Why Paying High Interest Debts First Doesn't Work

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  • Опубліковано 30 тра 2024
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 750

  • @eatnplaytoday
    @eatnplaytoday 4 роки тому +789

    I paid off my high interest student loan debts first. I hate seeing all the interest build up. Been debt free since October.

    • @billyjohnson9166
      @billyjohnson9166 4 роки тому +62

      sage your correct on this dave is wrong on this

    • @eatnplaytoday
      @eatnplaytoday 4 роки тому +86

      @@billyjohnson9166 Yep I don't really agree completely with Dave on this. I think it's more of personal preference. If a person knows they are disciplined enough to do the avalanche method, why not? It's win-win for them, paying less interest over time and still getting out of debt in the end. Everyone is different so it should tailor to their own preference/personality.

    • @masterp443
      @masterp443 4 роки тому +66

      @@eatnplaytoday yeah but this lady clearly isn't disciplined. $15,000 on a CC??? Yeah she needs the snowball method

    • @eatnplaytoday
      @eatnplaytoday 4 роки тому +8

      @@masterp443 Just saying not to assume of someone who acknowledges they have an issue and willing to make a change.

    • @eatnplaytoday
      @eatnplaytoday 4 роки тому +1

      @@Erika2 Hurray for us! 😁

  • @pinkpanda5696
    @pinkpanda5696 4 роки тому +376

    $2000 a month just in credit card payments? The thought makes me want to cry, lol.

    • @ariv8585
      @ariv8585 4 роки тому +23

      I pay $3000 a month regularly, sometimes more. My burn rate is outrageous.

    • @endirrwiggins2494
      @endirrwiggins2494 4 роки тому +38

      I was paying 830.00 monthly on credit card bills. 2020, debt free

    • @bensmith5701
      @bensmith5701 4 роки тому +12

      That’s what I make in a month 😂

    • @spongymcfonsworth
      @spongymcfonsworth 4 роки тому +1

      Thats jus obsurd even if you have it, alot of ppl with fake lifestyles and appear to be well off cuz of that piece of plastic! Same people that wouldn't even pay a $100 bill for a relative or fill up a friends or neighbors gas tank with their credit card if they needed it smh!

    • @PositiveMommaLife
      @PositiveMommaLife 3 роки тому +1

      I paid that much when I was throwing high money on it. Never again. No need too! No debt. It’s hard but then it’s done!

  • @PilotPerkins
    @PilotPerkins 4 роки тому +426

    This is so true. After I paid off two of my small debts, I got fired up to use most of my income to pay toward getting rid of all my debt. I even sold my couch, true story. Everything must go.

  • @jamiechang1561
    @jamiechang1561 4 роки тому +241

    I finally understand the reasonings behind the snowball. It's a habit solution! Love this explanation

    • @simplelifewithtracy
      @simplelifewithtracy 3 роки тому +1

      I agree.

    • @smileychess
      @smileychess 3 роки тому +13

      It worked for me be following it verbatim. It’s 90% psychology and there ain’t any shame in recognizing that.

    • @chrishood2793
      @chrishood2793 3 роки тому +4

      And it's more than that. When you get rid the small debts, they're gone for good. You can take that money that would have been used for those debts and apply them to the larger debt. If you lose your job or have something life altering happen to you, those smaller debts won't haunt you. That burden is over for good.

    • @BlueDauntless
      @BlueDauntless Місяць тому

      FPU is a behavior modification program. It focuses on behavior. Because getting out of debt is important, but staying out of debt is more important.

  • @Ryan_DeWitt
    @Ryan_DeWitt 4 роки тому +577

    It does work if you are disciplined. Running the numbers proves it. Same as eating less works on a diet. It is just that most peoples discipline sucks.

    • @leifc.6045
      @leifc.6045 4 роки тому +9

      Or you can grow your own food, sell it, and boom profit.

    • @notclaire612
      @notclaire612 4 роки тому +50

      Seeing the amount in interest we’re paying monthly on bigger debts motivates me way more than a paying off a small debt.

    • @greenAbbot
      @greenAbbot 4 роки тому +19

      That’s exactly what Dave said. But there’s no point in pretending you’re a more disciplined person than you are.

    • @smithersrob
      @smithersrob 4 роки тому +6

      "It does work if something was true that isn't true" that means it doesnt work!

    • @wtk6069
      @wtk6069 4 роки тому +30

      The point is that a person who is disciplined would not be in the situation to begin with.

  • @bigpicturethinking5620
    @bigpicturethinking5620 3 роки тому +153

    Mathematically it makes sense. Psychologically Dave’s method makes sense. If this person was able to do what made mathematical sense she wouldn’t even be making this call. The call speaks for itself

    • @Kng9929
      @Kng9929 Рік тому +2

      A lot of people make this mathematical mistake. Most of it comes from lack of personal financing. Nobody really teaches us and we learn as we go

    • @96ej
      @96ej 11 місяців тому +1

      ​@@Kng9929I know this is an old comment and I don't want to sound rude or anything but it's really hard to teach common sense.

    • @turtleanton6539
      @turtleanton6539 5 місяців тому

      Yeah

    • @turtleanton6539
      @turtleanton6539 5 місяців тому +1

      ​@@96ej and disciplin.

    • @michaeldoran4367
      @michaeldoran4367 5 місяців тому

      You just summarized the video...

  • @---cr8nw
    @---cr8nw 4 роки тому +30

    A side point: If you have debt with a ridiculously high interest rate, move that debt to a lower interest rate debt. For example, if you have 10,000 in credit card debt at 20%, look into a local bank or credit union for a personal loan. See if you can get something at 6 or 7% with a fixed repayment plan (not revolving credit). Pay off the credit card and close the account. *DO NOT OPEN A NEW CREDIT CARD WITH AN INTRODUCTORY RATE!*

  • @williamnettleton3413
    @williamnettleton3413 3 роки тому +23

    One thing that mathematically helps too, is that all the smaller balances once paid off rolls over to add to your snowball. So those cards with hard payments become easier as you pay off the small ones super quick. That's what we saw with me and my wife's debt. This plan works, she needs to do it and trust someone who sees clearer than her.

