The post “This Is Money Going to the Past”: Dave Ramsey to a 43-Year-Old With a $950K Net Worth Who Wants to Pay Off His Ex-Wife’s House appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A 43-year-old caller with a roughly $950K net worth told Dave Ramsey he wanted to write a check to pay off his ex-wife’s house. Ramsey’s response cut straight to what the move actually was:
“This is money going to the past. It’s not being written into the future. It’s not being written into the present.”
The stakes are whether a high earner with two kids, a recent divorce, and a new relationship should hand over liquid capital to settle an emotional debt that the math says is already settled. Get this wrong and you lose the cash and complicate every future financial decision with a new partner.
Ramsey said not yet. He walked the caller back through the standard Ramsey sequence: clear consumer debt, fully fund the emergency fund at three to six months of expenses, then put 15% of income into retirement, and only after that consider paying off an ex-spouse’s mortgage.
Running the numbers on this caller shows he has about $20K in personal debt he expects to eliminate in two months. He also plans to build a $60K emergency fund over seven to eight months, and then save a separate payoff fund. He already holds $500K in retirement accounts and $210K in 529 plans for his 14- and 11-year-old children, on roughly $200K of income across multiple jobs. By the time he has the cash sitting in a payoff account, the mortgage balance will likely be closer to $65K, down from $77K now.
Writing a $65K check against a $950K net worth is a rounding error in retirement terms. That is why Ramsey blocked it on motivation rather than math.
“Before you write that check, because you’re thinking about the kids, and you’re thinking about the guilt from the divorce, and some of these other things, I want you to visit the 10-year-from-now version of yourself.”
The kids argument collapses under that test. Ramsey was blunt: “You’re not really doing it for the kids, ’cause they’re gonna be gone from that house shortly.” By the time the check clears, the older child is closer to college than to grade school. The house becomes the ex-wife’s asset, not a childhood home being preserved.
Then Ramsey raised the scenario almost every recently divorced person faces. “Now let’s pretend the lady you’re dating, y’all want to get married and buy a house,” with Jade Warshaw finishing the thought: “And you say, ‘Wait, I have to pay off her house first.'” The caller’s current girlfriend “actually approves of it. She listens to the show.” Ramsey pressed further: “When I’m 56 and I’m dating someone and she says, ‘You paid off your ex’s house?’ How’s that gonna feel?”
The real cost is not the dollars. On a $200K income, those are recoverable. The optics and precedent inside a new relationship carry the lasting cost.
Strip the emotion out and there is exactly one factor that determines whether this is a clean act of generosity or a guilt payment dressed up as one. Is the caller’s name coming off the loan?
Right now his name is still on the loan. That means the bank still treats him as liable if the ex-wife misses payments. Paying off the mortgage removes that liability and cleans up his credit profile for a future home purchase. That is a forward-looking reason.
Compare that with the alternative motivation: paying it off to ease residual guilt from the 2023 divorce, or to look like a hero to the kids. “Just be real careful with those kind of motivations, because they don’t age well.” He stopped short of forbidding it: “It’s not immoral. It’s not a horrible thing. It doesn’t make you a saint. It doesn’t make you a sinner.”
Money moves forward better than it moves backward. If you cannot say out loud why a check serves the version of you that does not exist yet, do not write it.
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The post “This Is Money Going to the Past”: Dave Ramsey to a 43-Year-Old With a $950K Net Worth Who Wants to Pay Off His Ex-Wife’s House appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

