Ramsey Tells $700K Saver Marrying Pharmacist With $220K Debt: ‘You’ll Need a Stiff Bourbon After This’

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By Austin Smith Published

Quick Read

  • A 30-year-old roofing business owner with $700,000 in savings should pay off his fiancée’s $220,000 in pharmacy school student loans before marriage because federal graduate loan rates above 7% cost thousands annually, and both partners must be committed to staying debt-free for this strategy to work.

  • After eliminating the student loans, the couple’s combined income and discipline position them to rebuild savings faster than most Americans while maintaining only mortgage debt.

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Ramsey Tells $700K Saver Marrying Pharmacist With $220K Debt: ‘You’ll Need a Stiff Bourbon After This’

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A 30-year-old roofing company owner called into The Ramsey Show on March 25, 2026 with a situation that stopped Dave Ramsey mid-sentence. He had accumulated approximately $700,000 in savings, earned $450,000 last year from his roofing business, and carried only a mortgage as debt. His fiancée was about to become his wife. She was also about to bring $220,000 in pharmacy school student loans into the marriage.

"Every time I go to get that in order, sell stocks or things like that, it’s hard," he told Ramsey. "It’s the buffer that you’ve built. It’s really hard."

Ramsey’s verdict was immediate. Pay it off. And then he said something that made the advice feel human: "You’re going to need a good stiff double shot of bourbon right after you do this."

Why Ramsey Is Right, and Why It Still Hurts

The financial case for paying off $220,000 in student loans when you have $700,000 sitting in stock accounts is straightforward. Federal graduate student loan rates have ranged from 7% to over 8% in recent years. The federal funds rate currently sits at 3.75%, down from 4.5% a year ago, but graduate loan rates remain well above that floor. Carrying $220,000 at rates above 7% means thousands of dollars in interest every year, money that compounds against you rather than for you. That money earns nothing. It compounds against you.

But Ramsey didn’t just run the math. He acknowledged what the caller was actually feeling. "Of course it makes your stomach come up in your throat. If it didn’t, you’d be weird," Ramsey said. "You’ve been working a long time to build this up. You got a lot of calluses, a lot of roof and shingles slung over your shoulder to get to this."

That matters. Watching a balance drop by $220,000 in a single transaction is viscerally uncomfortable, even when the math is clean. Ramsey’s framing gives the caller permission to feel that discomfort without letting it stop him.

The One Condition That Changes Everything

Before endorsing the payoff, Ramsey asked a pointed question: "Are you guys aligned on we’re never doing this again for any dream or anything, or anything I want, or never again?" The caller confirmed they were "completely aligned" with "no intent to ever have debt on anything ever again."

That answer is the entire foundation of Ramsey’s advice. Paying off a partner’s $220,000 debt before marriage makes sense when both people are committed to staying debt-free. It makes no sense if one partner views debt as a normal financial tool. A couple that eliminates $220,000 in loans and then finances a car, a boat, and a kitchen renovation two years later has accomplished nothing except depleting savings.

This caller passed that test. The payoff is sound.

What the Numbers Look Like After

Consider what this couple’s financial position looks like once the debt is gone. Their combined income will be substantial (his $450,000 plus her pharmacist salary). With the student loans eliminated, their only remaining debt is the mortgage. Even after paying off $220,000, they still hold meaningful assets and generate income that the national per capita disposable income of $67,687 makes look extraordinary by comparison.

The national personal savings rate sits at just 4% as of the most recent quarter, down from 6.2% two years ago. Most Americans are saving almost nothing. This couple, once debt-free, has the income and the discipline to rebuild their balance sheet faster than almost anyone.

Ramsey put it plainly: "She’s worth every dime of it." He’s right, but the math supports it too. At their income level, rebuilding savings after the payoff is a realistic near-term goal if they stay focused.

What to Do If You’re in a Similar Position

Before writing the check, work through four steps:

  1. Confirm the interest rates on every loan being paid off. Federal graduate loans, private loans, and consolidated loans carry different rates. Prioritize the highest-rate balances first if a full payoff isn’t immediate.
  2. Verify tax implications. Liquidating stock accounts triggers capital gains taxes. Liquidating enough stock to cover a $220,000 payoff may require selling additional shares to account for the tax bill. Run this with a CPA before executing.
  3. Keep three to six months of expenses in cash before the payoff. Eliminating the debt buffer is the goal, but eliminating the emergency fund at the same time creates a different kind of vulnerability.
  4. Have the debt-free commitment conversation in writing, or at minimum explicitly, before marriage. Ramsey asked it on air. You should ask it at the kitchen table.

The stiff bourbon Ramsey recommended is optional. The clarity that comes from owing nothing except a mortgage, on a combined income that dwarfs the national average, is not.

Photo of Austin Smith
About the Author Austin Smith →

Austin Smith is a financial publisher with over two decades of experience in the markets. He spent over a decade at The Motley Fool as a senior editor for Fool.com, portfolio advisor for Millionacres, and launched new brands in the personal finance and real estate investing space.

His work has been featured on Fool.com, NPR, CNBC, USA Today, Yahoo Finance, MSN, AOL, Marketwatch, and many other publications. Today he writes for 24/7 Wall St and covers equities, REITs, and ETFs for readers. He is as an advisor to private companies, and co-hosts The AI Investor Podcast.

When not looking for investment opportunities, he can be found skiing, running, or playing soccer with his children. Learn more about me here.

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