Jan 28, 2026

Dave Ramsey Warns: This Common Habit Can Ruin Your Retirement

Written by Gabrielle Olya
|
Edited by Brendan McGinley
Dave Ramsey

"If you invest $100 a month from age 25 to age 65 in a decent growth stock mutual fund, it will be $1,176,000," said money expert Dave Ramsey in a YouTube video. "You retire a millionaire."

In that light, you might think investing just $100 a month is enough to retire comfortably — and in theory, it could be. However, even if you amass a healthy retirement nest egg, one common money habit could mean you still end up broke. Here's what Ramsey said you need to avoid.

Ramsey said that many people live above their means and carry debt with them into retirement.

"You can't have a $750 F-150 payment," he said. "You can't have a student loan that's been around so long you think it's a pet."

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Keeping debt on a credit card is particularly problematic, Ramsey said. That's because high interest rates work against you and for the financial institutions that profit from your poor behavior.

"You can't just keep yourself in payments where all you do is work for the man," he said. "All you do is work for these stinking banks that have better furniture and bigger buildings than you do. And the reason is you gave them all your stinking money, and you have no money because you gave it all to them."

Ramsey called debt "the single largest blocker" to building real wealth.

"Debt has been so normalized in our culture that to even imagine living without it is unbelievable," he said.

Inflation has made everything more expensive, so it's easier to get into debt, but Ramsey said this isn't a viable excuse.

"Let's be real clear here — the debt is not because of inflation," he said. "The debt is because you wussed out and refused to cut your freaking lifestyle to offset inflation, because you're still sitting in a line of 30 cars to buy an unbelievably expensive cup of coffee."

Instead of living the same lifestyle and taking on more debt, the more responsible move is to cut down on expenses as costs rise.

As Ramsey noted, your debt will drag down your wealth-building — especially if you take it into retirement.

"If you think getting into debt to maintain your lifestyle is going to maintain your lifestyle, there's an end to that," he said. "It's a boomerang — it comes back around, smacks you in the head and says, 'Hey, dummy.'"

This article was provided by MoneyLion.com for informational purposes only and should not be construed as financial, legal or tax advice.

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Written by
Gabrielle Olya
Edited by
Brendan McGinley