Jennifer from Mississippi dialed into The Ramsey Show with what seemed like a straightforward question: Which credit card should her 17-year-old son get to start building his credit? She and her husband have stellar credit scores — hers is 830, his is 780 — and they wanted to set their son up for similar success.
What happened next wasn't the consumer credit comparison she probably expected. Hosts Jade Warshaw and Ken Coleman basically said: Don't.
The Case Against Credit Scores
Warshaw, welcoming Jennifer as a new listener, laid out why the Ramsey philosophy doesn't involve building credit at all. "You have to have debt. You have to interact with debt in order to have a credit score," she explained. "When you borrow money, the borrower is slave to the lender."
The argument goes deeper than just avoiding debt for its own sake. Warshaw pointed out that credit scores measure your relationship with borrowed money, not your actual financial health. "Nobody's asking questions about can you actually afford the item. How are you managing the cash that is actually yours? That's why I have an issue with the credit score."
Jennifer shared that her son is already doing well financially — working part-time, saving money, even putting some into a certificate of deposit. But she had practical concerns. How would he rent an apartment without credit history? What about buying a car? And eventually, a house?
Renting and Driving Without Credit
Warshaw acknowledged the apartment concern but said it's more manageable than most people think. "You're right, a lot of apartments do look at your credit history. But a lot of them don't." For landlords who do check credit, she said her son could simply explain he has a zero credit score because he doesn't use debt, then back it up with bank statements and pay stubs. Often, landlords just want first and last month's rent upfront.
As for cars, Warshaw was emphatic: "I'd rather him buy a car in cash and not have payments. The car payment is what keeps middle class middle class. Most people are walking around here with a $700 a month car payment."
The logic is that monthly car payments drain cash that could otherwise be invested or saved. Instead of financing a newer car, buy something affordable outright and avoid the payment treadmill altogether.
Buying a House With Zero Credit
Then Jennifer raised the big one: "[After college] he'll probably want to buy a house. And I know it's a lot harder to obtain a house with no credit score."
"What if I told you that's not true?" Warshaw replied.
She explained a process called manual underwriting, which lets people with zero credit scores buy homes based on their actual financial behavior rather than their borrowing history. "You can buy a house with a zero credit score. It's called manual underwriting," she said. "They look for 12 months of trade lines. That could be your cell phone bill, your utilities... 12 months of rental history... and they'll ask for your pay stubs."
Warshaw added that she bought her own home this way. "A zero credit score is not the same as a bad credit score. A zero credit score is just as good as a high credit score. It simply means I don't borrow money."
She framed credit scores as a product designed to benefit lenders, not consumers. "There's a lot of people making money off of that. That's why you don't see on TV people advertising zero credit scores, because nobody's making money off that."
A Scary Shift in Thinking
Jennifer admitted the conversation felt like a jarring shift from what she'd always believed. Warshaw acknowledged that discomfort is natural when you're hearing something completely contrary to conventional wisdom.
Coleman chimed in with encouragement: "That fear is natural, Jennifer, but it's because you've never heard what she just laid out. Most people never have. Go do your homework on it. Fact-check us. I think you'll like what you see."
Whether you agree with the Ramsey approach or not, the conversation highlights an interesting tension in personal finance: the difference between what's financially optimal and what's culturally expected. Credit scores are so embedded in American financial life that opting out entirely sounds radical. But according to Warshaw and Coleman, it's not only possible — it might actually be better.