  • @raiden031
    @raiden031 4 роки тому +30

    I think there is another good reason to pay off smaller debts first. Each debt paid off reduces your fixed expenses. The lower your fixed expenses the less risk you will default in the event of economic hardship

  • @justinpaul3458
    @justinpaul3458 4 роки тому +53

    I'm glad Dave clarifies this advice is about psychology and not about math because I was about to stop listening to him if he was going to argue it mathematically.

  • @jacquelenebetancourt9165
    @jacquelenebetancourt9165 4 роки тому +14

    Paid off my credit cards and yesterday paid off my van early! Feeling good. Trying to pay off my $6k student loan before I graduate in 2 yrs. I have 3 kiddos, go to school full time and work.

  • @Harperrr.99
    @Harperrr.99 11 місяців тому +189

    I wish i learnt most of these principles about seven years ago. A lot of people have been trapped strongly in the matrix-- Go to school, get a job, and then slave your whole life. Many miss out on life-changing information that could have great effect on their finances. I played with the stock market sometime in 2020, and I was surprised at how well it turned out. I want to put in $90k more into the market. I heard people are making really great returns despite the downturn. Any recommendations?

    • @sherryie2
      @sherryie2 11 місяців тому +2

      Stocks are pretty unstable at the moment, but if you do the right math, you should be just fine. Bloomberg and other finance media have been recording cases of folks gaining over 250k just in a matter of weeks/couple months, so I think there are a lot of wealth transfer in this downtime if you know where to look.

    • @corrySledd
      @corrySledd 11 місяців тому +1

      @@sherryie2 My wife and I were following this same trajectory. Last two years, I pulled out my money and invested with her wealth manager. Not catching up with her profits over the years, but at least I earn more. Haha.

    • @AUstinnesc
      @AUstinnesc 11 місяців тому +3

      @@corrySledd For real, I've wanted to switch to a wealth manager. Please, could you recommend yours?

    • @corrySledd
      @corrySledd 11 місяців тому +4

      @@AUstinnesc Have you heard of "NICOLE DESIREE SIMON? She gets featured regularly on CNBC. Everyone in my office works with her including myself. I personally use tax-deferred accounts to hold my investments. That way I avoid capital gains taxes. There are other options your advisor could brief you about.

    • @AUstinnesc
      @AUstinnesc 11 місяців тому

      @@corrySledd Thank you. I just checked her out now on the web and I've sent an email. I hope she gets back to me soon. I've been thinking of doing this for a long time now, and I've procrastinated enough already.

  • @dfnt12
    @dfnt12 4 роки тому +66

    The issue with debt avalanche (high interest first) is that the people who have large amounts of high interest loans need immediate gratification. They’re in that debt mess because of that need for instant gratification where they see something they want then they buy it using debt rather than saving for it. So you have to design payment plans that offer the fastest gratification which is debt snowball

    • @thecurrentmoment
      @thecurrentmoment 11 місяців тому +2

      Good point!
      The whole source of consumer debt is get it now, pay later. What you say makes sense.

    • @ThePeterDislikeShow
      @ThePeterDislikeShow 8 місяців тому

      What if the person has already reformed in some way and now just cleaning up the mess?

    • @thecurrentmoment
      @thecurrentmoment 8 місяців тому

      @@ThePeterDislikeShow same thing, I imagine.
      A debt snowball allows you to get rid of more debts so you can focus on the few big ones.
      It seems to be better behaviourally, and as the original comment mentioned, people who have big high interest debts have behavioural issues. If you have reformed somewhat, then I don't think it changes things that much, a debt snowball is easier than the avalanche so is more feasible for people with large amounts of debt.

    • @user-vi5vd3ty9d
      @user-vi5vd3ty9d Місяць тому

      Avalanche method is the right way to go.

  • @MrWoodyman68
    @MrWoodyman68 4 роки тому +58

    A few days ago I finally paid off my once maxed out credit cards. I did just as Dave advises the lady here. Paid off the smaller credit first and then doubled my payments for the larger one. In total 8 1/2 thousand euros paid off. Once the smaller one was paid off I felt so good. Now I feel AWESOME!!!

  • @MusicloverX88
    @MusicloverX88 4 роки тому +120

    I paid off my highest interest loans first. It was like ripping off a band aid right away. And to be honest it motivated me more after I got done with the most expensive loan. Got me thinking, “Wow, they will all be easier from here on out!” I would of been so depressed and not as motivated if I went with the snowball method. It worked for me. Paid off my student loans in four and a half years.

    • @realdavebob
      @realdavebob 3 роки тому

      Way to go!

    • @beats4life971
      @beats4life971 2 роки тому

      4.5 years u could have been debt free in shorter period. 🤔

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart Рік тому +4

      @@beats4life971 re-read the original comment.

    • @TShirtAndReeboks
      @TShirtAndReeboks Рік тому +5

      When we tackled my husband's debt, we also did it based on interest rate and it worked great. But I am not someone who has ever liked debt, so it worked well for us.

    • @ThePeterDislikeShow
      @ThePeterDislikeShow 8 місяців тому

      Even Dave makes exceptions when there's a payday loan or IRS debt involved.

  • @mytubeeeee
    @mytubeeeee 4 роки тому +18

    Dave’s right.. been paying the smallest debt first and I have paid off 3 cc’s already and have 1 left. Knocking off the other 3 one by one felt so great each time.

  • @naturalchik5880
    @naturalchik5880 4 роки тому +292

    When she said she makes over 6 figures I was done. Girl get off this man's phone line.

  • @CaseyBurnsInvesting
    @CaseyBurnsInvesting 4 роки тому +347

    Amen. Paying high interest debts makes sense mathematically but getting in the debt in the first place was an emotional non math based decision.
    The baby steps are designed to work for the masses.

    • @Shybairnsgetnowt1
      @Shybairnsgetnowt1 4 роки тому +7

      Casey Burns Investing They certainly are, they’re working for me over in England!

    • @insideoutsideupsidedown2218
      @insideoutsideupsidedown2218 4 роки тому +3

      @@Shybairnsgetnowt1 your in England? I did not realise people in England had jolly ol computers....

