Dave Ramsey put it pretty bluntly when a caller with a $200,000 combined income rang in asking what their next move is with their $8,000 debt and lack of emergency savings.
He said to “cut up” those credit cards and pay off that credit card debt already. Indeed, Ramsey is right on the money as he usually is regarding those who have outstanding balances accumulating high double-digit interest on various credit cards.
And while cutting up the cards seems a tad extreme, I do think it’s not the wrong call, given the couple has demonstrated they’re not using their card responsibly.
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A recent caller on the Dave Ramsey show should have known that his recent commission check should have gone to paying off the hefty credit card debt.
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Leaving excessive amounts on a credit card willingly is such a terrible waste.
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Dave Ramsey’s recommendation was to “cut up” the cards. For such an irresponsible user, it was the right call.
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For someone with a respectable, even hefty income, there’s really no excuse to have thousands in credit card debt just sitting there.
Also, the caller recently received a fat commission check of $12,000 that could instantly obliterate that credit card debt! Indeed, Dave Ramsey told them to pay the debt with the check and to get a plan. This goes without saying!
In any case, it wasn’t the financial situation itself (think cash inflows and outflows) that was the biggest problem. Rather, it was the lack of a plan. And it’s their lack of expense tracking that’s costing them money when it really didn’t have to be that way.
Ramsey clarified this without any sort of sugar-coating. Indeed, sometimes a good dose of the cold, hard truth is needed to get people to change their ways and treat a sticky financial situation as a learning opportunity!
Sure, talking about finances, debt, and all the sort with one’s spouse may not be the most comfortable conversation in the world. But to keep a sum of debt on a credit card when it could have easily been wiped out at an instant seems like poor financial hygiene.
Fortunately, that can be corrected with a bit of help from a financial advisor. In the meantime, paying off the debt with the commission check, as Ramsey recommended, and “cutting up” the cards or, at the very least, putting them away in favor of debit cards or cash seems like a wise idea until they can promise themselves they will pay off the full credit card bill at by the end of every month.


