She Spent While He Saved for Retirement. Now She Wants Half and Dave Ramsey Says 'Your Heart's Broken'

MarketDash Editorial Team
20 days ago
A Cleveland truck driver called into The Ramsey Show facing $65,000 in combined credit card debt, a $970 monthly truck payment, and an ex-wife demanding half his 401(k). Dave Ramsey delivered some tough love about selling the truck, forcing the house sale, and not making any major purchases until the divorce is final.

Sometimes personal finance advice is less about spreadsheets and more about damage control. That's what happened when Corey, a truck driver from Cleveland, called into The Ramsey Show with a financial mess that would make anyone wince.

His situation: $35,000 in credit card debt that's entirely his own, an estranged wife who wants him to shoulder half of her $30,000 in additional credit card balances, a $970 monthly truck payment he can barely afford, and a divorce hearing just weeks away. Oh, and she wants half his 401(k) too.

When One Person Saves and the Other Spends

Here's how it all went sideways. Corey and his wife used to work together as over-the-road truckers, pulling in $250,000 a year between them. That's solid money. But their approach to that money couldn't have been more different.

"I was sticking mine in my 401(k). She was spending hers," Corey explained. Now, after just three years of marriage, they're splitting up and she's coming for half of everything he saved.

The vehicle situation alone is a nightmare. Corey had bought his wife a Lexus. He also had a motorcycle loan. When things started falling apart, she returned the Lexus to him, which sounds nice until you realize he was stuck with the debt on both vehicles.

Trying to dig himself out, Corey traded both the Lexus and the motorcycle for a 2023 Chevy Silverado, thinking he'd save about $500 a month. Except now he's paying $970 monthly on the truck and owes more than it's worth. As Dave Ramsey put it bluntly: "$970 at $33 an hour is in the cray-cray zone."

What the Law Says Versus What Feels Fair

Corey told Ramsey and co-host George Kamel that he tried to be reasonable. He offered to let his wife keep the house, all the equity they'd built, and her own debts. She said no. So now they're both lawyered up and headed to court.

Ramsey didn't sugarcoat it: "What she wants doesn't matter. What you want doesn't matter. The law is going to demand that you split it down the middle."

That's the reality of marital asset division. It doesn't care who saved and who spent. It doesn't care who was more responsible. It just splits things, and that can feel deeply unfair when you were the one being careful with money.

Ramsey was firm about one thing: "Now this has got to stop. You've already eaten a Lexus and a motorcycle and now she wants you to eat $15,000 more of the debt."

Don't Buy a Semi Until This Is Over

When Corey mentioned he was thinking about buying his own semi truck to get back on the road, Ramsey shut that down immediately. "You need to get this cleared up before you do that, because she's gonna end up with half the dadgum semi."

That's smart advice. Any major purchase before a divorce is finalized becomes a marital asset subject to division. Corey needs to wait, even if getting back to work feels urgent.

The more pressing issue is that truck payment. Ramsey pushed Corey hard to sell the Silverado, even if it meant taking out a small loan or finding a private buyer to cover what he owes. "Somebody will give you more than you owe on it," Ramsey said. "Get you a hooptie. You don't need a big car right now. You've got more problems than you need car."

The Battle Plan

Ramsey laid out a clear strategy: Force the sale of the house. Use part of the home equity as a trade to avoid giving up half the 401(k). Walk away with only his own $35,000 in credit card debt and nothing else.

"Do not let her have the house," Ramsey warned. "Because you're on the mortgage, and then she doesn't pay it, you're screwed."

That's a real risk. If she keeps the house and stops paying the mortgage, Corey's credit gets destroyed along with hers. Better to force the sale, split the proceeds, and cut all financial ties cleanly.

Ramsey ended the call with something Corey probably needed to hear just as much as the financial advice: "You're being managed by emotion because your heart's broken. One minute you're angry, the next minute you're terrified. I've been there. It's no fun."

Divorce is messy financially, but it's also emotionally devastating. Corey's trying to make rational decisions while his entire life is being pulled apart. That's hard for anyone.

The takeaway here isn't just about truck payments and 401(k) splits. It's about recognizing when you're in too deep, getting clear-eyed about what the law will actually do, and making the hard calls that protect your financial future even when everything feels overwhelming.