    • @TheExcellentInvestor
      @TheExcellentInvestor 4 роки тому +4

      So true! Your emotions will destroy your finances in a heart beat. Its the only reason engagement rings are so expensive.

    • @TheExcellentInvestor
      @TheExcellentInvestor 4 роки тому +1

      Drk RE makes sense👊

    • @arcadion448
      @arcadion448 4 роки тому +1

      Designed to work for "sheep".

  • @tnmingle
    @tnmingle 4 роки тому +11

    The every dollar app was a gain changer for me and we have been plowing through our debt. Just keeping the budget has given us a pay raise! Assign every dollar!

  • @joannebogias9299
    @joannebogias9299 3 роки тому +9

    I paid off the smaller amount first, once paid, applied the amount used to pay down on the next debt. For me, eliminating multiple smaller debts was the easiest way to eliminate all my debts. I set up in a spreadsheet to track.

  • @experience42
    @experience42 4 роки тому +124

    I understand the concept but personally, I’ve been paying my largest highest interest debt first because I feel like once that one is paid off the smaller one will feel like a breeze

    • @RevMarket
      @RevMarket 4 роки тому +11

      You are a unicorn.
      Most people are not your personality type.

    • @hiteshadhikari
      @hiteshadhikari 4 роки тому +11

      The only issue is most people will not be able to.
      Also at times people pay the highest and then think others are a breeze and then get into more loans thinking i have paid bigger loans so this one will be easy and thats how they mess up

    • @thomaseidson6374
      @thomaseidson6374 4 роки тому +7

      If it is working for your my friend keep doing it. Consider yourself the exception but keep up the good work.

    • @experience42
      @experience42 4 роки тому +13

      Thomas Eidson thanks!!! Down from $40 000 to $6000 in a year, so I think I’m doing pretty well :)

    • @flygirlvenus1990
      @flygirlvenus1990 4 роки тому

      You like doing things the hard way...

  • @georgievvladimir
    @georgievvladimir 4 роки тому +143

    1:52 "If you do the math you will never have the credit card debt" good point.

    • @RonJohn63
      @RonJohn63 4 роки тому +3

      Which is a crock of horse manure. Even people who "can do math" easily become Cleopatra. (Maybe that's an Americanism which you don't understand. She was the Queen of Denial.)

    • @andrewh.4186
      @andrewh.4186 4 роки тому +10

      @@RonJohn63 Thank you captain obvious. Dave Ramsey wasn't talking about getting through high school math class, he's talking about the idiocy of carrying credit card debt - anyone who stops to do the math on that will know it's just somewhere to never go. But who does that?

    • @RonJohn63
      @RonJohn63 4 роки тому +2

      @@andrewh.4186 are you really so blind to human nature that you've never heard of people doing things they know they shouldn't?

    • @andrewh.4186
      @andrewh.4186 4 роки тому +2

      @@RonJohn63 It's very truly a thing. But I'm not convinced we're at a place in society where people universally understand just how terrible credit cards are. There may be a vague idea that they're not ideal, but if someone genuinely understands that, and then gets deeply, deeply in debt anyway, they're probably going to need more than a budgeting plan to get their life back in order.

    • @andrewh.4186
      @andrewh.4186 4 роки тому +2

      Also being in denial is hardly the same as also doing the math. I know people that make bad money decisions, but they sure aren't adding up the cost.

  • @KourttneyL
    @KourttneyL 4 роки тому +77

    Thank you for this. I have two cards left! I should be debt free in February!!

    • @andrewames8528
      @andrewames8528 4 роки тому +1

      Congratulations!! Keep pushing!

    • @grilleFire
      @grilleFire 4 роки тому

      In Mexico 90% of people don't have debt, because they are too poor for Banks to give them any credit. lol

    • @eclpzlvr97
      @eclpzlvr97 4 роки тому +2

      So... Debt free now?

    • @Reblwitoutacause
      @Reblwitoutacause Місяць тому

      How about now

  • @sachinnair1613
    @sachinnair1613 3 роки тому +18

    I've always wondered why the debt snowball was structured like this, and it kind of makes sense now

  • @JessicaJones-dy3dn
    @JessicaJones-dy3dn 4 роки тому +19

    It works!! Im telling you! My husband and I have paid off ALL of our credit card debt as of this month. Bye Bye Consumer Debt

    • @barbaraleszczynski2214
      @barbaraleszczynski2214 4 роки тому +2

      Wow....Wonderful......now don't forget how this freedom feels! Keep it on your minds always.....you have been blessed and you want to stay that way! Always remember how debt suppressed you and caused you anguish and misery! You never want to go there again....but after a time...it's so easy to forget that pain! DEBT is a DESTROYER of people and family! Keep it out of your life! God Bless!

  • @stop08it
    @stop08it Рік тому +7

    I know myself paying higher interest debts works better for me, I get way more discouraged paying off a lower balance and seeing I still have a huge balance to pay off. I don't get more motivated and I know this from personal experience. Do whatever what works best for you especially if you have personal experience with this.

    • @JasonGroom
      @JasonGroom 4 місяці тому

      Exactly, Avalanche vs Snowball is a personal choice that needs to align to the person. Neither is one size fits all

  • @StephyG95
    @StephyG95 4 роки тому +30

    I get what he means: for someone who isn't motivated by numbers but by the "victories" of eliminating one loan at a time, the baby steps he offers will be more effective. Some people just aren't motivated by the idea of knowing they will be paying less money in interest by taking on the highest interest debt first, since they won't see a difference until much later when they get to the smaller interest loans.
    But if someone has the discipline and understanding to take on the highest interest debt first, the avalanche method would be the ideal. I think Dave is always under the assumption that people don't think that way, hence why he developed the baby steps. If you have the discipline, by all means you can ignore Dave's advice. I'm sure he much rather everyone do the avalanche method if everyone had the discipline. But a lot of people (specifically the ones who get themselves into debt due to spending money on things they don't need) don't have that discipline.

