A 29-year-old caller from New Mexico phoned The Ramsey Show with his wife to ask whether they should sell their house, pull the equity, and use it to wipe out theirA 29-year-old caller from New Mexico phoned The Ramsey Show with his wife to ask whether they should sell their house, pull the equity, and use it to wipe out their

‘Good God’: Dave Ramsey’s Reaction When a 29-Year-Old Reveals He Bought a $50,000 Truck While $135,000 in Debt

2026/06/18 17:26
6 min read
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The post ‘Good God’: Dave Ramsey’s Reaction When a 29-Year-Old Reveals He Bought a $50,000 Truck While $135,000 in Debt appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

  • Selling a financed $47,000 truck eliminates rapid depreciation while protecting home equity from consumer debt collateralization after a $33,000 second mortgage.
  • Eliminating the truck works for six-figure debt and volatile income, but fails if underlying income/spending issues remain unaddressed—it's a symptom fix, not a cure.
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A 29-year-old caller from New Mexico phoned The Ramsey Show with his wife to ask whether they should sell their house, pull the equity, and use it to wipe out their debts. When the host learned the couple had financed a $47,000 truck while sitting on six figures of consumer debt, Dave Ramsey’s reply was two words: “Good God.”

The couple grosses $160,000 to $170,000 a year but takes home only $8,000 to $10,000 a month, roughly $100,000 in actual cash hitting the bank. They are servicing $135,000 in consumer debt: $28,000 in his wife’s student loans, $6,000 in his own student loans, $4,700 on a credit card, $10,000 on his wife’s car, $47,000 on the truck, and a $33,000 home equity loan. The caller explained the second mortgage bluntly: “I got into a motorcycle accident, so I was put down for about 6 months, so we had to take out that second mortgage to stay afloat.”

The verdict: the truck is the line to cut

Ramsey’s prescription was direct: “You do not need to sell your house. You need to sell your truck.” He is right, and the math is clear.

Tapping home equity to pay off consumer debt converts an unsecured or vehicle-secured balance into a debt collateralized by the roof over your head. If income drops again, as it did during the caller’s six-month recovery, the house is what goes on the block. The couple has already lived this lesson once. The first home equity loan was triggered by a medical event, and rolling more debt into the same instrument doubles down on the same vulnerability.

The truck is the single biggest line on the balance sheet and the most liquid problem to solve. A new pickup loses value quickly, but it can be sold, refinanced into a beater, or replaced with a paid-for $8,000 used vehicle. The payment that disappears frees real cash flow inside that $8,000-to-$10,000 monthly take-home. Co-host Rachel Cruze caught the framing that gives the game away: “I love the ‘she owes $10,000, but we owe $50,000 for the truck.’ Her debt, her debt, but it’s our debt for the truck.”

Ramsey’s read on the broader pattern was pointed: “They don’t look like you’ve done anything extremely dumb with the possible exception of the truck. But the rest of it was your death by a thousand cuts. The only big one was the truck.” And: “What’s really going on is you guys have just been sloppy.”

The variable that changes the math: interest rate on each line

Sloppiness has a price tag set by the rate on each debt. The credit card balance is small at $4,700, but the average credit card APR sits near 21%, a level the Federal Reserve’s data calls record territory. That balance compounds faster than a student loan at a single-digit rate and faster than a mortgage. It gets paid first.

The truck loan sits in the middle. Auto rates have run high, but the bigger issue is depreciation stacked on top of interest. A $47,000 truck financed today is almost certainly an upside-down asset already. Selling now and absorbing the gap with a small personal loan is cheaper than feeding the payment, insurance, and fuel for years.

The home equity loan is the cheapest debt in the stack and the most dangerous to grow. Leaving it alone while attacking the truck and the card is the disciplined move.

What to do tomorrow morning

Ramsey offered the couple a free premium EveryDollar subscription and a closing line worth borrowing: “If I woke up in your shoes knowing what I know, I think you could be a millionaire in about 12 years from today.”

For readers staring at a similar balance sheet, the steps map cleanly:

  1. List every debt by interest rate. The 21% card balance costs more per dollar than the home equity loan, even though the home loan is bigger.
  2. Sell the financed vehicle before touching the house. Home equity is your last line of defense. Cars are replaceable; shelter is the asset to protect.
  3. Close the gap between gross and take-home. A $160,000-to-$170,000 gross income that nets $8,000 a month means roughly $60,000 a year is going somewhere other than your checking account. Pull a paystub and account for every withholding line.
  4. Write a zero-based budget on paper or in an app. Every dollar gets a job before the month starts. National savings rates have already slid from 6.2% in early 2024 to 3.7% in the first quarter of 2026, so the default drift is toward spending more than you keep.
  5. Stop financing depreciating assets. If the next vehicle cannot be bought with cash, it is too expensive.

The payment in the driveway is the problem.

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The post ‘Good God’: Dave Ramsey’s Reaction When a 29-Year-Old Reveals He Bought a $50,000 Truck While $135,000 in Debt appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

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