Here's a problem most people would love to have: You make CA$150,000 a year, you're debt-free except for your mortgage, and your friend is getting married in Spain. Can you afford the CA$5,000 trip?
That's exactly what Alex, a Canadian caller, asked "The Ramsey Show" hosts recently. And while the question sounds simple, the answer uncovered something more interesting about how even high earners can find themselves on shaky financial ground.
Co-host John Delony opened with the kind of perspective only a personal finance expert can deliver: "Dude, my friend got married at Arby's. Man, your friends get married in Spain. That's awesome."
The Green Light Comes With Conditions
Delony and co-host Rachel Cruze told Alex to go for it, but with one major condition. The money couldn't come from the family's CA$9,000 emergency fund. It had to be extra cash they could spare without compromising their safety net.
And that's where things got revealing. Alex and his wife have two young kids and monthly expenses around CA$5,000. Do the math, and that emergency fund covers less than two months of living costs. One busted water heater or unexpected hospital visit could wipe out a huge chunk of it in an afternoon.
The hosts recommended building that fund up to at least three months of expenses before splurging on international travel. It's not about being a killjoy. It's about making sure you can handle life's curveballs without panic.
The Pension Problem
The conversation also turned to retirement planning. Alex currently funnels 20% of his income into a pension fund, which sounds responsible on the surface. But Cruze and Delony raised an important point: Betting your entire retirement on a pension means putting all your faith in someone else's hands.
Their suggestion? Cut pension contributions in half and redirect at least 15% into a retirement account Alex controls directly. That way, he's not leaving his entire financial future up to an institution that could change its terms or face difficulties down the road.
High Income Doesn't Equal Financial Security
Alex's situation highlights something that trips up plenty of six-figure earners. A big paycheck doesn't automatically translate to wealth or peace of mind. What matters is the gap between what you earn and what you spend, plus how much cushion you've built for when things go wrong.
Whether your social circle is tying the knot at fast-food chains or throwing destination weddings in Barcelona, the principle stays the same: Build a solid foundation first, then enjoy the fun stuff.
"There may be more security knowing, OK, we have some good money, you know, money saved," Cruze said. "You've got to figure out how to get this emergency fund and the trip. If you can do both, that's great."
The takeaway isn't that Alex should skip Spain. It's that he should make sure his financial base is strong enough that a trip abroad doesn't become a source of stress instead of celebration. After all, nobody wants to be calculating emergency fund math while watching their friend say "I do" overlooking the Mediterranean.




