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Why Dave Ramsey Tolerates Mortgages But Despises Car Loans: The Wealth-Building Calculus Behind His One Hypocritical Stance

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 hours ago
Financial guru Dave Ramsey admits he's hypocritical about one thing: mortgages. A pastor's question on The Ramsey Show revealed why Ramsey accepts home loans but rails against car financing, and it all comes down to what actually builds wealth versus what keeps you perpetually middle class.

When Zachary, a pastor from St. Louis, called into "The Ramsey Show" recently, he asked the kind of question that cuts right through the usual personal finance platitudes. If Dave Ramsey constantly quotes Proverbs 22:7 about how "the borrower is slave to the lender," why does he tell people mortgages are fine while treating car loans like financial poison?

"I definitely agree with that principle in many ways," Zachary said, clearly wrestling with what looked like an obvious contradiction. It "seems almost to betray that principle a little bit."

The Confession: Yes, It's Hypocritical

Ramsey didn't dodge the question. "That is a wonderful question," he responded. "It is the only hypocritical advice we give on this show."

Here's the thing: Ramsey himself hasn't borrowed money for anything since his financial implosion back in his 20s. Not for cars, not for homes, nothing. He paid cash for everything after learning that lesson the hard way. But when it comes to advising other people, he makes an exception for mortgages because, well, most people can't realistically save up enough cash to buy a house outright.

"Everything else I tell people on the show to do, I do exactly what I say to do," Ramsey explained. "On allowing people to take out a mortgage without me yelling at them, it's the only time that my advice is inconsistent with my life."

So what makes mortgages acceptable while car loans remain firmly in the "financial stupidity" category?

The Math Is Simple: One Builds Wealth, One Destroys It

"I can pretty much talk you out of or call you stupid taking out a car loan," Ramsey said, not exactly pulling his punches. His reasoning is straightforward: cars lose value immediately and continuously, interest rates on auto loans tend to be higher, and there's zero correlation between financing a vehicle and building long-term wealth.

"Very few millionaires will tell you that, 'Oh, the best thing I ever did was agree to borrow on a car because I needed a car,'" he pointed out. "You're just begging to be middle class the rest of your life financially, mathematically."

Houses, though? That's a different story. Many millionaires did borrow money to buy their first home early in life and then turned aggressively anti-debt afterward. "Millionaires do tell us that they borrowed to buy a house many times and when they got it paid off, they never borrowed money again."

The key, Ramsey emphasized, is still getting that mortgage paid off as quickly as humanly possible. "The shortest distance between where you are and wealth is debt freedom," he said.

Forget The Buffer, Master Your Budget

Zachary also raised another issue he'd been thinking about as a new follower of Ramsey's Baby Steps program: the lack of emphasis on keeping a substantial buffer in your checking account to prevent overdrafts.

"I almost thought there should be another Baby Step about creating a buffer," Zachary said, recalling his own days of juggling credit card payments with barely any cash on hand.

Ramsey wasn't having it. "That should be part of your budgeting," he countered. "You can put a $100 buffer in there if you want, but you don't need any more than that. There's nothing wrong with that. But you don't need a $2,000 buffer because you're incompetent at budgeting."

Co-host John Delony shared his own experience with this exact problem. "My wife and I would make a budget and then we would check our checking account to see where we were," he admitted. Ramsey jumped in: "The checking account is not an indicator if you're on your budget."

The real solution, according to Ramsey, is rigorous budgeting discipline. "Give every dollar of your income a name before the month begins," he said. "It takes about 90 days for that rewiring to completely occur."

Zachary thanked both hosts, noting that following these principles has helped him stay financially stable as a low-income pastor supporting his family.

The takeaway from this exchange is refreshingly honest: even the most rigid financial philosophies sometimes bend when they collide with practical reality. Ramsey's willing to accept one contradiction in his advice because the math on homeownership versus car financing is just that different. One typically builds equity and wealth over time. The other guarantees you'll lose money while paying interest on a depreciating asset. When you put it that way, the hypocrisy suddenly makes a lot more sense.

