt, which I have since put a band-aid on it. But I'm looking for a tool to
to be able to move forward so I don't fall back into that credit card debt.
Okay.
When you say you're struggling to budget $200,000, what do you mean exactly?
Tell us exactly what you mean by that.
You know, I just feel my day-to-day puts me a bit upside down and then I wind up leaning on credit cards,
just not disciplined enough, so to speak.
And I feel that a budget and putting certain monies aside specifically for the mortgage
and, you know, groceries and day-to-day things would help me save more and be able to become a little bit more independent and not, you know, so up to the down.
I mentioned I had $27,000 in credit card debt, and I went ahead and took a second mortgage because it was a lot better than 30%, right?
So I have an 8% loan now on my second mortgage.
Still have decent equity in my home.
But you're still doing the same thing.
now. Yeah. It's going to get worse every time you do this. You treated the symptom, not the
problem. The symptom is credit card debt. The problem is you spend more than you make.
Exactly. So why do you spend more than you make? What's it going to?
Well, historically, it went to just necessities, as I call. I mean, maybe living outside of our budget,
spending too much on dinners, going out drinking, buying stuff for the house, cars, motorcycles.
I mean, that list can go on and on.
But I feel like I have a better handle on that now.
I'm not doing that anymore.
Because you're using a budget.
Well, yeah, yeah, I had a budget, but it kind of fell apart.
I don't have a budget currently, but I want to put one in the plate now that I don't have.
How much debt do you guys have, Carl, not counting your house?
I am happy to say nothing.
What about the, well, the $27,000 that you rolled into the second mortgage and there's nothing beyond that?
No car debt.
That's correct.
No.
No student loan debt.
That's all bundled in.
So what is a student loan?
How much is your house payment?
$20.
It'll be $2,800 now with the home equity.
It was $20.
Okay, so if I take $200,000 minus $2,800 a month,
there's a lot left over.
Yes, I agree.
You want to know what I think.
I know where it's all going.
And you're not the first one to fall victim to this.
You make a fine income.
It's a great income.
You guys probably feel like you make a great income.
And you've given yourself the excuse to be sloppy because you think that you can out-earn bad financial choices.
And it always comes back to bite you in the butt.
And that's what's happened to you.
So I think what's happened is it's not a budget problem.
it is a, it's a self-control problem, right?
Because you put those items, those line items, you say,
I'm only spending $500 on going out to eat,
or I'm only spending $1,000 on groceries,
and the self-control problem comes
when you start to butt up against that line item amount,
and then you say, you know, I'm just going to do it anyway, right?
Yes.
I know I've overspent.
I'm just going to do it anyway.
And so that's a personal problem.
It's not a budget problem.
I don't disagree.
I don't disagree. There's one, yeah, there's one more tivet to the equation. Yes, I make 200. However, I have a $100,000 base. The other $100,000 comes in two payments throughout the year in a bonus check. Okay.
So it's that ebb and flow. So every six months, yeah, sure, I get the lion's share, but throughout the other months is where I get myself in that trouble. And I feel that a proper budgeting tool would help me become more disliked.
important. And that's what I'm having a hard time. Let's pretend for a second that let's just make up a number.
Okay. We're going to put you on every dollar, the world's best budgeting tool that we've developed because we're the best at this.
And you and your wife are going to sit down and give every dollar an assignment before the month begins.
Now, if we could pan back a little bit, you're going to have to walk into this carefully, and I don't know exactly how you're going to walk into it.
But here's a plan. Let's pretend that out of the next budget, out of the next bonus,
which is half of your income, and that's a strain. That's where the strain's coming from.
That's a good point of information, by the way. Thank you for telling us that.
So let's pretend that you need $124,000, which is approximately, let's say $120,000, $10,000 a month
minus taxes. So I need $10,000 a month to operate. But I've only got $8,000 because I only got
hundred, 8,300, because I only got 100 coming in.
You follow me?
Yes.
So out of the next bonus check, I set aside $20,000 to subsidize my monthly baseline.
Follow me?
Gotcha.
Okay.
Yeah, I'm rating it down.
And so, or you can set aside if you want to make it even $24,000.
That'd be $2,000 a month.
So out of my next bonus check, I set $24,000 into a separate savings account.
Each month, I move $2,000 over, plus I have my hundred to work with.
with and I set my budget on that.
And then anything else in the budget, anything else in that bonus can go to reduce these
debts and to build wealth and to buy things.
If we were going to go on a trip, we'd take it out of a bonus check after we pulled our
24 out.
Okay?
If we were going to go buy a couch, we'd take it out of the bonus check in cash.
If after we pulled our 24 out, you know what I'm saying?
So, you know, you get a $50,000 bonus check twice a year.
We're going to pull 24 out at least once a year or maybe 12 out of each one.
Okay.
And then that gives me some other amount of money out of that bonus.
And you already need to have it also allocated before it comes.
Every dollar needs to be spent on paper and be in agreement with your spouse before it comes into your house.
And then stick to the plan, the two of you wrote down, and you pinky swear and spit shake and make a contract.
So there's no magic tool.
is just something I can build myself.
I'm going to give you the every dollar budget.
That's the tool because it's a system that'll show you how to work the Ramsey process.
But what I just designed for you is a customized version.
Yeah.
But to deal with your volatile income, you're, you know, because you probably can't live on a hundred.
Right.
By the time you pay your house payment and your groceries, if you can, well, then you've got another
hundred to throw at stuff as it comes in, right?
Which will clean up all these debts real quick.
I mean, $100,000 to clean up almost every debt but your house.
Mm-hmm.
No, you only have them.
You don't have anything.
It's just the second mortgage, yeah.
Knock the second mortgage out, the first bonus check, right?
Right.
And no more credit cards.
Cut them up.
Did you cut them up?
You cut them up and use a debit card.
We do not spend money we do not have.
No, you got to cut them up.
You got to take them out of the wallet and cut them up.
They have to die.
The accounts need to be closed.
Debit cards own.
The debit card will do everything the credit card will do except get you into debt.
And also something cool happens when you cut them up, you don't have anything to fall back on.
So you have to manage your money.
You have to do it the correct way.
Otherwise, when you run out, you run out.
And there's nothing else you can spend on.
So that's good.
Yeah, every dollar is going to help you.
It's going to be great.
Yeah, hang on.
We'll have Christian pick up.
We'll put you in the premium version.
We'll pay for it and get you started.
It's a free app, people, that you can download.
But the upgrade version has an automatic.
downloads from your debit card usage from your bank. And so it keeps everything up, keeps everything
current automatically for you. And it's very powerful tool. And it actually has built into it all of
the Ramsey system, the baby steps and shows you everything you need to do. And, you know,
when you lay it out and the first time you do it, you're going to sit down, you're going
you're going to say, where's all my money been going? Because there's $3,000. I can't, I don't
know where it's been going. Yeah. Everyone has that happen. You feel like you've got to raise when you do a
budget because the disorganization and the chaos, the impulse spending, the lack of self-control,
the inability to say no because I make a lot of money. All that kind of, that was a really good
insight. Yeah. But stick with it. Don't just do this one time in the first month if you're in
the red, quit. Stick with it. It takes most people 90 days to start locking in and really get the
feel for it. So stick with it. Don't quit after one month. If you run a business, you already know this.
bad information leads to bad decisions. And right now, AI is everywhere. But AI is only as good as the
data behind it. The best AI is built on the best data. That's why I recommend NetSuite. NetSuite is the number
one AI cloud ERP and more than 43,000 businesses run on it, including us here at Ramsey Solutions.
Their AI isn't bolted on, it's built in, and it connects everything that runs your business, accounting, inventory, customer data all in one place.
Because when your numbers are connected, AI actually works like it's supposed to.
NetSuite's AI helps flag cash flow problems, spot inventory issues, close your books faster, and cut down on manual reporting.
If your revenue is at least seven figures, go to NetSuite.com.
slash Ramsey for a free product tour. That's net suite.com slash Ramsey.
Seth is in Boca Raton. Hi, Seth. How are you?
I'm wonderful. Thank you for taking the call. Great to speak with you both. So, Dave,
before I ask you my money question and your, and specific advice, I'll give you the quick
family dynamic in my specific financial vitals. So I'm 52 years old. I'm single. No
kids. No debt. I've been in debt. I went bankrupt 20 years ago. Fortunately,
I'm in a lot better place.
I make between $1,500 and $2,000 a week in cash.
I work in the restaurant business, so it varies.
I own my car.
It's just me and my doggy.
I have $60,000 cash in the bank, so I'm doing okay.
The bad news is I have no retirement.
So the good news is that my father,
so I decided to move to Florida a couple years ago
when I realized my father's health was declining with Alzheimer's dementia.
I have an older brother.
So the family dynamic is myself and my older brother.
We never got along very well.
growing up in most of our adult life.
But now with regards to my dad's health,
it's actually helped bring our relationship
to, you know, much stronger.
And it's a blessing.
And it's a blessing for me as an adult son
to be able to have moved to Florida
to make sure my dad is okay.
We moved them into retirement,
or I should say, an assisted living,
and now in memory care.
Fortunately, my father was always wonderful
with money in terms of saving.
My mom was a spender.
Unfortunately, my mom passed,
and then so did my dad's second wife.
So my dad is 84,
as I mentioned, he has a long-term health care policy, which is paying for his assisted living.
So really, we don't need to spend any money really a month to take care of his needs.
My dad's estate, we had a conversation.
My brother and I with his financial advisor.
My dad's estate is worth just under $5 million.
He's got about $900, $800-ish in an IRA, and then he has two accounts with Morgan Stanley.
What we learned is that of that Morgan Stanley account,
we kind of hit the stock lottery Dave.
My dad had a stock that he purchased for $22 a share, a thousand shares,
and it's now trading at over $1,000 a share.
So we have about a million dollar position on one stock.
I think I know your answer, but I'm asking your advice.
Do we sell off some of the stock?
Obviously, move then to a mutual fund.
You know, how do we do it?
What's the best strategy?
And just kind of the question is, ultimately,
my brother and I want to make sure that his estate is safe,
which will then, thankfully, take care of my retirement.
as well as my brother and his families.
So, yes, you said $22,000 invested in what turned into a million dollars.
That's correct, yeah, the $22 cost basis.
And we know that if we sold it, then there's long-term gain, there's long-term gains,
but then, you know, if we keep it and then he passes away,
we then get that new step-up basis, so on and so forth.
But I know that 25% of his income.
So what you've got to weigh out is the risk of a single stock,
is substantial because whatever that company does, so does the million dollars, right?
If that owner comes out and decides he's going to be in the Epstein files and the stock goes,
or the guy, the CEO, and the stock goes in half, then he lost a half million dollars.
Okay?
