Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know that I "follow" DR, but I have listened to him quite a bit. He doesn't always go straight by the numbers. For example when paying off debt he says to pay the smallest one first (so that you can have small wins to keep your momentum going), even though starting with the highest interest rate might be better mathematically.
His stance on debt is that it is inherently risky. So owning your house free and clear is less risky than even a low rate mortgage. So his argument is not about the math but the risk.
I agree with this one, no matter the interest rate. In terms of paying off a mortage, my concern is that you are putting too much money into one asset. Who stays in a house for 30 years anyway?
Anonymous wrote:How does he suggest to pay for things? Cash? Debit card?
If I get rid of my credit cards, or just budget pay in full?
Anonymous wrote:Paying off mortgage is step 6. After funding retirement.
http://www.daveramsey.com/new/baby-steps/
Anonymous wrote:I don't know that I "follow" DR, but I have listened to him quite a bit. He doesn't always go straight by the numbers. For example when paying off debt he says to pay the smallest one first (so that you can have small wins to keep your momentum going), even though starting with the highest interest rate might be better mathematically.
His stance on debt is that it is inherently risky. So owning your house free and clear is less risky than even a low rate mortgage. So his argument is not about the math but the risk.