If you think online sports betting is just harmless fun, Dave Ramsey would like a word with you. The personal finance guru is treating mobile gambling apps like a public health crisis, and his language isn't subtle: he's comparing them to cocaine and fentanyl.
When Dad Suggests Options Trading Instead
During a recent Sunday episode of The Ramsey Show, a concerned father called in about his 21-year-old son. The kid had done something right by starting to invest for the long term, but he'd also gotten deep into sports gambling. The father's proposed solution? Maybe redirect that gambling energy into short-term trading like options and futures.
Ramsey wasn't having it. Suggesting one form of speculation to cure another is like treating a headache with a hammer.
"A college student shouldn't be playing short-term trading and a college student shouldn't be sports gambling, period," Ramsey said. Then he went harder: "This is cocaine. You are screwing around with cocaine. You're screwing around with fentanyl. You're screwing around with crack. And it's going to kill your little butt."
The App That Never Sleeps
George Kamel, another voice on the show, emphasized what makes mobile betting apps particularly dangerous: they're always there, always nudging, always making it easy to place just one more bet. He urged parents to force young adults to confront the math of their losses.
"Make him add it up and then show him what it's actually costing him both in past and future tenses," Kamel advised.
Ramsey pointed to the technology itself as the problem. The algorithms, the push notifications, the seamless payment systems—it all creates what he called a destructive feedback loop. These companies are "making billions of dollars at it and at the cost of an entire generation being screwed over," he said. "It's the fastest growing addiction in America. Faster than cocaine, faster than drugs of any kind."
Real Damage, Real Money
The warnings aren't theoretical. Last month, Nicole from New York called The Ramsey Show about her husband's gambling addiction, which had racked up $21,000 in credit card debt and nearly emptied their savings. Co-host John Delony called it "financial infidelity" and praised Nicole for separating their accounts to protect herself.
Delony suggested focusing on rebuilding trust while monitoring her husband's gambling behavior. Rachel Cruze, another co-host, noted that Nicole was setting healthy boundaries after experiencing a serious betrayal.
Then there's James, a 25-year-old who shared his story in October. After moving to Atlantic City, he lost between $45,000 and $55,000 in just six weeks. What started as small bets spiraled into nightly losses of $2,000 to $5,000.
Ramsey recommended Gamblers Anonymous, professional counseling, and building a strong support network. Kamel suggested implementing financial guardrails and possibly relocating to remove the temptation entirely.
The message from Ramsey and his team is clear: this isn't entertainment, and it's not investing. It's an addiction machine dressed up as a sports app, and it's winning.