  • @ashlynprimero1409
    @ashlynprimero1409 3 роки тому +10

    I paid my highest interest on student loans first and got them paid off way ahead of schedule. Worked for me because not everyone is in debt because of bad spending habits

  • @mrq1701
    @mrq1701 4 роки тому +4

    Dave promotes financial psychology that will work on the majority of people. Paying the smallest balances off first, regardless of interest rates, works for most people because it gives the fastest psychological rewards.

  • @natashaofnarnia
    @natashaofnarnia 4 роки тому +20

    What Dave is saying makes sense. You have to be motivated! My husband and I are paying off our high interest debts first, but we don't have a motivation or discipline issue. We took a lot of time planning how we would pay for these loans before we even took them out and We have a detailed plan that we stick to every month. Our motivation comes from the desire to be free to change our career choices regardless of the pay cuts we'd have to take to get started. Going to jobs we don't love everyday is a constant motivation for us. Not to mention the devastating effects debt has had on our family members. We will be debt free next March! We're also cash flowing my clinical psychology degree! Very excited to have a debt free college degree!

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart Рік тому +1

      Are you debt free now? And are you helping others?

  • @wowlecks
    @wowlecks 4 роки тому +4

    Also, by paying off the smaller debts first, you are eliminating monthly payments. Mathematically, you can save money this way - the extra money you'll have after eliminating a payment will help you cover the minimums on your bigger debts, thereby avoiding penalties & late fees.

  • @Idiotsincarshere
    @Idiotsincarshere 2 роки тому +7

    Paying high interest debts first worked great for me! And I saved a TON more than the debt snowball paying low balances and low interest first. Whatever causes you to create better habits I guess !

  • @orlandow1723
    @orlandow1723 3 роки тому +7

    This man has helped me beyond what I could have ever believed... some humans make me proud.

  • @seanr8809
    @seanr8809 4 роки тому +9

    My wife and I paid off her 100k of student debt by paying off the highest interest rate first. Watching the balance drop is enough motivation to keep get going. I understand the logic but I would never do this trick knowing it was costing so much interest.

  • @offerskirksey2255
    @offerskirksey2255 4 роки тому +188

    "If you were doing math, you wouldn't have credit card debt." Period.

    • @RonJohn63
      @RonJohn63 4 роки тому +6

      While true, it ignores the fact that it's possible to *start doing* math, even though you've been avoiding it for years.

    • @isettech
      @isettech 4 роки тому +7

      I occasionally have credit card debt, but pay 0% as it is set up to auto pay. You can't rent a car when traveling with cash. It won't happen. Same securing a hotel without a card. The cashback is a bonus. The auto-pay is to pay it off completely every month. This ensures the amount charged is very carefully examined as you know it will come out of your account. A credit card for online shopping is better than a debit card as fraud and charge-backs are much better than trying to get a debit card refunded.

    • @jimroscovius
      @jimroscovius 3 роки тому

      @@isettech You can rent a car with a debit card. Dave does it all of the time.

    • @isettech
      @isettech 3 роки тому +2

      @@jimroscovius That wasn't the case in 1980. Now most debit cards can be run as credit, but that has not always been the case. For online purchases, in general there is better buyer protection against fraud. You can dispute a bad charge instead of having overdraft fees while trying to get a refund on an empty account.

    • @jimroscovius
      @jimroscovius 3 роки тому

      @@isettech Debit cards have all of the same protections as credit cards. And, you shouldn't spend what you don't have. Why would there be overdraft fees? Because you spent what you didn't have.

  • @nard3890
    @nard3890 3 роки тому +3

    Personally using the avalanche method, 26k/60k left to payoff. 6months so far, done by Christmas

  • @atriptoasia6979
    @atriptoasia6979 4 роки тому +72

    Welp my lowest debt has the highest interest rate so figure

    • @hiteshadhikari
      @hiteshadhikari 4 роки тому +11

      Thats the easiest decision
      Thats easier than anything
      U pay it first and u get rid of higher intrest is a bonus

    • @Jemgirly
      @Jemgirly 4 роки тому +3

      Haha yeah, that's my case as well! So lucky right?? 😂

    • @atriptoasia6979
      @atriptoasia6979 4 роки тому +3

      Casey some bad good luck 😂😂😂

    • @twdjt6245
      @twdjt6245 4 роки тому

      Same here.

    • @twdjt6245
      @twdjt6245 4 роки тому

      Andres Cruz “the only time that wont be the case is if you have several debts of the same type”:
      That’s where you’re wrong, typically credit cards that are looser with who they accept (like when you’re first starting out using credit cards) will be higher interest while simultaneously have lower limits due to what your credit was like when you joined etc....but once you’ve built your credit history and score, you’ll get access to more difficult acceptance (and more “perks”) cards that have a lower interest rate and higher limits, due to you being a lower risk user.
      That’s the case with me...only have credit card debt I’m paying off currently ...have 3 cards and the one with the highest interest yet lowest balance (because of the lowest limit) was the first one I got...but my “big shark” was the latest one I got and has a lot more of a balance but lower of an interest because I had built a decent credit score and history prior to applying for it.

  • @dcamnc1
    @dcamnc1 4 роки тому +11

    I'm completely debt fee (including mortgage), and followed the snowball. I'd do it exactly the same way today as I did then, smallest debt to largest debt.

  • @mdooms76
    @mdooms76 3 роки тому +3

    I paid off my debt highest to lowest and it worked best for me. Discipline is the key not which order you do it in.

  • @NickPeitsch
    @NickPeitsch 4 роки тому +13

    It’s the most financially responsible move...
    Yet it doesn’t work for most people! Unbelievable.

  • @amigam3280
    @amigam3280 4 роки тому +15

    Dave's explanation is pretty condescending to be honest. He's basically saying that paying off high interest first works better, but because you're too dumb to follow the optimal method, you should use the watered down version where you end up paying more money. I did the avalanche method to get out of $40k of student loans in 18 months. You know what motivated me to keep going? Knowing that at the end, I'll have paid $5,000 less in interest and be out of debt 3 months faster vs the snowball

    • @carollynch8319
      @carollynch8319 4 роки тому +1

      weixou xi he didn’t say she was dumb he said she was undisciplined. You appear to have the discipline and focus to stay with your decisions.

