Dave Ramsey has been telling callers to get out of debt and stay there since long before podcasts existed, and his radio show turned syndicated program still pulls in millions of listeners every week in 2026. His advice rarely changes, which annoys critics and comforts everyone else.
The plan, often called the Baby Steps, started in his book “The Total Money Makeover” and still forms the backbone of his teaching. None of it is complicated. Most of it just requires doing something uncomfortable for a while.
1. Keep a Starter Emergency Fund

Ramsey tells people to stash $1,000 in savings before tackling anything else, even high-interest debt. The number is small on purpose.
A flat tire or a broken water heater shouldn’t have to land on a credit card, and having that buffer changes how a person reacts to bad luck. It’s a psychological move as much as a financial one.
2. Attack Debt Smallest Balance First

The debt snowball method ignores interest rates and orders debts from smallest balance to largest. Minimum payments go out on everything except the smallest debt, which gets every extra dollar available until it disappears.
Then that payment rolls into the next one. Math nerds argue this wastes money compared to paying off the highest interest rate first. Ramsey has held his ground for decades, betting that early wins keep people paying longer than spreadsheets do.
3. Write a Zero-Based Budget Every Month

Every dollar gets assigned a job before the month starts, down to the last cent. Income minus expenses should land on zero, not because spending stops but because nothing goes untracked.
Ramsey’s company built an app called EveryDollar around this exact method, and he pushes it on nearly every broadcast.
4. Spend Cash for Everyday Categories

Groceries, eating out, entertainment, these get a cash envelope or a designated amount that runs out when it runs out.
Swiping a card doesn’t carry the same sting as handing over actual bills, and Ramsey has built much of his teaching around that one piece of behavioral psychology. People notice cash leaving their hands in a way that debit swipes never quite register.
5. Skip Credit Cards Completely

This is the habit that gets Ramsey the most pushback, especially from people chasing airline miles and cashback rewards. He doesn’t budge.
Rewards programs are designed to encourage spending that outweighs the perks for most users, and Ramsey would rather people build the discipline of cash and debit than rely on a tool engineered to profit off both interest and impulse purchases.
6. Build a Full Emergency Fund

Once debt is gone, Ramsey shifts the savings goal from $1,000 to three to six months of expenses sitting in a separate account. Job loss, medical issues, a major repair, the fund exists so none of those become emergencies requiring new debt.
This step often takes longer than people expect, and Ramsey tells listeners that’s fine.
7. Invest 15 Percent for Retirement

After the debt is paid and the emergency fund is full, 15 percent of household income goes toward retirement accounts, typically a 401(k) match first, then Roth IRAs.
Ramsey leans toward growth stock mutual funds over picking individual stocks, arguing that consistency over decades matters more than chasing returns.
8. Pay Off the House Early

Mortgage-free living shows up as one of the later Baby Steps, and Ramsey treats it as a milestone worth real sacrifice.
Extra principal payments, refinancing into a shorter term, even downsizing, all count. He’s said on air more than once that a paid-off house changes how people sleep at night.
9. Give Money Away on Purpose

The final habit isn’t really about money at all. Ramsey ties generosity into nearly every stage of his teaching, encouraging people to give even while paying off debt, just in smaller amounts.
Once someone reaches financial stability, he expects giving to grow alongside it, treating generosity as the actual finish line rather than a number in a brokerage account.