Why Dave Ramsey Tolerates Mortgages But Despises Car Loans: The Wealth-Building Calculus Behind His One Hypocritical Stance

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 hours ago
Financial guru Dave Ramsey admits he's hypocritical about one thing: mortgages. A pastor's question on The Ramsey Show revealed why Ramsey accepts home loans but rails against car financing, and it all comes down to what actually builds wealth versus what keeps you perpetually middle class.

When Zachary, a pastor from St. Louis, called into "The Ramsey Show" recently, he asked the kind of question that cuts right through the usual personal finance platitudes. If Dave Ramsey constantly quotes Proverbs 22:7 about how "the borrower is slave to the lender," why does he tell people mortgages are fine while treating car loans like financial poison?

"I definitely agree with that principle in many ways," Zachary said, clearly wrestling with what looked like an obvious contradiction. It "seems almost to betray that principle a little bit."

The Confession: Yes, It's Hypocritical

Ramsey didn't dodge the question. "That is a wonderful question," he responded. "It is the only hypocritical advice we give on this show."

Here's the thing: Ramsey himself hasn't borrowed money for anything since his financial implosion back in his 20s. Not for cars, not for homes, nothing. He paid cash for everything after learning that lesson the hard way. But when it comes to advising other people, he makes an exception for mortgages because, well, most people can't realistically save up enough cash to buy a house outright.

"Everything else I tell people on the show to do, I do exactly what I say to do," Ramsey explained. "On allowing people to take out a mortgage without me yelling at them, it's the only time that my advice is inconsistent with my life."

So what makes mortgages acceptable while car loans remain firmly in the "financial stupidity" category?

The Math Is Simple: One Builds Wealth, One Destroys It

"I can pretty much talk you out of or call you stupid taking out a car loan," Ramsey said, not exactly pulling his punches. His reasoning is straightforward: cars lose value immediately and continuously, interest rates on auto loans tend to be higher, and there's zero correlation between financing a vehicle and building long-term wealth.

"Very few millionaires will tell you that, 'Oh, the best thing I ever did was agree to borrow on a car because I needed a car,'" he pointed out. "You're just begging to be middle class the rest of your life financially, mathematically."

Houses, though? That's a different story. Many millionaires did borrow money to buy their first home early in life and then turned aggressively anti-debt afterward. "Millionaires do tell us that they borrowed to buy a house many times and when they got it paid off, they never borrowed money again."

The key, Ramsey emphasized, is still getting that mortgage paid off as quickly as humanly possible. "The shortest distance between where you are and wealth is debt freedom," he said.

Forget The Buffer, Master Your Budget

Zachary also raised another issue he'd been thinking about as a new follower of Ramsey's Baby Steps program: the lack of emphasis on keeping a substantial buffer in your checking account to prevent overdrafts.

"I almost thought there should be another Baby Step about creating a buffer," Zachary said, recalling his own days of juggling credit card payments with barely any cash on hand.

Ramsey wasn't having it. "That should be part of your budgeting," he countered. "You can put a $100 buffer in there if you want, but you don't need any more than that. There's nothing wrong with that. But you don't need a $2,000 buffer because you're incompetent at budgeting."

Co-host John Delony shared his own experience with this exact problem. "My wife and I would make a budget and then we would check our checking account to see where we were," he admitted. Ramsey jumped in: "The checking account is not an indicator if you're on your budget."

The real solution, according to Ramsey, is rigorous budgeting discipline. "Give every dollar of your income a name before the month begins," he said. "It takes about 90 days for that rewiring to completely occur."

Zachary thanked both hosts, noting that following these principles has helped him stay financially stable as a low-income pastor supporting his family.

The takeaway from this exchange is refreshingly honest: even the most rigid financial philosophies sometimes bend when they collide with practical reality. Ramsey's willing to accept one contradiction in his advice because the math on homeownership versus car financing is just that different. One typically builds equity and wealth over time. The other guarantees you'll lose money while paying interest on a depreciating asset. When you put it that way, the hypocrisy suddenly makes a lot more sense.

    Why Dave Ramsey Tolerates Mortgages But Despises Car Loans: The Wealth-Building Calculus Behind His One Hypocritical Stance - MarketDash News