    • @Brazillianboi69
      @Brazillianboi69 4 роки тому +1

      Okay but did you have one sent and the student loan or did you have multiple cards, a car note, and a personal loan? In most cases, just throwing all your money on the student loan and keeping 5 other accounts open, going no where, and accruing interest is very overwhelming and most people don’t win like that. You have just a credit card? Of course you can do it your way.

  • @ld4974
    @ld4974 4 роки тому +8

    Its like Dave's advice to pay off your mortgage. It's more a mental thing than the thing that makes the most financial sense. Most people lack the discipline to do the thing that makes the most financial sense (which is why they are calling Dave).

    • @codybarrett4672
      @codybarrett4672 4 роки тому +4

      yup, if they had the discipline to pay off high-interest stuff first successfully they wouldn't even be in this situation in the first place, most likely

  • @davidkrumme7168
    @davidkrumme7168 4 роки тому +12

    I mean paying high interest debts first saves money. That fact isn't even debatable lol. As long as the person has the will power not paying off higher interest debts first makes zero sense

    • @insideoutsideupsidedown2218
      @insideoutsideupsidedown2218 4 роки тому +10

      David Krumme they are in debt with credit cards especially because they do not have the will power to spend less than they make.

    • @codybarrett4672
      @codybarrett4672 4 роки тому +4

      @@insideoutsideupsidedown2218 bingo

    • @davidkrumme7168
      @davidkrumme7168 4 роки тому +1

      Still doesn't debate the fact that paying off high interest first saves money.

    • @elwood62
      @elwood62 4 роки тому +1

      David Krumme he never said it didn’t save money. In fact he said the opposite.

    • @insideoutsideupsidedown2218
      @insideoutsideupsidedown2218 4 роки тому +2

      It does save money. That is the math. Again, if we were doing math, we would not be in credit card debt. If you are in debt with the IRS and a credit card company, you owe the IRS 10k at 15% and the credit card company 35k at 29% which one would you pay off first?

  • @blorax5179
    @blorax5179 3 роки тому +4

    I get it - "pay high interest first" is actually the rational (mathematically correct) answer but "pay smallest balance first" is the best answer (yields greater chance of overall success in debt elimination) for the psychology of the type of person who gets into this problem in the first place (kind way to say, the irrational spender).

  • @stevenlopez1717
    @stevenlopez1717 2 роки тому +5

    This doesn't apply to everyone. Many of us have taken on debt as a means of investing in our future (college, real estate, starting a business), not simply consuming. For myself, paying the entire debt off quickest is what motivates me. It would actually depress me to know that I'm choosing to delay the finish line and in turn accruing more debt via interest by paying off smallest first.

  • @josephpapino
    @josephpapino 4 роки тому +12

    There is no way a credit card balance of 15,000 at 16% is a $2000 payment per month. More like $200
    (16%/12) x $15,000 = $200. She must have a ton of late charges or something...

    • @SnuggleBunnyBaby
      @SnuggleBunnyBaby 4 роки тому +4

      Well she did say she couldn't always make to payment with the mortgage... I'm guessing she has late penalties

    • @deniceloya9990
      @deniceloya9990 4 роки тому +1

      Or she could have a payment plan within the credit card. Certain credit cards offer options to pay big debts on a low to no interest if you pay them in 6 to 12 months.

  • @amandamorales9030
    @amandamorales9030 4 роки тому +38

    I did not follow Dave's snowball method. I made my own order. I saw the math and JUST DID IT. No hesitation. I was done being broke. If you need to ask this question then, in my opinion, are not motivated enough to spend months or years to complete the avalanche method. I'm debt free because of my behaviors not math.

    • @windowslogo3577
      @windowslogo3577 4 роки тому

      what is avalanche method?

    • @I-own-your-feelings
      @I-own-your-feelings 4 роки тому +2

      Bingo. Figure out a plan, do the math, and stick to the process.

    • @wlonsdale1
      @wlonsdale1 4 роки тому

      @@windowslogo3577 highest interest rate first

    • @jokescity3985
      @jokescity3985 4 роки тому

      Your reasoning is literally the reason why Dave recommends using the snowball method...

    • @tymom9313
      @tymom9313 3 роки тому

      Same!

  • @barbjefferson2069
    @barbjefferson2069 4 роки тому +2

    I have my emergency money. Now I just paid off two CC cards this week. Wonderful feeling. They were lower interests CC cards. I now put the monthly payment of those two cards towards the next CC card I want to pay off. What I plan on doing is calling other CC creditors to get the interest payments down.Can't hurt to try; all they can do is say no. Great feeling to pay off those cards.

  • @MyNameIsCorey
    @MyNameIsCorey 4 роки тому +198

    Me: my interest is high
    Dave: smallest debt first....
    Me: I know but my interest...
    Dave: smallest debt first...

    • @MyNameIsCorey
      @MyNameIsCorey 4 роки тому +12

      @Ezequiel Sequeira I totally agree with you I discovered Dave about four yrs ago his philosophy on finances and his system to do it has completely transformed my view on money for the better. I don't agree with a few things but I like how uniform his system is for anyone to get out of debt

    • @chrisbaker2669
      @chrisbaker2669 4 роки тому +7

      Sometimes dave says attack payday loans first.

    • @sparkwhite19
      @sparkwhite19 4 роки тому +10

      @@chrisbaker2669 payday loans are predatory. He also says pays the IRS first. Interest rates are so high it doesn't work mathematically.

    • @Farsadelcatolicismo
      @Farsadelcatolicismo 4 роки тому +5

      paying smallest debt first is all mental stuff... to boost you up (encourage you) to keep going ...but mathematically it don't work ...highest interest first is a MUST , but there is something that can be done if you want to go the smallest debt first route ...transfer your highest rate CC debt to a 0% introductory rate CC that way you won't pay interest for a whole year or more , that gives you time to pay off the smallest debt. I have 4 CC's and I transfer the balance back and forth from one to the other as soon as the introductory rate is about to expire and that way I avoid the interest (even tho I still have to pay 3% transfer fee in most of the cases but it's still alot less than eating up the interest for a whole year) .

