Debt

Dave Ramsey\'s 7 Baby Steps: An Honest Review — 2026 US Guid

An objective analysis of Dave Ramsey\'s 7 Baby Steps — what the research says, where the advice is excellent, where it\'s outdated, and who it works best.

Kike Faúndez
Written by
Founder of CashControlly
Published on 9 min read
Debt9 min read

Dave Ramsey's Baby Steps framework has helped millions of Americans get out of debt. It's also been criticized for rejecting credit cards categorically, recommending paying off low-rate mortgages instead of investing, and avoiding nuanced tax optimization. Here's the honest scorecard.

The 7 Baby Steps

  1. $1,000 starter emergency fund
  2. Pay off all debt (except mortgage) using debt snowball
  3. 3–6 months full emergency fund
  4. Invest 15% of household income into retirement
  5. Save for children's college
  6. Pay off home early
  7. Build wealth and give

Where Ramsey is objectively right

  • Baby Step 1 ($1,000 emergency fund first): Correct. You need a buffer before attacking debt or any interruption sends you back to credit cards.
  • Baby Step 2 (debt snowball): Psychology research supports this for people who need motivation. Works better in practice than on paper for most.
  • Baby Step 3 (full emergency fund before investing): Correct for most. Investing while having no emergency fund creates forced selling at the worst times.
  • Anti-debt philosophy generally: For the target audience — people who've demonstrated they misuse credit — avoiding credit is the right prescription.

Where the math diverges from Ramsey

  • All debt is not equal: A 2.9% car loan should NOT be prioritized over a Roth IRA contribution getting 7% average returns. The avalanche method saves more money than snowball for most people mathematically.
  • Baby Step 6 (pay off mortgage early): A 3% 30-year mortgage vs 7% long-run stock returns — every extra mortgage dollar costs you 4% annually in opportunity cost. This advice was better in high-rate environments.
  • No credit cards ever: For financially disciplined users who pay in full, credit card rewards are $1,000–$3,000/year in free travel and cash back. Blanket avoidance is expensive for high earners who won't misuse credit.
  • Only mutual funds / no index funds: Ramsey recommends actively managed mutual funds. 30 years of data shows index funds outperform them 85–90% of the time after fees.

The verdict

The Baby Steps are an excellent framework for people with high debt, behavioral spending problems, or who need extreme simplicity. The rules become suboptimal for high-income households with stable finances who would benefit from tax optimization, credit card rewards, and index fund investing.

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About the author

Kike Faúndez
Kike Faúndez
Founder of CashControlly · Santiago, Chile

Enrique 'Kike' Faúndez is an Information Systems and Management Control Engineer from Universidad de Chile, with master’s degrees in Finance from Universidad de Chile and Industrial Engineering from Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. He has 15+ years of experience in regulated financial services across finance, operations, and digital product development. He founded CashControlly in Santiago, Chile, with the conviction that personal financial control should not be a privilege, but an accessible and well-designed tool.

Credentials
  • Master's in Finance, Universidad de Chile
  • Master's in Industrial Engineering, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
  • Information Systems and Management Control Engineer, Universidad de Chile
  • AI and ITIL certifications
  • 15+ years in regulated financial services
Learn more about the founder

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