That's because you got it in one thing.
That's the risk.
Okay.
The, if you decide, I don't want the risk, you're going to have $150,000 in capital gains tax.
he's going to have 150,000 in capital gains tax.
Y'all are managing it for him.
Okay?
And as you said, that's on the one hand.
On the other hand, if we leave it alone, we don't have any taxes, but we have the risk.
And he passes away, there'll be no taxes on it.
So it's a $150,000 decision.
So I'm going to weigh $150,000 in taxes against the risk that this particular,
company is going to somehow tank before this elderly fragile man passes away.
You see what I'm saying?
My brother had, yeah, we wouldn't sell the full position.
The thought on our call on Monday was to maybe sell off like 20, 25 percent.
So we're talking about a much smaller tax bill of, you know, 30 or 40,000 on a $200,000.
So the answer is this, let's just be...
inappropriately callous. Okay. Can I just be mean a minute? It sounds mean because I'm talking about
your dad, okay? But as long as he passes away before this company does something wrong,
then you would not have wanted to move it. So the sooner he passes away versus the risk,
the less you would want to do that. And so I'm gauging his health and his situation
mathematically, sadly, against whether we begin to move some of this away. And that, that
That's what you do.
So who is the company?
Is it Apple?
No, it's Micron.
Hmm.
Interesting.
Micron is up 900% in one calendar year.
Yeah.
If you look at it, I'm sure you're probably familiar with them.
You know, they do the AI chip and it's literally like I call it a stock lottery.
So, you know, my dad wouldn't have.
That's a very volatile, it's a very volatile position.
Yeah.
So do you see, so do you think?
you think selling off 20% of that and then putting that couple hundred thousand in a mutual fund,
is it safer, kind of lowers our position and our risk a little bit?
Is that a smart decision?
Yes.
I probably would say I'm going to sell off 20% every year until he passes.
Yeah, that's kind of what my brother and I were talking.
Are there different strategies, Dave, that are beneficial, like in terms of when we do decide to sell?
Like I heard something about a covered call.
No, I wouldn't get into all that.
I would just say I'm weighing the stepped up basis against the risk of a highly volatile tech AI company.
This is not a steady – I mean, they're not a bad company.
I'm not trashing them.
But this is a sudden leap up, which also is more accustomed to a sudden leap down.
If this was something boring, like Apple would be much more boring.
Agreed?
Yeah, sure.
Yeah. So that's, and at the stock price you were mentioning, that's kind of what I thought it was.
But anyway, but that one's been more of a steady thing where, you know, AI and microchip is just like suddenly on the scene and suddenly off the scene and suddenly it won't matter and suddenly nobody will care.
Nobody was zero. I, yeah, that scares me.
So. I kind of thought that. On a separate subject, my dad happens to be a plaintiff in a class action lawsuit. His second wife passed.
and there's a class action lawsuit that he's involved in.
If my dad was to pass before we got litigation,
because currently we're in litigation,
we're basically waiting to, you know,
see what the offer is in terms of our specific case
with my dad's second wife.
In your experience, would that still,
if the plaintiff passes, meaning my dad,
does that then, and then there's a judgment rendered,
would that then go to my dad's estate,
which is basically the trust of my brother and I have,
or does that lawsuit go away?
Just curious on that to the hedge on the phone.
And thank you again so much,
I'm not a legal expert.
I think it'll go to the estate,
but I would ask an attorney to get a real opinion about that.
My opinion is probably worth what you paid for it there,
but I think it is.
So let's recap,
because we were talking gobbledy goop there for a minute,
when someone has paid $22,000 for a stock that's worth a million dollars,
if you transfer it,
if you cash it out obviously before you die you um pay taxes on the difference the gain if instead
it passes to your heirs they pay taxes on the difference in market value and whatever they sell it
for and if you sell it within six months of death it is presumed to be market value by the IRS so zero
taxes on a million-dollar gain at death or taxes on everything over 22,000 on a million
bucks. So basically a million-dollar gain is a $150,000 swing in taxes. If these two brothers
receive this money with the stepped-up basis to market value, they have no taxes upon
dad's death. But if the stupid thing goes in half, before then, you'll wish you had paid some
taxes. And that's kind of what he's weighing out and what we were weighing out with him.
But yeah, it comes down to how much faith do you have in that particular company to stay stable.
And how much faith do you have in, sadly, dad's health. I mean, that's being very callous.
But that's the mathematical analysis. And then you've got to, you know, cry a little bit and have your
heart in that and say out loud, this is an awkward discussion. Weird to talk about. But it's weird
for me to sit down with my whole family and go over my estate plan once a year. If I die,
wait a minute, people, I'm still sitting here. But if I die this year, this is what it's going to
happen. If Dave dies this year, meeting. It's very awkward.
Here's what nobody warns you about. You're behind on payments. You signed up with some debt
settlement company. You're making your monthly payments to them. And then one morning,
a process server knocks on your door. Surprise, you just got sued by a creditor. And that
company you trusted? Not a law firm. They're not built to represent you if things escalate.
And now you're scrambling to figure out what to do next. And that's why I tell people about Guardian
Litigation Group. Guardian litigation is not a call center. They're actual attorneys at a law firm.
And from day one, you're assigned a real attorney who can represent you if a creditor takes you to court.
No scrambling when things go sideways, just real legal protection built in from the start.
And look, the best way out of debt is still the budget, the plan, the baby steps. But if you're already
in default and legal threats are coming your way, Guardian has your back. Their attorneys have helped over 55,000
people settle more than $600 million in debt. So get real legal help at guardianlit.com
slash Ramsey. That's guardian l-it.com slash Ramsey. Attorney advertising, results may vary and
no specific outcomes guaranteed. Gabby is in Gainesville, Florida. Hi, Gabby. How are you?
Well, I'll keep doing that. Gabby, how are you? I'm doing well. How are you, Dave and Dave?
Better than we deserve. What's up? All righty. So my husband and I just got married.
in January. And since before we got married, we were starting on the baby steps because we both
had student loan debt and a bit of credit card debt. However, my husband owns our house with his mother,
and my mother-in-law, because they bought the house after he graduated college as an investment for him.
And she plans on moving the ownership to myself within the next month or two. But she also plans on
refinancing the house.
But to do so, it's tied with my husband's credit score.
And one of our biggest debt sums is his credit card.
So she's been pressuring us to make sure we pay that down.
But since we've been following the baby steps, we've been going with our smallest debts first.
So basically my question is, should we focus on paying down his credit card so that we can refinance the house?
Or should we stick to the plan?
So how much is on the credit card?
It's about 12,000.
Okay. And how much is the other debts?
So my student loans are about 14.
His student loans are 12.
My credit card is 8.
And his credit card is 12.
Yeah, you already gave me. That's the one you already gave me, right?
Yes, sir.
Okay. All right. So they're all fairly close.
Yes.
And your household income now is what?
It's about 100K.
Okay.
When you do the refi, what's the interest rate moving to?
So they've been waiting for the interest rates to drop.
Right now, it's at 7%, but they're hoping for at least 5, 4%.
What's it current?
I'm saying currently.
It's currently 7?
Yes.
Yeah, because the market rate right now is about 5, right?
You need to talk to Churchill mortgage about your refinance, okay,
and get a 15-year fixed rate because you should be somewhere in that 5% rate.
in the marketplace right now.
And that's a wonderful savings as well.
That would be great.
So let me say something as preventative medicine that's not, the answer is yes, pay down the credit card because they're all fairly similar.
And this accomplishes a bigger goal.
And it's not because she's pressuring.
It's because she's offering.
So I don't understand how we got here.
with him and his mom owning the house together, that's not bothering me as much.
And what I want to make sure you here is this lady is, we get all the calls that this went
the other way.
Like she's being hard to get along with.
And she doesn't want to help you get out of it.
And she wants to stay on it.
And you think you have to own this house with your mother-in-law forever.
And that's the call we use.
usually get. This lady's going is very healthy in saying, I want to put it into my new daughter-in-law's
name as fast as I can. That is the right mother-in-law answer. You have a peach of a mother-in-law.
She's awesome. Oh, I definitely do. It's just been a little bit stressful because we actually
recently found out that we're also pregnant. Oh, wow. That's so awesome. That is so awesome. Very
cool. Well, now she's going to be super nice.
Oh, yes.
I love it. Hey, good for you. Yeah, I want to give her some props because she's, she wins the mother-in-law of the year award on this show. Most of the time the mother-in-law in this situation is a test pilot for a broom factory. And so this one is really doing a good job. And so I want to help her. I want you to appreciate her and to help her. And because she's really just handing you the keys to this thing. Y'all got to just get the paperwork.
work transferred, right?
Wow, that's so cool.
There's no other money involved.
That's so cool.
Yeah, we just got to get the refinance, get her name off the loan.
That's it.
And then she deeds it over to him and to the new daughter-in-law.
That is awesome.
And that only costs $12,000.
We make $100.
I want you to work extra.
I want you to sell stuff.
Any wedding gifts that go back that you had duplicates of, turn them into cash and throw them
on the credit card, chop up all credit cards, get on an every dollar budget.
We're going to give it to you as a wedding gift, the premium version and get you signed up.
the two of you sit down and just wear that thing out.
You're going to come up with 12 grand in like three months.
It's going to be gone.
Yeah, that would be great.
Yeah.
Just one more side point.
Because I'm pregnant and we recently found this out so we haven't hit all the bills yet,
how do we attack the baby steps moving forward?
Do we set aside part of – we've been paying off debt at least $1,500 a month
since we started in January.
I want to get that credit card gone, and then I want you to stop paying off debt.
Okay.
I want you to stack cash until the baby comes.
Okay.
It sounds like you've listened to us before.
We call it Stork Mode.
Yeah.
So while you're in stork mode until baby comes, we stack cash, and we don't use the cash.
We're not building on a nursery.
We're using the cash to pay off debt after you come home, and the baby's okay, and you're
okay, after you come home from the hospital.
But this is just an extra little pad while we're pregnant.
But before that, the first three months right here of your first three, your first trimester, we're knocking out that debt before we do go to Stork Mode because I've got to get this house transferred.
Yeah.
And that's where the side hustling has to come in.
Otherwise, the math won't work.
If you're using that $1,500 margin to pay off $12,000 and that's it.
No, we got to get to $3,000, $4,000.
Exactly.
And we're going to squeeze this budget down super tight.
We're going to work extra.
And again, I'm selling everything in sight.
I really am.
Because if you can get this house transfer and be rid of this one thing and then you stack cash till baby comes, you're going to be in a really peaceful situation.
Yeah, margins got a double.
Yeah, that's for a short period of time, I want you all to go cray craye, and knock this out.
If you live like no one else later, you get to live and give like no one else.