    • @andrewh.4186
      @andrewh.4186 4 роки тому +10

      @@Farsadelcatolicismo It's a bit incorrect to say "mathematically it doesn't work" - basically exactly as he said, mathematically you pay off _quicker_ *at the same amount* towards debt paying smallest to largest, but nobody does that unless they have tremendous self control, which nobody who has high credit card debts does. Also it's emotionally draining.
      If you're psychologically unusual, and can stick to a paper plan like it's a law, then pay interest rates first. If not, there's a good chance you're fooling yourself into thinking you're saving money, when it just gets spent somewhere else.

  • @kendraplayzrobloxgamer8413
    @kendraplayzrobloxgamer8413 4 роки тому +2

    Smallest debt first then to largest. It’s a mental problem. Not a interest problem. By doing this it helps you get motivated and encourages you to keep going further in the end result.
    Some people use the highest interest rate first however without motivation and discipline you may fail or go backwards into a spiral effect.
    Determination is the key to success and I say do whatever makes your headset happy but I always go smallest to largest debt. Hoping to be debt free this year.

  • @elmateo77
    @elmateo77 4 роки тому +2

    I'd say smallest debt first is a good principle, but with one exception. Payday loans, because they can have absolutely ridiculous interest rates. If you have a payday loan at 400% and a car loan at 5% you'd better get that payday loan paid first no matter what the relative sizes are, because it's gonna double real fast if you don't get rid of it.

  • @dinimakhmudov1674
    @dinimakhmudov1674 Рік тому +1

    The reverse can hold true as well.
    You can pay off the cc with the highest interest first, and get fired up to pay the rest. That can have the snowball effect, too.
    Just my two cents about it… 🤷‍♀️

  • @Yup2024
    @Yup2024 Місяць тому

    What I love is that when I arranged my debt from smallest to largest, my smallest were overwhelmingly my highest interest debt. So I see that as a win.

  • @billgateskilledmyuncle23
    @billgateskilledmyuncle23 4 роки тому +33

    She said she had 4 credit cards and the biggest one has 15k on it. I just about got dizzy. Wth!?

    • @garethsiegel4618
      @garethsiegel4618 4 роки тому +3

      Why are you dizzy? You might want to have that checked out...

    • @Farsadelcatolicismo
      @Farsadelcatolicismo 4 роки тому +1

      That's not rare ...I have 6 the highest is 18k , another one is 12k ....it's a nationwide problem , if you don't have any debt like that congrats and don't do it like ever but a lot of us do. Lucky for me my house is paid off and my wife is an executive that makes 100k a year otherwise I'd be choking a lot worse

    • @billgateskilledmyuncle23
      @billgateskilledmyuncle23 4 роки тому +1

      @@Farsadelcatolicismo I have never taken out a credit card. My parents warned me years ago that they are traps. Way to easy to go into debt because you just swipe instead of signing papers each time. I do have other debts, but they are all stable, like a mortgage. To open another and another sounds like an addiction to me.

    • @sharinglungs3226
      @sharinglungs3226 4 роки тому +3

      Dilly Dally credit cards can be great if you have the discipline to pay it off in full each month. I also use my statement as a way to track my monthly spending. It’s nuts to me how people have so many cards. I only have two: one visa and one MasterCard just in case if a place I purchase from doesn’t take mastercard.

  • @beefen7921
    @beefen7921 4 роки тому +10

    and here I am sitting and thought that having $300 balance on my credit is already a freagen headache.

    • @lifted0422
      @lifted0422 4 роки тому +4

      That’s how it starts lol

  • @garrettstevensen2467
    @garrettstevensen2467 4 роки тому +2

    I agree with the whole, "This is not a math problem, this is a behavioral problem..." But, If the poor behavior to go into debt has been recognized and adjusted, then the mathematics should now be considered, would it not? It is no longer behavioral but math after the mistakes have been realized and adjusted.

  • @samanthaburd9391
    @samanthaburd9391 4 роки тому +28

    Love the diet analogy!

    • @Erica-wz8yv
      @Erica-wz8yv 4 роки тому +1

      Samantha Burd me too. Makes a lot of sense when he explains it that way.

    • @Gas_man
      @Gas_man 3 роки тому

      But it’s not really an accurate analogy. You still see your overall balance come down as you’re paying off your high interest debt. And actually, you’re losing more weight because you’re saving money on interest.

  • @jesterpoker
    @jesterpoker 3 роки тому +8

    Some people are motivated enough to not waste money for fictitious progress.

    • @1x0x
      @1x0x 3 роки тому +3

      i agree but im also not struggling. he explained that if you are dumb enough to get in that situation, you are probably dumb enough to need fictitious progress.

    • @ucyberwolf
      @ucyberwolf 3 роки тому

      Basically. Debt avalanche instead of snowball saved me more than 3K in interest.

    • @andrewb3941
      @andrewb3941 3 роки тому

      @@ucyberwolf he said that math wise avalanche was better. But most people that are in debt dont have the discipline to stick with it...

  • @getinthespace7715
    @getinthespace7715 7 днів тому

    The beauty of attacking the smaller debts is freeing up cash flow. It can have a larger impact than paying on the higher interest debt by increasing the size of your "shovel". It helps loosen that grip the debt has on you by a little bit.

  • @npxmnpxm
    @npxmnpxm 4 роки тому

    Great explanation, thanks! I really appreciate the psychology behind your method.

  • @adrianaponte9912
    @adrianaponte9912 3 роки тому +1

    I love love love this call. That was awesome Dave.

  • @NappyWayz
    @NappyWayz 3 роки тому +2

    Crown Financial Ministries say high interest. That was the way I went. Dave is right that it is a mindset. When I decided to pay off my debt, it worked out. Debt free now for 4 years.

  • @JTDyer21
    @JTDyer21 Рік тому +1

    Either way you gotta live on a written budget and only buy things you really really NEED. Most people don't understand the difference between a want and a need.

  • @driverjohns6051
    @driverjohns6051 4 роки тому +1

    I have never agreed with Dave on this concept. My debt was student loans, not credit card. I did the math and it became clear the amount of money I would save by paying the high interest loans off first. To each his/her own...