She Spent While He Saved for Retirement. Now She Wants Half and Dave Ramsey Says 'Your Heart's Broken'

MarketDash Editorial Team
20 days ago
A Cleveland truck driver called into The Ramsey Show facing $65,000 in combined credit card debt, a $970 monthly truck payment, and an ex-wife demanding half his 401(k). Dave Ramsey delivered some tough love about selling the truck, forcing the house sale, and not making any major purchases until the divorce is final.

Sometimes personal finance advice is less about spreadsheets and more about damage control. That's what happened when Corey, a truck driver from Cleveland, called into The Ramsey Show with a financial mess that would make anyone wince.

His situation: $35,000 in credit card debt that's entirely his own, an estranged wife who wants him to shoulder half of her $30,000 in additional credit card balances, a $970 monthly truck payment he can barely afford, and a divorce hearing just weeks away. Oh, and she wants half his 401(k) too.

When One Person Saves and the Other Spends

Here's how it all went sideways. Corey and his wife used to work together as over-the-road truckers, pulling in $250,000 a year between them. That's solid money. But their approach to that money couldn't have been more different.

"I was sticking mine in my 401(k). She was spending hers," Corey explained. Now, after just three years of marriage, they're splitting up and she's coming for half of everything he saved.

The vehicle situation alone is a nightmare. Corey had bought his wife a Lexus. He also had a motorcycle loan. When things started falling apart, she returned the Lexus to him, which sounds nice until you realize he was stuck with the debt on both vehicles.

Trying to dig himself out, Corey traded both the Lexus and the motorcycle for a 2023 Chevy Silverado, thinking he'd save about $500 a month. Except now he's paying $970 monthly on the truck and owes more than it's worth. As Dave Ramsey put it bluntly: "$970 at $33 an hour is in the cray-cray zone."

What the Law Says Versus What Feels Fair

Corey told Ramsey and co-host George Kamel that he tried to be reasonable. He offered to let his wife keep the house, all the equity they'd built, and her own debts. She said no. So now they're both lawyered up and headed to court.

Ramsey didn't sugarcoat it: "What she wants doesn't matter. What you want doesn't matter. The law is going to demand that you split it down the middle."

That's the reality of marital asset division. It doesn't care who saved and who spent. It doesn't care who was more responsible. It just splits things, and that can feel deeply unfair when you were the one being careful with money.

Ramsey was firm about one thing: "Now this has got to stop. You've already eaten a Lexus and a motorcycle and now she wants you to eat $15,000 more of the debt."

Don't Buy a Semi Until This Is Over

When Corey mentioned he was thinking about buying his own semi truck to get back on the road, Ramsey shut that down immediately. "You need to get this cleared up before you do that, because she's gonna end up with half the dadgum semi."

That's smart advice. Any major purchase before a divorce is finalized becomes a marital asset subject to division. Corey needs to wait, even if getting back to work feels urgent.

The more pressing issue is that truck payment. Ramsey pushed Corey hard to sell the Silverado, even if it meant taking out a small loan or finding a private buyer to cover what he owes. "Somebody will give you more than you owe on it," Ramsey said. "Get you a hooptie. You don't need a big car right now. You've got more problems than you need car."

The Battle Plan

Ramsey laid out a clear strategy: Force the sale of the house. Use part of the home equity as a trade to avoid giving up half the 401(k). Walk away with only his own $35,000 in credit card debt and nothing else.

"Do not let her have the house," Ramsey warned. "Because you're on the mortgage, and then she doesn't pay it, you're screwed."

That's a real risk. If she keeps the house and stops paying the mortgage, Corey's credit gets destroyed along with hers. Better to force the sale, split the proceeds, and cut all financial ties cleanly.

Ramsey ended the call with something Corey probably needed to hear just as much as the financial advice: "You're being managed by emotion because your heart's broken. One minute you're angry, the next minute you're terrified. I've been there. It's no fun."

Divorce is messy financially, but it's also emotionally devastating. Corey's trying to make rational decisions while his entire life is being pulled apart. That's hard for anyone.

The takeaway here isn't just about truck payments and 401(k) splits. It's about recognizing when you're in too deep, getting clear-eyed about what the law will actually do, and making the hard calls that protect your financial future even when everything feels overwhelming.

    She Spent While He Saved for Retirement. Now She Wants Half and Dave Ramsey Says 'Your Heart's Broken' - MarketDash News