Janice in Norfolk, Virginia.
Hi, Janice.
What's up?
Hi.
Thank you so much for speaking with me.
Last night, my mother gifted me $53,000.
And I am just wondering if I should put that toward my mortgage,
which is currently $215,000 at the $2.5 interest rate.
Or my concern is that all my parents' wife,
they have been financially frugal, but they have not saved.
They inherited quite a bit of money from a family member who passed,
and since then have been a little bit less conservative with their money.
So I'm worried that as they get older,
I do know that they are currently spending more money per month
than what they bring in with...
How much money did they inherit?
Over a million.
And that's what this...
Why 53,000?
Where did that number come from?
It was a family thing.
One person got that amount, and so to be fair,
I also got that amount.
I don't need the money, but the other person apparently did.
Let me help you.
She's going to get hammered with gift tax unless she's got some estate planning going on.
Well, that is also part of my concern when I was looking up.
Yeah.
Individual can give an individual 19,000 before you get into gift tax a 55%.
Mm-hmm.
They don't know anything about any of this, and they just write checks?
Well, this is the largest check that I have received.
So are you married?
No.
Okay.
Well, they can each give you 19, so that'd be 38.
But everything above that, unless they file some paperwork called a unified estate tax credit
and use up some of their estate exemption, which they can do pretty easily, they're going to get hammered with gift tax.
You can't just hand out money unless it's a 501, unless it's a properly done nonprofit and you're not.
so mom and dad need to get some tax advice and quit being ignorant.
They're about to get their butts kicked in an audit really bad because they didn't have
learn what they were doing.
So I don't care out of a million if they gave you a 53 to give somebody else 53,
they're probably okay.
I'd put it on my mortgage.
I wouldn't worry about the gift.
I just worry about mom and dad getting hammered of gift tax.
I'm sorry?
They don't have a million anymore.
They have less than 500,000.
You're worried that they're going to come knocking on your door when they blow
through all this money and now they're going to be...
No, I don't think they would do that because they would not ask me for that, but I feel,
you know, compelled more or less. Make sure that...
If your house is paid off because you use this to accelerate the payoff, then when they are in
trouble someday, you'll be in a better position to help them. So I'd put it on the house.
If you're waiting for the perfect interest rate before you buy a home or refinance,
that moment may never come. That's why people should talk to Churchill Mortgage, because
rates move every day. And when rates drop, buyers flood the market, which means more competition
and higher home prices. Smart buyers know they can't time the market. They move with a strategy.
Buy the home you can afford now and refinance later if rates improve. Churchill helps you understand
what you can actually afford, not just what you qualify for. And with their certified homebuyer
program, you can get fully underwritten before you shop so you can make moves faster and make
stronger offers. And right now, Churchill has a special offer only for the Ramsey audience.
Go to Churchillmortgage.com slash Ramsey offer to learn more. That's a special website.
Remember this. Churchillmortgage.com slash Ramsey offer. This is a paid advertisement.
The Churchill certified homebuyer program is available for qualifying borrowers and select loan
types only. NMLSID 1591.mless ConsumerEx.org equal housing lender. 1749, Mallory
Lane, Sweet 100, Brent went into C, 37027. Welcome back to the Ramsey Show and the fair winds
Credit Union Studios. Jade Washaw, Ramsey Personality, number one bestselling author, is my co-host.
Ricky is in Riverside, California. Hi, Ricky. How are you?
I'm doing well. Just a little nervous, but happy to be on talking to you guys.
You too. What's up?
I have a pretty stressful situation that my wife and I are going through. I've been animating
in games making pretty decent money for the past four years.
And I've recently lost that job about a month ago.
And now just doing the budget over the weekend,
it showed that we were short about $3,000 this month,
just with the mortgage and all of our bills and just groceries and all that.
So I've been trying to figure out what is the best path.
And the only thing that I can think of is possibly selling our house.
but I've listened to you guys in the past and I'm not sure if like our situation
aren't that or if there's anything else that I can do but I'm just incredibly stressed
I'm sorry that's scary so you were an animator did you say yes yeah and you were
making what I was on average it was 120 to 150 recently recently most recently I was
making 130.
I just got a job at Home Depot.
Good.
About six weeks ago.
And, um, sorry.
I'm sorry.
Um,
I'm,
I'm making, uh,
21 an hour.
So I think that's like, uh, 40, 40 K.
Um, so,
I just, I don't know if I should.
Yeah, is your wife working outside the home, sir?
Yes, she works for the state of California.
She makes about her take home pay is $4,000.
It would be higher, but they automatically deduct her retirement.
And what does she do there?
Health insurance.
She licensed, she checked the licenses for foster care facilities.
Okay.
And why did the animation job go away?
It's just been, the industry's been really rough.
The one that I just had was just a contract position
after a layoff that I had last year.
So this was the contract from September to the end of April.
And right around the new year, I've been applying,
reaching out to old coworkers,
anybody that I can recruiters on LinkedIn,
then anyone, anyone that had any sort of connection.
I've had interviews.
I had an interview recently at Apple.
Just found out I didn't get it yesterday.
And it'll be the other game studios.
I get close, and then it's usually that final interview where I just don't seem to get it.
So I just, I haven't been able to line up another animation job.
So you, but it sounds like there is jobs out there in this industry, that the industry isn't dying.
you just hadn't landed after your last contract,
you haven't landed the new gig as all.
In my opinion, I think it's dying.
During the pandemic, it was doing really well
because everybody was at home gaming,
so gaming studios over-hired.
Things level back out,
and games aren't doing nearly as well.
So there's more...
Is gaming what you were doing before?
Yeah, I've been doing game animation.
How is AI affecting animation?
I think it is starting to affect it to a degree.
I think like just like commercials are starting to use AI more,
which that takes jobs away from animators.
I don't think it's really affected games yet unless I just don't know,
but it's affecting like movies and TV and advertisement for sure.
Okay.
All right.
Hmm.
But you're bringing in.
$3,000 a month and she's bringing in four and you're still three short?
Yeah.
How much debt do you guys have, not counting your house?
Not counting the house, I did the math.
It was about 160,000.
On what?
My student loans were $55,000.
My wife's are $20,000.
We do have a car for $40,000 and just a couple.
of like personal loans like one for 17,000, another one for 10, another for five, we owe
$10,000 to the IRS from taxes, not getting enough taken out of checks.
Okay. All right. So the levers to pull are, before I'd sell the house, I'd sell the car,
and I'd sell it tomorrow, and get out of a $40,000 car, get into a $5,000 car.
And I would put the student loans on hardship deferral temporarily.
I'm trying to get cash flow going here.
And then you need, but if you're going to pay something, you pay food first, lights and water, second, house third, and cars and car gasoline, fourth, to get to work.
So food, shelter, transportation, and utilities before you do anything, before those cards or loans, student loans, or anything else gets paid, okay?
But yeah, I'd get rid of the car immediately.
And then I would set a, you know, I'd pick up another second job to go with this one.
Yeah, I was going to say.
And fill in the blank here because you're not working 40 at Home Depot.
And can your wife pick up a side hustle as well?
Maybe my wife, they, on Monday, I had Brickana at work.
So they actually converted me to full-time on the spot, which was super nice.
So I'm working 40 hours now.
That's all, though.
I mean, you can work another 30.
Yeah, I can.
Yeah, I'm not, this is not a permanent solution.
I'm trying to keep the water in the lake while we get a new position as an animator.
Okay.
And then what I would do, so let's pretend that you can strain and work 60, 70 hours, and she can work 60, 70 hours.
We sell the car.
We're on beans and rice, rice and beans.
We're having a garage sale.
we got so much stuff on Craigslist, the children think they're next.
You know, we're really, really dumping stuff out of here.
And we can barely hold on.
That's what I want to get to.
And I think you can get there.
I think you can get there.
But that's a temporary thing.
And then I would say, if I don't land an animator's job and get my income back up to get us back to where we can breathe again, within X number of months, then we're going to sell the house.
And so like three months, four months.
Okay.
You can't sustain the thing I'm talking about for six years.
No, this is a short term.
So we're saying, you know, we're going to give this until after Christmas.
We're going to give this until Thanksgiving.
But, you know, if we're thinking about selling a house, we would want to sell it after the first of the year.
So if you could hang on for six months doing this.
And if you haven't landed the animator job in six months, then, yeah, you probably do need to
do something different. You need to adjust your career.
Okay. The other thing I would advise you, and I am not an AI expert by any stretch of the imagination,
although Ramsey is spending a lot of time on it here, the people inside this building are,
it is not the answer to everything. It is artificial. It is not real. But it is affecting,
disrupting some of these industries. And if I'm in your shoes, I'm going to learn what it's
doing to my industry. And I'm going to start learning how to use it instead of it putting
me out of business.
This show is sponsored by BetterHelp.
Summer is here. And listen, everything
changes this time of year. The kids are
out of school, the routines go out the window, you're
traveling more, you're for sure sleeping
less, and if you're not careful,
you and your family can end up running on
fumes. Here's the truth.
If you don't slow down this summer and take
care of yourself, all that stress
is not just going to disappear. It's going to
show up in your body, in your work, in your
relationships, your patience. It's going to show
up everywhere. This is why I'm a
big fan of BetterHelp. BetterHelp is an online therapy platform that matches you with the licensed
therapist based on your goals and preferences. All of their therapists follow a strict code of conduct
and you can message your therapist or schedule sessions right in the BetterHelp app. If it's not the
right fit, you can switch therapists at any time for no extra cost. Listen, you don't have to carry
everything all by yourself this summer. Go to betterhelp.com slash Ramsey to get 10% off. That's
BetterHelp.help.com slash Ramsey.
Sophia is in Maine. Hi, Sophia. How are you?
Hi, I'm good. How are you doing? Better than I deserve. What's up?
Going into my junior year in college and I want to study abroad next semester, well,
next spring in 2027, but it's a good chunk of money and so I would probably have to take a loan
out for it. So I'm wondering if it's a good idea to do that.
Should I take out a loan to go on a European vacation?
That's what studying abroad is, Sophia.
Yes, I know.
How much does it cost to study abroad?
So, including literally everything, tuition, home and board, and even like spending money,
they estimated it around 18 to 20,000.
Okay, 18 to 20,000.
Do you have any sort of job or any work that you're doing right now?
Yeah, I made about, I go to school full time, but I made about $25,000 last year, I think, around that.
Are there scholarships for this?
Yeah, so all of my scholarships for my home university will transfer.
So I'll get about like $8,000 covered.
And then my own personal savings.
I don't have to pay until October, and so I'm planning on saving like everything until then.
So I think I'll be able to get like a good, probably another $8,000 on that.
Okay.
So we're getting close.
Yeah, we're getting close.
