Dave Ramsey to Newlyweds: Get Your Own Finances Right Before Playing Savior

MarketDash Editorial Team
12 days ago
Financial guru Dave Ramsey tells newlyweds struggling with money conflicts to stop helping family and friends until their own financial house is in order. His advice: broke people can't help broke people, and generosity without stability hurts everyone.

Financial advice guru Dave Ramsey has a message for newlyweds who can't resist playing financial hero to family and friends: you're not helping anyone if you can't pay your own bills first.

When Generosity Becomes a Problem

A listener named Jacob wrote in this week with a problem many couples face. He and his wife, married less than a year, were already butting heads over money. The issue? His wife kept giving cash to family and friends, even when they couldn't afford it, according to KTAR News.

"Often, she will give money to family and friends. Most of the time I wouldn't mind this, as long as the person really needed help," Jacob explained. "But often she will do this, and we end up short when it comes to taking care of our bills, paying off debt and saving."

In other words, they're helping other people stay afloat while their own ship is taking on water.

The Reality Check

Ramsey didn't sugarcoat his response. "Your wife's heart is in the right place. And generosity is a very attractive quality in a person. Still, that doesn't make what she's doing a good idea right now."

Then came the memorable line: "Broke people can't help broke people. By this, I mean only the strong can help the weak. Right now, you two should be working together—as a team—to get your own financial house in order."

His advice? Sit down together and have an honest conversation. "She's a good lady, Jacob. Praise her for her giving heart. But at the same time, show her what's happening with your own finances," Ramsey said.

The plan itself is straightforward: pay off debt, build an emergency fund, save for retirement, and then set aside money to help others. It's the financial equivalent of putting on your own oxygen mask before helping others.

Prevention Is Cheaper Than Therapy

Ramsey also emphasized that engaged couples should take pre-marital counseling seriously, even if they've been together for years. Money, children, religion, and in-laws are all topics that need discussion before the wedding, not after the first fight.

On the subject of prenups, Ramsey told another caller worried about a $7 million business that prenuptial agreements are usually unnecessary. But if there are significant existing assets at stake, they can make sense. His guidelines: prenups should protect what you bring into the marriage, not tie payouts to how long you stay married, and can be updated if both partners contribute to building wealth together.

The kicker? Prenups only matter if the marriage ends. While you're married, you should operate as true partners.

Dave Ramsey to Newlyweds: Get Your Own Finances Right Before Playing Savior

MarketDash Editorial Team
12 days ago
Financial guru Dave Ramsey tells newlyweds struggling with money conflicts to stop helping family and friends until their own financial house is in order. His advice: broke people can't help broke people, and generosity without stability hurts everyone.

Financial advice guru Dave Ramsey has a message for newlyweds who can't resist playing financial hero to family and friends: you're not helping anyone if you can't pay your own bills first.

When Generosity Becomes a Problem

A listener named Jacob wrote in this week with a problem many couples face. He and his wife, married less than a year, were already butting heads over money. The issue? His wife kept giving cash to family and friends, even when they couldn't afford it, according to KTAR News.

"Often, she will give money to family and friends. Most of the time I wouldn't mind this, as long as the person really needed help," Jacob explained. "But often she will do this, and we end up short when it comes to taking care of our bills, paying off debt and saving."

In other words, they're helping other people stay afloat while their own ship is taking on water.

The Reality Check

Ramsey didn't sugarcoat his response. "Your wife's heart is in the right place. And generosity is a very attractive quality in a person. Still, that doesn't make what she's doing a good idea right now."

Then came the memorable line: "Broke people can't help broke people. By this, I mean only the strong can help the weak. Right now, you two should be working together—as a team—to get your own financial house in order."

His advice? Sit down together and have an honest conversation. "She's a good lady, Jacob. Praise her for her giving heart. But at the same time, show her what's happening with your own finances," Ramsey said.

The plan itself is straightforward: pay off debt, build an emergency fund, save for retirement, and then set aside money to help others. It's the financial equivalent of putting on your own oxygen mask before helping others.

Prevention Is Cheaper Than Therapy

Ramsey also emphasized that engaged couples should take pre-marital counseling seriously, even if they've been together for years. Money, children, religion, and in-laws are all topics that need discussion before the wedding, not after the first fight.

On the subject of prenups, Ramsey told another caller worried about a $7 million business that prenuptial agreements are usually unnecessary. But if there are significant existing assets at stake, they can make sense. His guidelines: prenups should protect what you bring into the marriage, not tie payouts to how long you stay married, and can be updated if both partners contribute to building wealth together.

The kicker? Prenups only matter if the marriage ends. While you're married, you should operate as true partners.

    Dave Ramsey to Newlyweds: Get Your Own Finances Right Before Playing Savior - MarketDash News