Financial personality Dave Ramsey turned a straightforward debt question into a warning shot about co-signing loans and what he calls a predatory lending system that targets families at their most vulnerable.
When Helping Your Kid Becomes Your Liability
On Monday's episode of "The Ramsey Show," Jessica from Illinois asked whether she should tackle her 22-year-old daughter's $12,000 co-signed car loan or her own $20,000 in credit card debt first. Total damage: $32,000.
Ramsey's answer was clear: knock out the credit cards, then attack the car loan. Why? Because co-signing doesn't mean you're just backup support.
"It's what we call a contingent liability… and they're going to come after you really fast," he explained.
In other words, Jessica is fully on the hook whether her daughter pays or not. The loan isn't just her daughter's problem—it's hers.
Co-Signing Is Buying Something Someone Else Can't Afford
Ramsey didn't sugarcoat his position. He called co-signing a financial trap dressed up as generosity.
"Don't act like that, you're doing somebody a favor by helping them buy something they can't afford," he said.
He went further, calling the decision "biblically stupid" and citing Proverbs: "One lacking in sense cosigns for another." His point wasn't theological—it was practical. Co-signing locks you into debt you never planned to carry.
The real red flag, Ramsey argued, was that lenders refused to finance Jessica's daughter independently.
"If this is the most aggressively marketed product and if they want to sell debt more than they want to live and eat and breathe and they won't loan your daughter money, something's really wrong."
Translation: if professional risk-takers won't take the risk, maybe you shouldn't either.
Debt Problems Are Math Problems
Two other recent calls to the show illustrated just how much financial strain young Americans are facing.
A 27-year-old man from Texas called in with $100,000 in debt while his wife earned $60,000. Among the liabilities: a $27,000 car loan that Ramsey said didn't fit their budget. His advice was blunt—sell the car. The family was stretching to maintain a lifestyle they couldn't afford, and it was creating stress they didn't need.
Then there was Toby, also 27, who had $14,000 in debt and had been homeless for months. He was considering bankruptcy after losing housing and dealing with DUI-related costs that spiraled into instability.
Ramsey told him bankruptcy wouldn't solve the deeper issues. The debt was a symptom, not the disease. Toby needed steady work, sobriety and a support system to rebuild stability—not a legal reset button.
The common thread across these calls? Debt decisions are math problems, not moral failures. But they require facing reality head-on, not finding creative ways to avoid it.