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Dave Ramsey Loves His Dog More Than Most People, But Won't Take On $14,000 In Debt For Hip Replacement Surgery

MarketDash Editorial Team
21 hours ago
Personal finance guru Dave Ramsey offers blunt advice on veterinary spending: loving your pet doesn't mean going into debt for expensive treatments. He argues that costly procedures often serve the owner's emotions rather than the animal's welfare, especially when conditions aren't truly fixable.

Dave Ramsey has a confession: he genuinely prefers his 12-pound Havanese to most humans. But that deep affection doesn't translate into financial recklessness when it comes to veterinary care.

"I truly prefer this dog to most people, I really do," the personal finance expert said during an episode of "The Ramsey Show." Still, he's drawing a hard line when pet owners consider taking on massive debt for medical procedures. His advice? Focus on what's actually best for the animal, not your own emotional needs.

The Hardest Decision Requires The Most Courage

"It becomes about us instead of the dog," Ramsey explained. "We spend $8,000 to keep the dog alive while the dog is suffering, and it's not fair to the dog." He's not speaking from some detached financial perch, either. Ramsey admits he's "cried like a 12-year-old" while putting down a pet. But he believes making that difficult choice takes more courage than prolonging an animal's suffering because you can't face the grief.

The key question pet owners need to answer, according to Ramsey: is the animal actually fixable, or are you just trying to delay your own heartbreak? If a condition can genuinely be treated and the pet will enjoy a good quality of life afterward, spending money might be justified. But his position is crystal clear: "Do I go $14,000 in debt to put new hips into a Labrador retriever? No, you do not."

During another call five years ago, a listener named Adam asked whether he should spend $1,000 on eye surgery for his 9-year-old Shih Tzu after already dropping $400 at emergency vets. Ramsey sympathized but returned to his central principle: "I want to make sure that this is about the dog, not about me."

He gets the emotional weight of these decisions. "I don't want to make that trip to the vet and not come home with my dog... but on the other hand, it's not fair to the dog," Ramsey said.

If you have the cash available and the treatment will result in a pain-free life for your pet, it might be worth considering. But Ramsey cautions against emotionally-driven choices that don't actually serve the animal. "Sometimes people will pay a whole bunch of money to prolong an animal's life three months, and that's selfish on your part," he said.

The Rising Cost Of Veterinary Care

Ramsey's advice hits home as veterinary expenses continue climbing. According to MetLife, the most expensive canine health problems can compete with human medical bills. Treating intervertebral disc disease can reach $12,000, while bloat can run up to $8,000. Cancer treatments frequently exceed $8,000. Even relatively common issues like cruciate ligament tears or broken bones can cost between $2,400 and $5,000.

For chronic conditions such as diabetes or heart disease, those bills become ongoing expenses that compound over years.

Ramsey's ultimate guidance boils down to three principles: be kind, be realistic and be responsible. "It's a dog, it's not a human," he said.

Dave Ramsey Loves His Dog More Than Most People, But Won't Take On $14,000 In Debt For Hip Replacement Surgery

MarketDash Editorial Team
21 hours ago
Personal finance guru Dave Ramsey offers blunt advice on veterinary spending: loving your pet doesn't mean going into debt for expensive treatments. He argues that costly procedures often serve the owner's emotions rather than the animal's welfare, especially when conditions aren't truly fixable.

Dave Ramsey has a confession: he genuinely prefers his 12-pound Havanese to most humans. But that deep affection doesn't translate into financial recklessness when it comes to veterinary care.

"I truly prefer this dog to most people, I really do," the personal finance expert said during an episode of "The Ramsey Show." Still, he's drawing a hard line when pet owners consider taking on massive debt for medical procedures. His advice? Focus on what's actually best for the animal, not your own emotional needs.

The Hardest Decision Requires The Most Courage

"It becomes about us instead of the dog," Ramsey explained. "We spend $8,000 to keep the dog alive while the dog is suffering, and it's not fair to the dog." He's not speaking from some detached financial perch, either. Ramsey admits he's "cried like a 12-year-old" while putting down a pet. But he believes making that difficult choice takes more courage than prolonging an animal's suffering because you can't face the grief.

The key question pet owners need to answer, according to Ramsey: is the animal actually fixable, or are you just trying to delay your own heartbreak? If a condition can genuinely be treated and the pet will enjoy a good quality of life afterward, spending money might be justified. But his position is crystal clear: "Do I go $14,000 in debt to put new hips into a Labrador retriever? No, you do not."

During another call five years ago, a listener named Adam asked whether he should spend $1,000 on eye surgery for his 9-year-old Shih Tzu after already dropping $400 at emergency vets. Ramsey sympathized but returned to his central principle: "I want to make sure that this is about the dog, not about me."

He gets the emotional weight of these decisions. "I don't want to make that trip to the vet and not come home with my dog... but on the other hand, it's not fair to the dog," Ramsey said.

If you have the cash available and the treatment will result in a pain-free life for your pet, it might be worth considering. But Ramsey cautions against emotionally-driven choices that don't actually serve the animal. "Sometimes people will pay a whole bunch of money to prolong an animal's life three months, and that's selfish on your part," he said.

The Rising Cost Of Veterinary Care

Ramsey's advice hits home as veterinary expenses continue climbing. According to MetLife, the most expensive canine health problems can compete with human medical bills. Treating intervertebral disc disease can reach $12,000, while bloat can run up to $8,000. Cancer treatments frequently exceed $8,000. Even relatively common issues like cruciate ligament tears or broken bones can cost between $2,400 and $5,000.

For chronic conditions such as diabetes or heart disease, those bills become ongoing expenses that compound over years.

Ramsey's ultimate guidance boils down to three principles: be kind, be realistic and be responsible. "It's a dog, it's not a human," he said.