  • @thomaseidson6374
    @thomaseidson6374 4 роки тому +11

    When you pit emotion and logic against each other emotion will win just about every time. People get in to most consumer debt because of emotional, not logical decisions. If it was all simply logical math most people wouldn't be getting in to debt in the first place. Feeding the emotional side of success by paying off the smallest debt amount first gives shots of dopamine by the brain giving a sense of pleasure and accomplishment and helps fuel the process further.

  • @MsRuthie
    @MsRuthie 4 роки тому +2

    Stick with it caller, it’s amazing how fast it works and how excited you’ll get.

  • @ncsquared1006
    @ncsquared1006 4 роки тому +2

    He is so right!

  • @d_all_in
    @d_all_in 4 роки тому +17

    "If you were doing math you wouldn't have credit card debt" LOL

  • @diantefinney4966
    @diantefinney4966 4 роки тому

    Great explanation from Dave

  • @TheEntrepreneurChannel
    @TheEntrepreneurChannel 4 роки тому +9

    I’ve always wondered this!

  • @thespicyonion
    @thespicyonion Рік тому +1

    He really feels this . I love his enthusiasm!

  • @danf6975
    @danf6975 4 роки тому +2

    I noticed the same principle as what is talked about here to be true in my own personal life when managing multiple cards some for Personal some for business
    You get motivated once you see one of the cards paid off completely and put away to not be used and it makes you work that much harder to get the next one down

  • @wanefelicia8779
    @wanefelicia8779 4 роки тому +1

    Needed this!

  • @lauromartinez8948
    @lauromartinez8948 3 роки тому +1

    Right on point Dave ! It’s called Reinforcement and is a proven behavior analysis principle.

  • @perryingram23
    @perryingram23 4 роки тому

    That was a really great analogy man 👍🏾 💯

  • @maryjambor3677
    @maryjambor3677 8 місяців тому +1

    Avalanche makes the most mathematical sense and is fine when describing two debts that are of "similar" size. For instance, if you have 2 debts. One is 10k at 5%, one is 11k at 10%, those are close enough together that it just makes sense to attack the 11k first, even though technically it is bigger. It's like 1 month's work bigger - not worth paying all that extra interest and larger payment if you could have attacked it first.
    Snowball makes the most sense when you have debts of varying sizes. For instance, instead of 10k and 11k in above, it's 1k and 11k. Just clearing that little 1k will help with the cashflow, and it's not like paying off the 1k will significantly increase the amount of time it takes to pay off 11k (again, maybe a month or so for many people's budgets).

  • @richardramfire3971
    @richardramfire3971 Рік тому +1

    Ramsey is a blessing

  • @martinh9744
    @martinh9744 4 роки тому +1

    The recurring wins help keep you going.
    When you aren't paying the highest interest rate just because you want to stick with a program (for any number of reasons) adds incentive. It should make you angry that you can't pay the high interest debt. That is an incentive to be more intense paying your smaller debts so you can get to that high interest one sooner.
    Completing the BS2 and being intense while doing it are both important. Avalanche method doesn't provide the same incentive.

  • @pikaresque
    @pikaresque 3 роки тому +1

    math vs. human nature is an argument that actually makes sense to me

  • @themetadaemon
    @themetadaemon 3 роки тому +2

    There needs to be a psychological driver to paying off high-interest debts. We all instinctively know that the high-interest should be payed off first, but it needs to be made real. Figure out how much interest per month for the debt. Every time you pay something down, do the ratio and put that much cash in a jar. That's the monthly raise you just gave yourself. Rinse and repeat.

  • @EllieofAzeroth
    @EllieofAzeroth 4 роки тому +2

    I'm doing a combination of snowball and avalanche right now. Starting with low balance to highest on my private loans from Sallie Mae, then working my way from lowest to highest on those with almost no interest rate

  • @bored8715
    @bored8715 2 роки тому +1

    The debt I have is both. My smallest debt has a high interest rate, same with the others. So will be doing both the debt snow ball and the debt avalanche

  • @IAmSuperStick
    @IAmSuperStick Рік тому +2

    I agree the snowball method gives you fast results that can motivate you to keep going, but there's one thing that has always bugged me. My lowest balance only has a $25 min payment. My highest balance carries a $150 min payment. Would it not be better to pay that bigger one off first so I can save on the min payments each month? As that card gets paid down, those min payments also come down, allowing more $$ to put towards the principle. Or am I missing something??

  • @virginiakingsford2232
    @virginiakingsford2232 4 роки тому +20

    It boggles my mind that people that people ask this still. Its been answered a thousand times.

    • @ladyt618
      @ladyt618 4 роки тому

      As a matter of fact, before she asked the question, she verified it! This caller blew my mind! LOL

    • @insideoutsideupsidedown2218
      @insideoutsideupsidedown2218 4 роки тому +1

      But millions to go....

    • @billgateskilledmyuncle23
      @billgateskilledmyuncle23 4 роки тому +3

      So um, I make 10k a year and owe 25 trillion on lesbian poetry. Do you think I should finance a 20 year old car with 300k miles for 3x what it books for? (And Dave just popped the top of a bottle of tequila)

    • @Kp-cb8pq
      @Kp-cb8pq 4 роки тому

      Dilly Dally 💀

    • @j2z1000
      @j2z1000 4 роки тому

      Unless the person asking it is new to Dave Ramsey

  • @doubledragon2074
    @doubledragon2074 2 роки тому +1

    "I'm never going eat out again!" I love you Dave! 4:13

  • @PaulGoins
    @PaulGoins 3 роки тому

    I like these segments which really get into the "why". I'm a math nerd and know what's logically better (and what I'd personally follow), but figured it was a psychology thing - that makes total sense. Like with anything, up to everyone to decide what they do, but as general advice for most people, for the sake of ultimately getting them out of debt... Makes sense.

  • @user-td7xf3gz4l
    @user-td7xf3gz4l 4 роки тому +45

    Well it does work it's just a matter of discipline

    • @rialjohnson
      @rialjohnson 4 роки тому +3

      Yes. That's exactly what he said. If you had the discipline to do it you wouldn't have the debt.