But you are spending every single dime you can scrape up on a European vacation while you're a broke college student.
Well, I mean, I mean, this has absolutely no economic or marketplace value, honey.
Zero.
What are you studying?
You're not going to come home and go, oh, every employer in Maine is going to lie.
up to hire me because I studied abroad for one semester. Zero chance. Yeah. This is a fun
vacation thing to do. How old are you? I'm 19. Yeah. I don't disagree with it. If your parents are
rich, that's fine. But I would not tell a 19-year-old person that I love to spend their very last
dime to go on vacation. How are your other semesters being paid for? Obviously, you've got the $8,000
scholarship, how are your other semesters at home being covered?
I go to college for free, so I don't have any student loans at all.
I will say this, and this is Jade's opinion.
I traveled right out of college for work.
I was getting paid to travel, so that is a big differentiator.
But I think traveling is one of the best things that you can do for yourself.
It's a different type of education.
I personally think that if you can cash flow this, I wouldn't stop you from doing it.
But Dave, dad has told us something else.
Jade and I can disagree and both be right.
We can't.
That's okay.
We can disagree and both be right.
That's all right.
Yeah.
I, yeah.
So I look at education.
Here's the problem.
Okay.
Yep.
The, if you qualify this as a vacation.
And you say, I'm going to spend all of my year saving up to go on vacation because I value travel like Jade is talking about.
And you want to do it there.
And you put that in that slot, that bucket in your brain.
I'll back off a little bit and not yell at Jade.
$12,000 for vacation.
Yeah.
That's what you're saying.
A little bit.
But the problem I've got is when people call this education.
Yeah.
Because there's very few things that you study abroad that add value to your resume equivalent to what they cost.
What about-
Like nothing?
Would you factor in school of life, life experience, being able to see cultures outside the United States?
Yeah, but there's education to that.
That's not, you can't call this.
Education is for the purpose of furthering your career.
That is a type of education.
Well, it should be, especially when we start talking about borrowing on it.
We're not going to do that at all.
No, we're certainly, yes.
If you have to borrow, don't go.
Yes.
Period.
We're in agreement on that.
Yes, we 100% are.
But, you know, I'll just come clean, all right?
We have plenty of money at the Ramsey's.
Uh-huh.
And Rachel, your friend.
She wants to study abroad?
She decides she's going to study Spanish in Spain for one semester.
She did.
Oh, really?
Yep, I paid for it.
Okay.
We had the money.
Are you mad because she doesn't speak Spanish to this day?
Zero strain.
The girl cannot call the dog in Spanish.
I'm just saying.
Aki.
It's just absolute.
I mean, loco pedo.
She can't even get there.
I mean, it's just not a chance.
Unlocopero.
I see why you're salty.
It's just no chance she can get there.
I speak more Spanish than she does.
She went over there and had a great time.
She knows how to say margarita.
In classic Rachel style, wherever Rachel is, Rachel has a great time, right?
But it was absolutely freaking useless.
Oh, man.
Okay.
And I look back and I go, I got complete, as the dad, I got scammed.
You got swindled.
You did.
Because they told me this was education.
You got bamboozled.
And what it was was a Spanish party in Barcelona.
Okay.
Understood.
Point taking.
I'm bitter.
You're bitter.
I'm bitter.
You're bamboozled.
You're bitter.
You walked into bitterness.
That's the problem.
Now, all kidding aside, don't call it education.
because it really isn't.
I mean, even if you're studying, if you're going to go to London and study banking, that's
okay.
It does not add enough feathers in your cap for your future job to justify the expense.
No.
The ROI is not there.
It's an experience.
It's a vacation.
It's an experience.
I'll tell you, there might be one exception.
What's that?
Art.
Oh, okay.
If you were going to study, if you're studying fine art and you were going to spend time with
the great masters in Italy.
Yeah.
Okay.
That might actually add value to your resume enough to help you with some of the big houses in New York.
Okay.
So, Sophia, go to a couple of museums while you're there.
Yes.
I mean, you've stood in, you haven't just studied it in a book.
Yeah.
You know, we're on a slideshow.
So that might, that might, you know, if you can spend time in Venice and see the light differences.
Yeah.
That are real.
And I'm not an artist, but they're real.
then that might, there's something nuanced like that, you might get your money back.
But most of this stuff, most of this stuff is just bull crap.
I would say there's likely not a career ROI, but you can expand your life.
Yeah, your knowledge of different cultures and societies.
I mean, there's some versions of going and getting a degree that are that.
But we've now told people that, you know, you can spend $200,000 having this degree that is well-round.
and you're a barista and you're not well-rounded. You're the best rounded barista I know.
Correct.
You're the most insightful on several subjects. No, thank you. That's not a way to build a child's life.
It's not a way to coach a 19-year-old because this is how we end up with a student loan crisis.
And Sophia called about a student loan. Yeah. The fact that you were going to take a loan for this was bananas.
I will say that. Yeah. It's a fun discussion. It is a fun discussion. Hey, I learned something new.
Rachel go on vacation. You get thrown on the bus, kiddo. I'm just saying.
Just feel the bus tracks. Blum, blah. Well, you're talking to somebody who's been to 92 countries. So I love travel.
Me too. Now, like I said, the difference, I got paid to travel. I got paid to go to all these places. That's very different.
Well, you're working cruise ships. Yeah. What do you want? Yeah. I mean, that's a different, that's a completely different thing than my college is taking me.
That's right. And I am going to study. Yeah. Yeah. That's, it's. It's a different. It's a different thing.
just an experience. It's a trip. It's a fun thing that you could do. It's a party. Yeah. Yeah. It's
beer pong overseas. Oh boy. I can say this with, I never played one game of beer pong,
my entire college. You didn't. Well, it was not, they didn't, they didn't invented it when I was
there. I would have been champion. You would have been the champion? Oh, boy. Bourbon pong.
That's why we, yeah, oh, there we go. There we go. A whole new game.
Oh, guys, you have to be careful with education.
It is an irony in America that we're stupid about education.
Let that settle in.
You've worked hard to keep your car running.
The last thing you want is stress when you're running the kids all over to summer activities
or loading up the family for a well-earned vacation.
That's why I trust Christian Brothers Automotive.
Listen, most people don't worry about their car just because it's older.
They worry because they don't worry because they don't.
don't feel confident about what's happening under the hood or who's working on it.
And that kind of uncertainty can turn a simple trip into a stressful one real fast.
But Christian Brothers is different.
They use digital vehicle inspections so you can see what your technician sees,
know what needs attention now, and what can wait, and make decisions without the pressure.
That's how you protect your time, your money, and your travel plans.
And Christian Brothers stands behind their work with the nice difference warranty.
three years or 36,000 miles, whichever benefits you more.
So before your next trip, take care of the car that's taking care of you.
Go to CBAAC.com slash Ramsey to schedule your service and get 10% off your visit.
That's CBAC.com slash Ramsey, 10% off up to a $250 value.
See stores for details.
You're getting ready to hit the road this summer.
You want to feel confident your car is ready to go.
but when you don't fully understand what's going on under the hood,
it's easier to either ignore something important
or spend money you didn't need to.
Because let's be honest, you're not a mechanic.
And you shouldn't have to be.
That's why we trust Christian Brothers Automotive,
the official auto repair partner of the Ramsey Show.
They bring clarity to car repairs and maintenance.
With their digital vehicle inspections,
you can actually see what your technician sees,
understand what needs attention now and what can wait so you can make wise decisions without second
guessing.
Listen, when you're counting on your car to get you where you need to be, you don't want uncertainty.
You want confidence.
And Christian Brothers stands behind their work with the nice difference warranty, three years
or 36,000 miles, whichever benefits you more.
Go to CBAC.com slash Ramsey to schedule your service and get 10% off your
visit. That's C-B-A-C-com slash Ramsey.
10% off, up to a $250 value. See Store for details.
Our question of the day is brought to you by Y-R-R-Fi, when people get buried under private
student loans that they can't keep up with. They might think there's no way out.
Well, Y-Refi helps borrowers, explore, solutions with fixed-rate refinancing in a payment plan that's
tailored to their situation. Go to Y-Refi.com slash Ramsey. That's the letter, Y,
the letter R, the letter E, the letter F, the letter Y, Y, refi.com slash Ramsey, might not be in all states.
Okay, today's question comes from Shelby in New Jersey. She says, my husband and I are both 35 years old and we recently combined our finances and did our first budget together. I paid off close, I paid off and closed my credit card. He stopped using his credit card, but wants to keep it just in case. Together we earn over $175,000.
a year. Our own debt, our only debt is $25,000 on a car loan. We have the cash today to pay it off,
but my husband will not agree to pay it off any faster than just the monthly payment we pay
a $400 per month. I want to be debt free, but I want us to agree to commit to this way of managing
money. How can I best go about this? So it sounds like your husband is living, he doesn't want to
leave his comfort zone, right? Him closing up his credit card. That's uncomfortable for him because he
likes it to fall back on just in case. And also, yeah, paying off the car early, paying more than just
the minimum payment. That sounds like it's setting him outside of his comfort zone. If I do these things,
I'm going to have to change something about my life. I'm going to have to pull back on something.
And it sounds like he's not interested in that. And you're right, that is a problem.
the best thing that you can do about this is to share a deeper reason why, not just for the moment
and not just so we can be debt-free.
Just so that we can be debt-free feels great, but there's a deeper why behind that.
And I would challenge you to put words to what that is, what it means for your family tree,
what it means for your marriage, what it means for your personal piece.
and that is what I would share with him first and foremost before we even start talking about the numbers.
And then I would challenge him to share what his vision is for the family and what his wise are.
That way all the cards are laid out on the table and you can actually have a conversation about the vision for your family.
And then now we can start plugging in.
How do we get there together?
Yeah.
You're exactly right.
If we pan back and we say is our goal to keep a car payment the rest of our lives.
sure hope not well if you do that then let's go on ramsie solutions and pull up the calculator
yeah and put in four hundred dollars a month from age 35 to age 65 yeah in a decent gross
stock mutual fund that's going to be several million dollars oh yeah it is hope you like the car
terrible yeah it's a three million three point two million dollar car i hope you like it and um yeah
so the only way that anything he is saying makes sense is
in the next 30 days.
In the next 30 months or 30 years, it does not make sense.
What did come out?
1.2 million.
Yeah.
Unbelievable.
Yeah.
So, which makes the 400, I want to keep a $400 car payment statement,
asinine.
That's like saying, I want to be middle class instead of being a millionaire.
On purpose, because I really like car payments.
Well, what a dumb butt thing to say.
Yeah.
I mean, seriously.
That's just dumb.
So, you know, but.
You've got to pan back and make sure that he grasps that instead of going, well, I think I'll just pay it out slowly.
