Here's a financial dilemma you don't hear every day: Patricia, an 82-year-old widow from Atlanta, called into The Ramsey Show with a problem most people would love to have—and a fear that's keeping her from solving it.
Her late husband was what you might call old-school when it came to saving. Over 25 years of marriage, he quietly tucked away more than $100,000 in cash somewhere in their home. Patricia discovered it after he passed, and now she's stuck. She wants to deposit the money, but she's convinced that walking into a bank with six figures in cash will send the IRS knocking on her door.
Half a Million in Assets, But Barely Getting By
"My husband was a mattress saver," Patricia explained to co-hosts George Kamel and Jade Warshaw. And that's not even the whole picture of her financial situation.
She's sitting on roughly $400,000 in certificates of deposit. Her house is paid off and worth around $425,000. Her car? Also paid off. Add it all up, and Patricia has about $500,000 in net worth. Yet somehow, she's scraping by on just $1,400 a month in Social Security benefits.
"I just do my best," she said about making ends meet. "I don't eat much."
The reason she's living like this? Pure fear of what might happen if she touches that cash pile.
The IRS Isn't Coming For You
Patricia had asked around about depositing the money, and apparently received some alarming advice. "I've asked other people and they say if you try to just take this big chunk of money and put it in the bank... the Internal Revenue is going to come and say where in the world did you get this $100,000 in cash?"
Kamel quickly put that fear to rest. "I don't think they're going to take you into a room and interrogate you. The bank legally just has to file a report. Anything over 10 grand, they just have to file a report saying that you deposited the money."
All Patricia needs to do is provide a simple explanation: "My husband, you know, saved cash in a safe for years." That's it. No interrogation rooms, no handcuffs, just standard banking paperwork.
The Real Problem Isn't the Cash
While the cash concern got most of the airtime, both hosts agreed that Patricia's bigger issue is the $400,000 sitting idle in CDs. "I'd love to see you invest that 400K," Warshaw said. "That way, if you want to draw a little off of it, you can, and you don't have to worry about it depleting."
Kamel emphasized the urgency, pointing out that every day Patricia waits, inflation chips away at her purchasing power. "That 100K, as you know, has been eaten away by inflation," he said. "What you could buy with 100K back in the day versus today—it's different."
The segment wrapped up with Warshaw adding some levity to the situation, joking about the logistics of transporting that much cash. "Can you imagine? Stuffing a suitcase with $100,000 and just heading down to the bank... I would get a pit bull to walk everywhere with me just to be sure."
For Patricia, the message was clear: stop worrying about imaginary IRS problems and start making that money work for her. At 82, living on $1,400 a month when you're sitting on half a million dollars isn't being careful—it's leaving opportunity on the table.