    • @RonJohn63
      @RonJohn63 4 роки тому

      @@rialjohnson that's utterly and completely *wrong.*

    • @ShadeMiller
      @ShadeMiller 4 роки тому

      @@RonJohn63 how? It's true.

    • @RonJohn63
      @RonJohn63 4 роки тому +1

      @@ShadeMiller I am no different now with $0 debt than I was when $56K in non-mortgage debt. The difference is that now -- and for the past seven years -- I have been motivated to *use* that fiscal discipline.

  • @m0here239
    @m0here239 4 роки тому

    Mine was a student loan , never had a spending issue.
    So I got the interest based method done successfully. BUT...
    he’s right...of course, if for someone else it’s a behavior and spending problem...well he says it here clear and simple.

  • @jeremyzamorano4774
    @jeremyzamorano4774 4 роки тому

    Go Dave!!

  • @TheIronChainMaster
    @TheIronChainMaster 3 роки тому +3

    Disagree! When I look at the highest interest rate it tells me how much money its costing me. That gives me a " I got an attitude & gonna attack this debt with an all out aggression "
    Just kill the interest and punch it in the face

  • @cmoore806
    @cmoore806 3 роки тому

    I get that he recommends paying smallest to largest but back in the day I just called the creditor and asked them if the could lower my interest rate. I got it down to 7.25% APR which helped get it paid off that much faster. I even asked them how often they will consider lowering the rate and I called them on a calendar and each time they lowered it.

  • @rickmontilla3490
    @rickmontilla3490 8 днів тому

    Mathematically is best to pay off high interest first . It’ll save you more money and get you out quicker however you must have the discipline to follow thru , that’s why daves plan makes sense for those that are easily discouraged

  • @maxm2656
    @maxm2656 День тому

    I was never a fan of this one size fits all thinking. I’ve never had debt, much less had multiple forms of debt. But anyone with basic loan understanding knows that interest is your enemy. I’ve heard some people be so aggressive I have to think paying off the biggest debts first works too and reduces overall cost

  • @xyzsame4081
    @xyzsame4081 3 роки тому

    get yourself an excel sheet and reward yourself by how much you save on interest. By all means do an approximation (if credit card debt is 15 % and another cost you 10 or 5 %). IF you need a motivation.

  • @sincerelyhair8812
    @sincerelyhair8812 4 роки тому +1

    I only have car and student loan debt! I’ve been tackling my highest balance/ interest rate car note first then I’ll tackle my student loan debt. Paying my car note off first is what’s working best for me. My interest rate is 13 percent on my car & my notes are $700, so I’d rather pay that off first than my $120 student loan payment with 4.6 percent interest rate.

    • @RonJohn63
      @RonJohn63 4 роки тому

      13% on a car loan?? Holy Canoli, Batman! (You're right, though, to hit it first...)

  • @evelynarias251
    @evelynarias251 4 роки тому +1

    This is the exact same reason why I am able to save a lot of money after getting my tax return. I see the money in my bank account and then it inspires me to save MORE and MORE and MORE and MORE. It fires me up and I don’t go out to eat anymore and I also don’t spend as much and I stick to my budgets!! I feel like I already knew this was a mental thing , I just had to HEAR it from Dave lol

  • @tomm8025
    @tomm8025 4 роки тому +5

    Boy I sure hope this lady ignores DR's advice. She actually has the right attitude in mind. DR is so reluctant to waiver from his SET advice that he can't see when a person would actually do it better and the correct and faster way. Even hearing her want to get rid of the higher rate debts first, he is incapable of realizing that his generic snowball method is NOT for everyone. It's just a lazier way to insist one size fits all. I have yet to have one person I helped get out of debt use the snowball method and all it took was getting them to realize that the balances don't matter, you have a TOTAL amount of debt you are trying to rid. They SEE the progress as they watch that TOTAL drop every month, and more quickly than snowballing it. Just lazy not to teach people the proper way.

    • @tomm8025
      @tomm8025 4 роки тому +3

      @Jose V - OK, I had a very lengthy, detailed reply written and then UA-cam reloaded to the main page and all was lost. So I will keep this shorter. Jose V., you haven't said a things DR didn't already state in his video. So not sure why you think it coming from you would now changes things? To your (and DR's constant name calling) point that "these people are STUPID." You're incorrect in most cases. People in America are often uneducated in these matters because our consumer driven "get a job and spend" American society that provides no real life finance education through the system. DR wants to defend snowballing because he has been pounding his cookie cutter program for years. I have helped numerous people out of debt, always used the so-called "avalanche" method and don't have people giving up because I teach them not to focus on individual accounts. Your individual accounts balances don't matter because you have a TOTAL amount of debt you're getting free of. When people realize the debt is hurting them and looking to get out of it they are never more open to learning the correct way to do so. And that way is highest rate first. They will see their progress as they watch that TOTAL debt amount shrink month after month, and it will get them excited. So I wholeheartedly disagree with his view that everyone sees finances the same way and that they will behave like he did in his past. There are plenty other things he says that are not correct or best, but I know, I know, he has all these "studies"! Have you seen these studies? Cause I got a thousand questions and points I will target looking at if I ever do see one. I don't think DR is a bad guy and much of finances is same advice most will give. But I do disagree with his cookie cutter approach and the assumptions he makes about others. Also, he will even contradict his advice with his own behavior and then defend his not following his own advice as OK because "he can afford it." That always makes me chuckle and likely why he often crosses his body in a defensive manner.

  • @carlosguzman443
    @carlosguzman443 5 місяців тому

    After getting into debt for $47,000. I committed to COD. Cash on delivery. 5 years later i learned how to use net 30 day program.

  • @cattsmahal1005
    @cattsmahal1005 4 роки тому +1

    My Cap One as 0% till the end of 2020
    My credit union is at 2.9 with a high balance.
    Therefore, I’m paying as much as I can with my credit union. So yes, I’m attaching my high interest high balance cc first.

  • @chriseaton2374
    @chriseaton2374 3 роки тому

    Been doing this and gotta say this guy is right