Well, what are the implications of that?
$1.2 million.
Hello.
So that's just dumb.
And so you pan back and you start going, look, the people that build wealth and the kind of life that I envisionous living don't have car payments.
The people that I envisionous living like don't have credit cards.
They are living on debit cards and they pay cash for things.
They don't have any debt, and they use what used to be all those debt payments to build wealth with.
If you live like no one else, and later you can get out of debt, build wealth and live like no one else.
I want us to go somewhere with this, not always keep a car payment.
You're always going to have a car payment.
Might as well have a good car.
But that's what you're saying is so important, which is why you have to go beneath the numbers,
because when you're married, most people do some version of what they saw growing up or what they see the people around them doing.
If he grew up from a family where they had car payments the entire time and it seemed like everything
was okay, then in his mind, look at how the family turned out. Right.
Broke and living on social insecurity working at McDonald's or a Walmart greeter at 74.
But if he hasn't seen that fallout yet, because he will, but if he hasn't seen that yet
and so far everything seems okay, in his mind, what's the big deal? And then if you came from a
family where we paid cash for things and we paid things off and you understood the implications
of debt. Those are two different backgrounds working together, and that's the emotional side of
money that you do have to have conversations about. You have to understand where the other person
is coming from in order to then shift the conversation in the way that it needs to go. But there's
no long-term scenario that his idea works in. No. Zero. Zero. The only idea, the only thing
scenario he works in is in the immediate in the next 90 days. It feels good to not have to have
$25,000 in the bank and not have $25,000 card debt. But there's no
You know, no 10-year period of time that you look at that and go, oh, that was really smart.
It just does not occur.
Yeah.
So when you pan back and you extend vision to this, you said vision earlier, and you add vision to the discussion.
You say, I want to talk about where this takes us, not what we're doing this month.
But where does this philosophy take us into the land of Brook?
That's where it takes me.
And I want to go to the land of millions.
That's a different land.
there are more flowers there.
Hello.
Caesar is in Denver.
Hey, Caesar, what's up?
Hey, Ramsey.
How are you guys?
Better than we deserve.
How can we help?
Hey, so I'm 21 and I have a pretty good paying job.
But I feel like I've hit my pace feeling.
At 21?
At my age and my...
You already maxed out?
In your industry or just at this one job?
What is your industry that you maxed out at this one job?
21?
Diesel mechanic.
What are you making?
I'm making $42 an hour.
You ain't maxed out.
There's diesel mechanics making $120 out there, bro.
Working for themselves or other people?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, and I don't know whether it's time to go on my own.
I've done out on my own.
No, I don't necessarily think it's time to go out on your own,
but I think the particular line of diesels that you're working on
and the particular industry that you're working on
is not paying as much as some of the others are paying.
Do it.
I mean, Mike Roe and I were having this discussion the other day.
Diesel mechanics are doing much better than a lot of lawyers.
Yeah, yeah, and I feel like at 21 I'm making decent money.
You're doing great for 21 years old.
42 bucks is no slouch, but you're not, you're not, you know,
you can make six figures in your world, dude.
Now, you might have to be running a mobile truck.
You might have to be out there on the road a little bit.
You might have to go get some certifications on some engines that you're not, that you don't know yet.
You know, I don't know what you're working on and what the guys making 120 are working on.
But I was just talking to Mike about this the other day, and he was saying that this is one of the,
and there's a shortage in your world, too, by the way.
There's not enough guys and gals that know how to do it.
Just a quick search tells me the highest paid diesel mechanics often work in specialized fleet maintenance.
field service roles, overtime, power generation.
But if you do those things, you can make upwards of 120 plus.
Yeah.
And that was Google in 30 seconds.
Right?
Or chat GPT or whatever you did.
And I just, I mean, it really breaks it down.
That was not like a detail piece of research she just did.
But that's, that confirms what Mike was talking about.
So yeah, you know, you might be maxed out.
So what I would tell you to do is move in one of those other,
more specialized situations, power plants.
situation, something like that, get your income up, get some more experience, and then talk about
opening up your own thing somehow and running your own thing. People that own their own
businesses generally, if they do a good job running the business, make more than the people
that work for them. Yes, yep. Doing the diesel mechanics. So there you go. Running a business is
hard work. You're the CEO, the accountant, and the sales team. You don't have time to moonlight as your
own benefits department. That's where Health Trust Financial helps. In fact, health insurance is one of the
biggest and most confusing line items in your budget. And most of you are overpaying because you're
stuck figuring it out alone. You don't have time to figure out all the fine print about networks
and deductibles. My friends at Health Trust Financial have been helping Ramsey listeners for over
20 years. Their focus is simplifying health insurance and serving people with empathy. No pressure,
no games. They give you clear, unbiased advice that fits your life and your budget. Most of their
clients save hundreds of dollars every month. That's real money you can put back in your business
or into the baby steps. So stop wasting your time, your energy and your money. You run the
business. Let health trust financial.
handle finding the right health insurance.
Go to health trustfinancial.com today.
That's health trustfinancial.com.
The right insurance acts as a shield around your loved ones and your wallet if disaster strikes.
It's defense.
Offenses investing.
Our free insurance coverage checkup helps you figure out if you've got the right coverage
or have you got some of the stuff that's just rip off.
And it gives you a personalized action plan with clear next steps.
where are you overpaying?
Here's something to shop.
Ramsey Solutions.com slash checkup.
It's free.
Take the coverage checkup.
Ramsey Solutions.com slash checkup.
Susan's in Milwaukee.
Hi, Susan.
How are you?
I'm good.
How are you?
Better than I deserve.
What's up?
Yeah.
So my question is about how to handle conversations about differing financial values with family members.
Like who?
Like close family members.
Mom and dad?
Sibbles.
Siblings.
Tell us the situation that's where something's coming up and you feel like you need to have a discussion.
Yeah.
So it's kind of come up a couple different times.
So previously it's been about like vacation budgets.
And we kind of set our budget and you can tell that it's maybe a little lower.
Recently it was about a last minute travel plan situation.
and they didn't feel like they could commit to a date.
And I made the mistake of saying, like, well, we can't afford to do like a last-minute plane ticket
because those can be obviously more expensive.
Sure.
And their response was, oh, well, we talked about it and we'll just pay the extra.
For you.
And for us, yes, for me.
And it was, it's not, I spoke wrong.
It was not that we couldn't afford to.
it's that we choose not to like pay.
You don't want to just turn around and say that.
You know, the difference is, listen, I got to tell you, Dave and Sharon love traveling.
We do not get joy out of traveling without a plan.
We're overpaying when you don't have to.
And so everything is planned out to the nth degree.
Even our impulses are planned.
And so that's what we get joy from.
other people get joy about just landing somewhere, getting a rental car and figuring it out.
And that is fun for them.
I don't travel with those people.
They would drive me bonkers.
And there are some of those people I love dearly, but we don't travel alike.
And I'm not staying in that place.
I'm not sleeping in the back seat because you couldn't get a reservation.
I'm not standing outside in the sun for an hour and a half because you can't get in a freaking restaurant.
I've had the reservation for four months before I got there.
And so that's the difference.
And it's okay.
If you want to live free and all that, then do it, you know.
But Dave has a plan.
You're not wrong.
And so either one's okay.
And I just tell people that.
And we have relatives and friends that are in both camps.
Everything's planned out to the nth degree.
I mean, are they usually like that?
Have you found in the past that, hey, we just are yin and yank?
when it comes to the way we travel?
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, they're definitely more last minute.
They're also just willing to like, oh, it's not a big deal financially.
Yeah.
I think Dave's right.
These are not your travel companions.
I think it's as simple as that.
And it's no shade.
It's just.
I'm going with you.
I'm not going with you.
If it's a family thing, the way we're going to go is if you plan it.
Otherwise, the family ain't going to be there.
Yeah.
I think that's fair.
I think that's totally.
fair because one one of the ways costs us more money and we don't want to pay more money.
And we don't do that. The way we function. So you don't have to convert them to your way of thinking,
nor do you have to defend your way of thinking. All you have to do is just say, no,
we don't know that way. If we would love to do stuff with you, but here's the terms,
we plan it out and we, you know, when we stay within our budget, that way it's fun for us.
It's not fun for us otherwise. And this is your sibling or
his. It's mine. Okay. Well, just look at your sister or brother and tell them that. No. Yeah.
And no, you can't pay for it and make it all better because it's still not fun. Yeah. And I don't like
the way that feels either. No. I don't want that ick on me. So thank you.
And that's kind of how it felt is like we're doing well. And it feels like we're now the poor
family relation because we're not just willing to throw a couple extra hundred dollars. That feeling is
on you. That's not on them. You've got to just decide I'm not the poor family relation. I'm the
family relation that plans. And they can think whatever they want. Yeah. Because I know I'm not the
poor family relation for sure. And I'm the one that plans. I mean, it's not, I just can't stand it.
Drives me nuts. So it's okay. If you all don't want to go, it's okay. But this is how we go. If you're
going to roll with, this is how we roll. So, and we roll with the budget. We stick to our budget. That's
fun for us. We stick to our plan. That's fun for us. And, you know, if we want to do something a
different. We'll decide on the fly, but 99% of our stuff is detailed freaking out. Yeah. And it's not
okay if the details don't execute either, by the way. Yeah. And here's the thing. If you truly like them
enough to travel with them, then you should be able to have this conversation and it be all good
when it's all set and done. Yeah. Yeah. So, you know, here's another plan. Okay. Like,
there's a different kind of situation than yours, but we take our kids and grandkids all.
for a week after Christmas, somewhere warm, and Sharon and I pay for everything. And we have
since they got married. That's our gift to them. And that is planned out way in advance.
They can speak into it a little. But it's your plan?
Generally speaking, we're going to our place, you know. And this is what we're doing. And I don't
mind hearing from Rachel what she thinks she wants to do. And that's cool, you know. But
but we're paying for it and there's no shade on that that's our gift and uh but those are the
term there's a plan and you know we all agreed we're going too by the way yeah you don't come up and
go you know i don't think i'm going to go this year no you already told me you're going and it's
already booked yeah it's paid so yeah you're going and that that's i mean we don't tell people what
to do we just tell them what to do you know it's but i mean it's but i mean yeah i think what's
happening here is there's more than a travel or budget discussion. It's the shade that's being thrown.
Yeah. And it's making her feel a type of way. It's making her feel like she has to defend herself in.
Yeah. I just take all that off the table and go, this is who we is. Do you want to play with us? This is how with us, the rules of our sandbox.
I like your usage of shade, Dave. That's, you're doing good. I'm picking up from you. I got the cool kids around me and the cool kids are teaching me these things. I heard you use it earlier and I thought I'd just bring it back up and act like I knew what it meant.
