Making $100,000 on a house flip sounds like a win. But when you spend the money before you understand what you actually owe, that win can turn into a problem pretty fast.
Logan called into "The Ramsey Show" from Lexington, Kentucky, looking for tax advice on a recent home sale. He and his wife bought a house for $315,000, sold it for $415,000, and netted about $77,000 after fees. Not bad for a quick turnaround.
Then came the spending decisions. They put $22,000 toward a car for his wife. Meanwhile, Logan still owed $37,500 on his truck. Personal finance expert Dave Ramsey wasn't having it.
"What are you smoking?" Ramsey interrupted as Logan explained where the money went.
How The Money Disappeared
Logan and his wife got married in April 2022 after paying off her student loans, starting their marriage with about $30,000 in savings. They rented for a year, then bought a 4,200-square-foot home from a family friend at a discount. The only problem? They knew it stretched their budget.
With no down payment and a 6.25% interest rate, they spent 2024 living paycheck to paycheck despite earning $130,000 combined. By November, they decided to sell.
The house sold in seven days. After fees, they walked away with roughly $77,000. But they also carried about $10,000 in credit card debt from home improvements made to prep the property for sale.
The Tax Reality Nobody Calculated
When the conversation turned to taxes, Logan admitted he hadn't figured out what he owed. Ramsey had bad news: because they didn't hold the home long enough, the profit wouldn't qualify for favorable capital gains treatment.
"It's ordinary income," Ramsey explained. After accounting for sales expenses and allowable improvements, he estimated the tax bill would land around $20,000.
Ramsey urged Logan to stop making financial moves and meet with a tax professional immediately to nail down the exact amount.
"You went and bought another car," Ramsey said. "And you haven't even settled with the IRS yet."
Broke By Behavior, Not Math
As Ramsey pushed Logan to consider selling both vehicles, co-host John Delony jumped in with his own take. "You got a ticket, dude, and you blew your nose in it," he said, referring to how they'd used the home sale proceeds.
Ramsey laid out the path forward: sell the truck, pay the tax bill, clear the credit card balance, and reset to the last point where their finances were actually stable. That meant relying on paid-off vehicles and cutting expenses, not just counting on their income.
"Y'all are broke people," Ramsey told him. "You're broke because of behavior, not math."
Logan also shared that he and his wife learned on Christmas Day they were expecting their first child. Ramsey said this was exactly the moment to change direction and break the pattern before it repeated itself.
Sometimes a windfall creates more problems than it solves, especially when you spend it before understanding what you actually get to keep. For this couple, a quick house flip turned into a wake-up call about priorities, planning, and the importance of dealing with the IRS before buying cars.