Good. Context was correct. Boomer usage. There we go. Good job. Oh, man. Ivalu. Ivalu is in Michigan, and I pray God, I got that right. Ivalu am I close even.
You're close. Okay. How's it pronounced? Ivalu. Oh, it is Ivy Lou. Not a close. I got it. I nailed it. All right, Ivy Lou. What's up?
I want to know if service contracts for car repair through my dealership is a good or bad investment for my car.
Really bad.
Horrible.
I should just plan on spending the money for the repairs for the next few years.
Yep.
You want to hear the numbers?
12% of what you pay covers the repairs.
50% covers the marketing.
and the commission's paid to the salesman that sold it to you, and the rest is profit.
12%.
So if you paid $10,000, $1,200 worth of repairs is what it covers, on average.
These things are unbelievably profitable, and the guys love to sell them,
because they make almost as much selling that stupid extended warranty as they do the entire car.
Okay, they're telling me a seven-year bumper-to-bumper.
cost me $2,759.
Yeah.
Well, there's already a warranty on there that's bumper to bumper.
They're extending it to seven.
No, the warranty is expired.
Okay.
And how expensive a car is this?
I purchased it in March of 2025.
It's a 2023 Buick Encore, and I paid $22,000 cash for it.
Okay.
The vast amount of that $2,000 is not going to come out in repairs on average.
So if you were going to start an extended warranty company, you would figure out the probability of the car braking,
and you would set aside that amount of money out of 1,000 Buick enclaves, how much is it going to cost me to cover it for seven years?
And you're going to figure out it cost me $500 to cover it for seven years on average across $5,000 of them.
Okay?
And then you would figure out I've got to pay the commissions and I've got to have a profit.
and that's how you run an insurance company.
Welcome back to the Ramsey show in the Fair Winds Credit Union Studio.
I'm Dave Ramsey.
Christina is in New York City.
Hi, Christina.
How are you?
Better than I deserve.
What's up?
Long story short, my husband's family has a vacation home that is currently owned by my mother-in-law.
And a couple years ago, we offered to take it over, take care of it, pay for it, deal with the maintenance.
because that's what my late father-in-law had wanted
and he had always told my husband that he eventually would inherit this home
because they built it together when my husband was like five years old.
But my sister-in-law did not agree with this plan
and said they did not want this house to go to him
that they wanted it to be split three ways
and that they wanted my mother-in-law to continue paying for it
you know, until she passes away to, like, keep it all in a trust together with her other property.
But now my mother-in-law is getting older, you know, maintenance is taking a lot.
It's another expense that she doesn't have the money for.
And now she's asking us all to split the cost for the house four ways.
No.
And my one, yes.
No, thank you.
And my one, no, yeah.
So, and my one sister.
already said that she's not doing it.
So our question is, should we split it four ways or at this point, I guess, three ways,
but we will not own this house eventually, or should we just look for our own house?
You should look for your own house.
Okay, that's what we keep on thinking.
So we should just tell her.
This is called a dysfunctional family.
Yeah.
Isn't it?
Yeah.
Yes.
And, you know, my father-in-law really wanted it to go to my husband.
There were conversations.
It doesn't matter.
He didn't cause it to happen.
I know.
If he really wanted it to, he should have put it in a trust before he died.
Yeah.
And then the sisters-in-law could pound sand.
Yeah.
Which is what they need to do.
They need to pound sand, but I don't think they're going to.
Yeah.
Yeah. So I guess for her...
So, I mean, there's two sisters, right?
Yeah, two sisters.
And one is already opted out.
If the other one opts out,
Tell your mother-in-law to deed it to the trust now, to your son, to your husband, and then we'll pay the bill.
If you'll go ahead and deed it to us now, we'll pay the bill.
Yeah, that's what we had said two years ago.
I know.
We'll say it again, though.
And, yeah.
Why won't she do that?
Because my sister-in-law said, no, they don't want that to happen.
I know, but they don't want to pay anything either.
So, Mom, since they don't want to pay anything, and we're the only ones wanting to pay anything,
Why don't we do what dad said to do originally and deed the stinking house to me and I'll pay for it.
Yeah.
But if you're not going to do that, we're not in.
So, Mom, you get to choose.
Somebody's going to be disappointed.
Let's decide who.
Yeah.
Yeah, and if she doesn't do it, then we, I mean, this is what I can.
Let it go.
Just let it go.
It's just a house.
Just let it go.
Now, what would you do?
It's her fault.
It's her fault, not yours.
We have three.
I know.
We have three.
children as well. What would you do so this doesn't happen to our children? I would raise my
children better. Where they're not brats. But like we are talking about like maybe having like a
trust for the house that has like I don't know a certain amount of money in it. How about your father?
Before he dies communicates to his three kids. I built this with my son. I'm leaving it to him.
This is what's going to happen. And you two will get other things. But you're not
getting this. Instead, he never bothered to communicate. Yeah. Yeah, that's what a lot of people do.
They wait till they're dead to piss people off. Go ahead and piss people off while you're alive.
If somebody's going to be mad, go ahead and do it while you're alive. This is how you do it.
There's not an estate plan that works where there's no communication. Everyone should know
every detail that involves them. Okay?
Yeah.
So Rachel, Daniel, and Denise can tell you what happens with our lakehouse.
We've all decided together while we're up walking while we're upright.
And then they can, in this case, by the way, they're going to own it together.
And then they can decide to buy each other out.
They can sell the thing.
They can burn it.
I don't care what they do.
I'll be gone.
But it's theirs to decide.
And if I'm going to leave it to one of them or if one of them wants to buy the other two, want to buy the other two out,
It's not going to make me mad.
They do whatever they want to do.
I hate the lake.
I don't want to go down there anymore.
Okay, cool.
Y'all work that out.
But, you know, if you clarify it up front and often in your estate plan, you don't have the first reading of the will after death.
You have the first reading of the will as soon as the will is complete.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, I guess that's what my, yeah, that's what my mother-in-law is trying to do now, but she's not really honoring her.
husband's delicious. No, what she's trying to do now is offload the expenses without offloading
the ownership. Yeah, and that doesn't work. Yeah. I don't want the expenses unless I get the
ownership. No, thank you. Okay. And so really, honestly, what should happen here based on,
now, I'm getting your opinion and your pissed at your sisters-in-law, and I don't really blame you.
So, but, so I haven't heard their side. But from what I'm
hearing, what I would say is that mom needs to say, hey, I offered you guys a chance to chip in.
You don't want to chip in. And so I'm going to step back and I'm going to honor dad's original
wishes. I'm deeding it to your brother. You'll get other things in the will. And I'm going to go
ahead and move it into a trust for your brother now while I'm alive. And he's going to pick up the
expenses from this point forward. You will not be getting the lake house. I'll take care of you
and other things, but I'm just letting you two know.
You had the option and you opted out.
Yeah, sadly, it's only one of them that's opting out.
I know, but that's okay.
Just step in, you know, that's what I would do if I was mother.
They don't have a choice.
It's hers.
She gets to do with it what she wants.
Even if the story wasn't what the story was, she could just wake up in the morning and go,
I'm giving it to you.
Yes, she could.
I think the problem with this, too, is there was information that,
you knew that the sisters probably never knew.
They probably never heard that the lakehouse was supposed to go to your husband or go to you.
I think I kind of knew, but, you know, they don't want to have to possibly make any kind of change.
He's dead, but I think he was a wuss.
He did like to keep the peace.
Yeah.
Well, he didn't keep the peace.
What he did was he avoided conflict.
There's a difference.
You keep the peace with clarity.
Avoiding conflict is just cowardice.
Yeah.
And whatever conversations have need to be between the husband, not you, because you're the in-law.
Yeah, I would not. You don't need to be talking to mom. You don't need to be talking to sisters at all because it's not going to go well.
No, Jade is exactly right. Good advice. Good advice, Jade. Yeah. So your husband should call his mom and say, mom, this is what dad really intended. If we're not going to do that, we're not going to participate. I'm sorry. If you would like to do that, though, if you want to go ahead and deed it over, I'll take it off your hands and you won't have to worry about it anymore. And we will.
have fulfilled Dad's original wishes that we all know we're there.
And just there's no time to cover this, but you've got to view inheritance as the cherry on the top of the Sunday.
It can't be the thing that you're counting on to break you free.
Right, right.
You were counting on this as your house.
On the other hand, you don't want to be handcuffed to it either.
Yeah.
I'm going to be in an LLC with my sister who steals money was yesterday.
No, thank you.
Hey guys, George Camel here.
Do you ever feel like insurance companies only care about your money
and not what you actually need?
Well, there's a better way.
When you go to Ramsey's Insurance Resource Hub,
you'll start feeling confident that you're getting the right coverage
that's truly best for you.
You'll find helpful info on everything from life insurance, health insurance,
identity theft protection, and more.
And when you're ready to get the coverage you need,
you can connect with a Ramsey trusted insurance pro
who will only get you what you need at the best price.
Go to Ramsey Solutions.com slash insurance,
Ramsey Solutions.com slash insurance.
Buying or selling a home is a big decision.
And for most people, it's the largest asset that you ever transact.
So you need an expert in your corner, not someone who got their license three weeks ago and goes to church with you.
Real estate agents that are inexperienced are somewhat dangerous.
Well, where do they get experience?
Not on you.
So you need people that know what they're doing that do a lot of transactions a year if you're thinking about buying or selling.
A pro, somebody that's high octane, high protein, and that's not most of them.
That's just a handful.
We vet the top agents in every market, and we track all the market trends out there in the real estate world.
So Ramsey Trust that will help you find the real estate agent that you want.
And if you want to know what's happening with market trends and prices and mortgage rates
and other free tools to help you buy or sell with confidence, go to Ramsey Solutions.com
slash market. Nate is in Phoenix. Hi, Nate. How are you? Good. How are you? Better than I deserve.
What's up? Yes, sir. So my question, I am a 21-year-old recent college graduate. I'm starting out a career in
aviation here in Phoenix, but my question more so revolves around a $5 million real estate portfolio that my
late grandmother, she passed away a few months ago. She built it up.
over the past 40 years by being a nurse and having a house cleaning company.
And so no one else really in my family at the moment is like willing to kind of manage this portfolio that she built up.
It's roughly a dozen houses, apartments, condos, et cetera, across four different states.
And so I'm kind of looking to take that on.
And the challenge being I have a job here in Phoenix and my siblings and parents have jobs as well.
And being that it's spread across all the way from Hawaii to Pennsylvania, we're looking at what is the best way to manage this.
If you inherited it, why are you?
Yeah.
Oh, so it's in my mom's name.
But my parents are nearing retirement age.
They don't want to take on any big ventures or basically, like, you know, have a huge hassle of managing this.
So I have basically stepped up and told them, I want to take advantage of this opportunity.
Why is it an opportunity?
How will you get, what's your benefit?
Well, my benefit is I, you know, I've read a lot and seen a lot online how real estate can, you know, be beneficial in terms of building income.
No, no, no.
What's your, what's your financial benefit to it?
You want to be a property manager because you read real estate online?
No, I wouldn't say, yeah, I don't want to be, like, I want to basically figure out how I can turn these roughly dozen properties and build it into something that's beneficial.
for our entire family.
So you're thinking, I just want to make this very clear, are you thinking, hey, if I help
this build from $5 million and maybe I, you know, double it or whatever, then when I inherit it,
it's going to be even more.
Is that what you're thinking?
Or are you thinking you can just earn some sort of salary off managing this?
Or is it both?
So it's more so not that I really want a salary.
It's really, I almost want to turn it into a family business, if that makes more sense.
You keep saying family business, and yet you don't own it.
anything. Yeah, because, I mean, my parents, like I said, my parents own it, but they have
kind of, like I have talked with them and we've kind of come to agreement where they want me to
basically take the lead on it because they're nearing retirement. No kidding. How are you getting
paid for this? That's dumb. They want to hire their 21-year-old who had other life goals to now be
a property manager is what you're saying because you're getting nothing out of this. No, I
don't want you to do this because you read an article on TikTok and got excited about real estate.
No.
If they don't like, you don't own it.
If they don't, if they don't enjoy property, they can always sell the properties and invest the money.
Yeah.
You don't own it.
Nor are anywhere in this discussion, have you ever owned it?
You've never indicated anywhere in this entire time.
We ask you four times, are you going to own it?
No, I'm just going to run the family business.
Well, then you're just a stinking employee.
And I don't even think they've said that to you that they're going to pay you money or a certain amount of money to run this.
They haven't said that.
Yeah.
Well, I guess, like, I mean, following the logical line of progression here, I guess eventually me and my siblings are going to inherit it.
And your siblings are going to benefit from all your work because you're not.
Yeah.
So you think I should.
I think you're, I think what's happening is you're operating on a set of assumptions.
and they are massive assumptions.
Yeah.
You're assuming that you're going to end up with this.
You're going to end up with this and that you're going to have a bigger percentage of this
and that there's going to be a family business.
You've got a lot that you've made up.
Let's play this out.
You go in there and you work for a few dollars enough to support you while you screw with this
and you run this from $5 million to $20 million.
In 10 years from now your parents die and your siblings now have one third of $20 million
that you built.
You're going to be pissed.
That is not a good plan.
So, yeah, so I guess your advice would just be to, like, you know, let my dad.
Yeah, let them decide.
If your mom and dad want to say in return for managing our property, we will pay you a property management fee, and we will deed these four properties to you now.
And then you do with those four properties something good for you.
you. Meanwhile, you manage the others for your siblings' future because your parents aren't going to
do anything with them. Now, that would be one thing. Now, the second piece of this is, I heard a
couple other things in there and we'll change horses on you now that I drop that on you. But no,
don't just go in there and assume that this is all going to work out because it's real estate. It's not.
Now, then the other thing is, you said properties scattered from Hawaii to whatever to Egypt. That's another
problem. And that is a bad, I mean, and there's only 10 or 12 properties. It's not.
like you got this huge portfolio.
So you guys need to sell off some of this stuff that's stuck out there in the middle of Egypt somewhere
and get the properties centralized where you can run them.
All the real estate, the Ramsey's on with a couple of exceptions of vacation properties,
are all within 40 miles of each other.
And there's $600 million worth, not $5 million.
All of my portfolio.
It's all where I can touch it within a short drive.
and so and that that's what the kids are going to end up with in this case so yeah if you know you guys
need to do some estate planning and figure out end the game after you grow this portfolio how do
you benefit from growing the portfolio other than just the thrill of growing the portfolio and in the
meantime how do you eat which would be the property management piece what needs to be how
Dave, go even deeper on the, like, this needs to be in writing.
This needs to be somewhere.
It can't just be we talk about it over Chick-fil-A.
And then we also tell the siblings.
Yes.
You know, so Nate is taking over the property in return.
Nate is going to do this, this, and this.
Okay.
We all know.
Okay.
So in our case, Rachel's husband, Winston, has a real estate company that he and I
started.
He has done other things with it on his own behalf that I have nothing to do with now.
And he also manages all the Ramsey property and gets paid for managing the Ramsey property.
He does not own any of the Ramsey property.
The three Ramsey Gen 2s will own the Ramsey property, one of which is his wife.
But he's not managing it for the family vaguely hoping he'll get something.
He knows exactly what he's going to get.
His wife is going to get one third of the portfolio upon Sharon and my death.
and in the meantime, he's being paid commissions and management fees to run a real estate company,
which he thoroughly loves and I like working with him.
So it's all good.
But that's a very clear delineation of what's where.
And by the way, he kind of came at it like Nate did.
He wanted to learn the real estate business.
I know it.
He wanted to get involved in it.
I was one of his, I was his initial mentor.
So over the years, I was one of his mentors.
He's had other people that didn't just learn from me.
But I kind of helped him get started, and I did.
And so...
This guy needs a mentor because he can't just jump into this.
I'm in aviation.
Yeah.
No, I'm in the rental property business in Hawaii.
And it's going to be different in each country in each state that he's in.
Yeah, well, Hawaii's a different country.
Hey, guys, Dave Ramsey here.
Every day on this show, we help people work through real money problems.
and figure out what to do next.
Now, you can get that same kind of help any time with Ask Ramsey.
Ask your money question and get answers built on Ramsey principles we use on the show.
Whether you're making a decision or just want something explained, Ask Ramsey is here to help.
It's fast, simple, and free to use.
Go to Ramsey Solutions.com and try Ask Ramsey today.
That's Ramsey Solutions.com.
Kagan is with us in Palm Beach, Florida.
Hi, Kagan. How are you?
Hey, Dave. I'm doing well. How are you?
Better than I deserve. What's up?
So I had a question I wanted to run by you.
I turned, I'm 22 now, but back when I turned 18, I took out some credit cards and racked up, to me, a significant debt.
And I finally now, I'm just facing it. I'm 22.
and I got a job, full-time job, and I'd been working on paying it off.
Good. What do you make?
I make $3,500 a month.
Okay, working 40 hours?
Yeah.
What do you do?
I work for a pain cream company, nano-extreme pain cream.
Okay.
Some marketing for it.
Yeah.
And how much credit card debt did you run up?
I ran up about 40.
$40,000. Is that all the debt you got?
$40,000, and then I have some student loan debt. All together, I had $70,000 of debt.
Okay, so student loans are $30,000? Yes. No car debt? Well, I was watching your show, and I ended up selling my car about two weeks ago because I am able to ride into work with somebody.
Wow. How are you good? What did the car sell for? I sold it for 13.
grand, so I was able to put that
forward the car.
So I just paid that off.
So I don't have a loan on that anymore.
Big move there.
Excellent.
All right.
Okay, so the $70,000.
Yep, and then I had some bicycles
that I sold.
I sold those for $10,000 to pay off
some debt.
I ended up paying off two credit cards
that totaled up to $8,500 in debt.
Look at you, man.
Get it, get it.
Get it.
So you're with the 70 now.
Oh, 43,000.
Down the 43, yeah.
But there's 70 total, including student loan debt, yeah.
Okay.
So I have a friend who offered to pay off all my debt, and I pay him back.
Ooh.
I don't really know if I want to do that or not because I want to ruin, I know money can ruin a relationship,
and I'm not sure if I want to go down that road.
It's not really money that ruins it.
It's the change in the relationship.
They can ruin it.
So you're 22.
What kind of a friend has $73,000?
He comes from generational wealth.
His dad's very wealthy.
So he has lots of money just laying around.
Wow.
So he offered to pay it for me, and I have to pay him back, of course,
but I'm not sure if I want to do that.
I would not do that.
No.
Okay.
I think you're making wonderful progress because you've done a couple of things.
One is you became very focused and clear on your debt attack,
and two is you've been very impressively willing to sacrifice.
I'm very impressive.
And so...
Yeah, I mean, it's not what I want to do at 22, but I don't want to live my whole life like this.
Yeah.
Well, you don't want to live under the thumb of a credit card either, so you're wanting to get out.
I'm going to fight my way out.
No, I think it's a kind offer, and I appreciate it.
The problem is that when you borrow money from someone, you change the relationship to that of master-servant.
The borrower is slave to the lender.
And so if you're a slave, by definition, you have a master.
And even if your master is a very nice person or as an unconcerned person, they still become your master.
and it changes the air in the room.
They start thinking about how much this guy works.
They start thinking about if you're going on vacation.
They start thinking about if you went to happy hour.
All of a sudden, they're thinking about it,
even if they have plenty of money, quote, unquote, laying around.
Yeah, because this is your friend.
So he has front row seats to how you're living your life every day.
Yeah.
So, I mean, it's kind of sounds good on the surface or it sounds,
it's actually a nice offer.
Yeah, sounds good news.
But it's going, more times than not, to your point, it ends in disaster, Kagan.
So I would tell you this, if you can get some transportation of some kind, I'd love to see
you pick up an extra job for 30 more hours and, you know, and continue to accelerate the plan
that you've already got.
That's what I would do.
But the secret sauce to this, Kegan, is not mathematics on the interest rate.
You get a better interest rate with your friend.
that the secret sauce is not that at all.
The secret sauce is Keegan.
When Keegan changed, everything changed.
And before Keegan changed, nothing changed.
So once you decide you're going to ride this thing, you're riding it.
I'm proud of you.
Keep after it, dude.
I want you look in the mirror and go, you're the answer to the problem,
not borrowing from a friend.
That's right.
And that might include working another 30 hours a week somewhere,
which I really wouldn't mind you doing at all.
Todd is in El Paso.
Hey, Todd, what's up?
Todd?
Hey, I was going to, sorry about that.
Let's kind of muted a little bit.
My bad.
No troubles.
What's up?
Hey, so anyway, I was,
I've kind of got myself kind of like screwed over a little bit,
I guess you could say.
I was out getting,
I had a friend put me on to getting Pokemon cards,
and I think I went a little too far over because I racked up.
Well, I talked about waiting on the phone.
before this, I racked up like thousands of dollars in credit card debt to help pay for my
Pokemon cards.
How many thousands?
Probably like $10,000 to $15,000.
Oof.
Okay.
How much credit card debt do you have exactly?
Do you even know?
Pay attention to you like that?
Mm-hmm.
Well, step one, identify the problem in detail.
You're lost, you're screwed.
You need to find the map that has the...
little red arrow on it that says you are here here you are it's 13,426 dollars of stupid
I want to define my stupid very carefully and thoroughly that's step one step two is take
assessment of the inventory of Pokemon cards and what and how you can move them so
you've been trying you bought them to speculate on them and try to retail them back out you
tried to buy them at one price and sell them at another price right correct did you do that
successfully ever?
No, I kind of just winged because I saw all the success stories.
And I was like, you know what?
I'll use the credit card.
You know, my logic was I use their money because it's not mine.
And then if it doesn't work, then I could fall out.
Then it's your money after all.
Who knew?
I have a feeling this is a symptom of something else.
What caused you to be so desperate that you would do 10,000 or however much on a credit
card for Pokemon cards?
Oh, that's just the American.
dream in my mind. I'm just trying to like make the next dollar like any American dream is to go broken credit card dad?
Well, when you order like that. Yeah, I just did. I think I wanted to. Okay.
What do you do for work? What's your job?
Bouncing around employment. I'm kind of. There it is. And there it is. And there it is.
Okay. That's what I was getting to it. There was something going on. Yeah, ding, ding, ding, ding.
Okay. Okay. So you believe crap like you heard, like it takes money to make money. And so.
So I'm going to be a Pokemon guy because two people I know did this once.
And instead of working.
So here's what I want you to do.
I should get a 40-hour job.
And then what I want you to do right after that is I want you to get another 30-hour job
and pay these credit cards off.
Meanwhile, call some of your stupid Pokemon friends and say, hey, stupid friend, you got me into a stupid mess because I was stupid.
And we're going to get this mess cleaned up and sell these stupid cards.
Now help me with this.
And let's get these cards moved instead of sitting around looking at them.
Because every day I got to look at them.
If I'm you, I feel dumber.
Yeah, the American...
I've done dumb things, Todd.
You did a dumb thing.
So I know what dumb things look like.
And dumb things, when you leave them sitting there in your house, they shame you.
When you walk by, they go, you do it a dumb thing.
They talk to you.
They talk to you. They tell you.
They do.
I had a car parked in my driveway one time.
He kept saying, Dave, you're stupid.
Yeah.
You're dumb, Dave.
Yeah.
Look what you did, Dave.
So I got rid of that stupid car.
I felt stupid every time I drove it.
Yeah.
Hey, what's up, guys?
It's Jade Warshot.
Listen, summer spending adds up so fast between vacations and road trips and camp fees and events.
And all the extra gas and grocery runs, money can get tight before you know it.
To really get your money under control and keep it that way, you're going to need a plan.
And that's what you'll get with the every dollar budget app.
It helps you track your spending, free up cash to put toward debt and savings,
and it's the simplest way to make a plan for your money before the month begins.
So no more wondering where your money's going.
You're telling it where to go.
Download every dollar in the app store or Google Play and start for free today.
Our scripture of the day, John 1335, by this, everyone will know that you are my disciples if you love one another.
Thomas Sowell said some of the biggest cases of mistaken identity are among intellectuals
who have trouble remembering that they are not God.
Oh, boy.
Whoa.
David is in Denver.
Hey, David, what's up?
Not much, Dave.
How are you?
Better than I deserve.
How can we help?
Yeah, I'm on Baby Step 6.
I'm paying off my home.
I have no debt at the moment.
And I've been in the corners of the U-2 finance world,
and I found a video about five weekly mortgage payments
and signing up for that program.
So I'm currently owe $420,000.
$5.98 30-year fixed loan.
And I'm two years in.
And I was wondering, do you recommend that I sign up for the biweekly mortgage payments?
I would not pay a fee for it.
Is there a fee associated with it?
Yes, sir.
To enroll, Rocket Mortgage does require a single upfront mortgage payment, which for me is
$3,500.
So I would have to be.
They take that as a fee?
Wow.
No, I do.
I guess not a fee.
I think it goes towards a principal, sir.
Is your mortgage with Rocket?
Yes, sir.
Okay.
Are they charging any fee for the service of the biweekly, an actual fee?
I don't believe so, sir.
I believe they just asked me to make a one-time mortgage payment to enroll,
and then I am enrolled from then on.
Okay, that's possible.
I'm not real trusting of Rocket.
Ah.
Because Rocket has a lot of shysters going on in there, so be careful.
But let me let's walk through it.
Here's why I'm asking that question.
All right.
So basically a biweekly mortgage is half a payment, as you know, David, every two weeks.
Yes, sir.
There are 26 two-week periods in a year.
So 26 halves is 13 holes.
Right.
Which means that a biweekly mortgage effectively pays a single payment extra per year.
Correct.
So mathematically, you would be within $15 of this by simply just writing a check once a year for an extra payment.
That's true.
And so I kind of thought, like, what?
There's no magic.
Yeah, the biweekly is not magic.
It's just a way to trick you into paying extra principal.
I see.
And that's the only thing that does it.
So if you just took your regular mortgage and once a year sent an extra payment above your regular mortgage,
you'll be within $10 or $15 of the same exact result.
So it takes a 30-year mortgage and turns it into about a 23.
It takes a 15-year mortgage and turns it into about a 12.
I see.
But it's all done by an extra principal payment a year.
And really, truthfully, your own baby step six,
so you may be doing more or less of an extra principal payment a year.
Are you paid every two weeks?
Yes, sir.
I do have a salary position.
So does my wife.
We earn about 186, 186.
thousand dollars a year. So it would be kind of an autopilot thing to at least to get one extra
payment a year. But I, with those numbers you're giving me, I want you to put more than that on
there anyway, don't you? Well, the problem is my, I have a four-year-old son, and I'm paying $22,000 a
year for daycare. And that just really hurts the budget. I do feel like I'm house poor. I feel like I'm
kind of, you know. Of your house poor, you don't need to increase your house payment. Yes, sir. I'm just
trying to pay this thing off as quickly as possible.
Currently,
the way you're going to do that is extra principal payments,
not being house poor from daycare.
So you've got to decide which life is it you're living here.
But either way,
I want you and baby Step 6 for your sake to get the house paid off.
And the way you're going to do that is extra principal payments.
If you want to do that by setting it up as a biweekly and they don't charge you a fee
to do it,
see, if they're charging you 500 bucks to do this or something,
well, crap, no, I'll just send it an extra payment.
Right.
But if they're charging you no fee and you're paid biweekly and it's easy, yeah, let's do that,
but let's also plan to do more.
Excellent.
And before I let you go, I do earn $11,000 a month with my wife after taxes and my mortgage is $3,500,
which equates to 32.2% of my monthly income.
Since I'm on baby steps six, I don't have any debt, do you still think I can keep this house?
I know you always say sale the house is too much, but I really want this home.
I think that you're feeling the squeeze, especially right now because you have somebody in daycare, and there's a seasonality there.
That's not going to be like this for all time.
So I think that's why you're feeling the squeeze.
If there's something you can do to offset that in the meantime, I would do it.
But I'm not.
And that's putting the take home pay you outlined is after you put money in 401K, right?
Yes, sir.
No, that's not the number.
That's the wrong calculation.
That's the wrong calculation.
When we say take home pay, we mean just after.
taxes only. Yes, yeah, it's 11,000 hits our joint account a month. I know, honey, but that's after
they took money out for 401k. And probably insurance. Yes, sir. Those two numbers don't count in the
calculation, so you're not at 32%. Oh, okay. That's what I'm saying. The only numbers that count in the
calculation for take-home pay is after taxes, gross minus taxes. So add back insurance, add back
in your calculation and then say of that number what percentage is it and it's going to be down
close to 25 so you're fine i don't think you're hurting here i think you're just you know observing the
fact that not own that you're not out of debt completely yet and even when you are it's not a magic
pill it's just uh it's just a better place than being in debt that's all everybody listening
needs to understand what you just said about take home pay which is it is only the after tax amount
When we say have your house be 25% of your take on pay on a 15-year fixed, we're talking about only after taxes, not after child support coming out, not after your car payment coming out and going to the credit union.
Not after the insurance, not after 401K, not after 401K, not after AFLAC, not after any of that stuff, okay?
So put all that crap, that's not what we're talking about.
Good point.
Aaron is in Minneapolis.
Hi, Aaron.
What's up?
Hi, thank you for taking my call.
Sure.
So we recently moved to a country home.
We thought it would be our dream home, our forever home that we'd raise our kids in.
But after moving here, we realized we hate country life.
We miss living in closer to a city.
We miss sidewalks, all the amenities.
We have another home, and we are renting it out, and we thought we would rent it out for a few years and then sell it and then use that money to pay off said country home.
But now we are unsure of what to do, because we are not sure of what to do.
because we do not want to stay in said country home.
We'll sell said country home and move back to the city.
What's wrong with that?
So our other home is three hours away.
Sell it.
Sell both of them and buy a house in the city.
That's what you think we should do?
Sure.
If none of them are working for you.
I don't want a rental house in a country home and I want neither.
Why don't we say I don't want to own them anymore?
So what am I going to do?
I'm going to sell them.
And you could probably buy what you want, maybe in cash.
I don't know.
Get rid of both of them.
even if we just recently bought said country home
how recent
why are you arguing with me you call me up and said you didn't like it
no i'm not are you i don't know but you're going well i just bought it
well i know but i don't like it i made a bad decision
unmake the decision okay you didn't get married you bought real estate
okay thank you so much dave yeah it's hard it's hard to get rid of the married thing
if you do that one wrong but the real estate when you just put up
sale. It's more simple than you think, I think. Yeah. Well, it's just, I mean, you may lose a little
money. Okay, we made a bad decision with something, something about our vision for life was
askew. Yeah. And so we may pay some tax for that. Stupid tax. We may pay some stupid tax for that.
That's okay. It's okay. I've done dumber things than that. Then thought I wanted something that I didn't.
And, but I tell you what is interesting to do, Aaron, in these situations and anybody else. I've done it a lot to
myself, when I find myself in a situation like that called a mistake, that's a mistake.
I want to backtrack and think through.
How did I get?
What caused my brain to malfunction that allowed the mistake?
What decision-making framework was I using that was flawed that caused me to, you know,
okay, I was looking at Instagram people on Homestead.
Yeah.
Well, don't, you know, okay, I've just figured it out.
I don't need to be looking at Instagram to do anything that it has quality in life.
Right.
You know, and so what was it that caused me to get a skew of what reality was?
Yeah.
And so that I don't do it again.
Well, then it becomes research, not just something stupid you did.
It was an experiment.
It was an experiment.
I found something that didn't work.
That's right.
Like a test tube when I blew up the lab.
Yeah, that kind of thing, yeah.
I puts this hour of The Ramsey Show in the books.
We'll be back with you before you know.
But 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.
