A mom called The Ramsey Show with a question most personal finance shows would not know how to answer. Two of her children had tested positive for lead exposureA mom called The Ramsey Show with a question most personal finance shows would not know how to answer. Two of her children had tested positive for lead exposure

Dave Ramsey Tells Couple Whose Kids Have Lead in Their Blood to Pause Their Debt Payoff: ‘What Are We Doing It All For?’

2026/06/16 19:11
6 min read
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The post Dave Ramsey Tells Couple Whose Kids Have Lead in Their Blood to Pause Their Debt Payoff: ‘What Are We Doing It All For?’ appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

  • Pausing a 12-18 month debt payoff to remediate a $10,000 lead-paint hazard delays student loan payoff by just 6 months while eliminating a compounding health cost that dwarfs.
  • This advice applies to families in aggressive debt payoff with children facing active health hazards, not to those managing discretionary home improvements or facing purely.
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A mom called The Ramsey Show with a question most personal finance shows would not know how to answer. Two of her children had tested positive for lead exposure in their blood, and the source was deteriorated paint on their house exterior. The repair estimate came in at $10,000. The family was deep into Baby Step 2, with $23,000 in student loans on top of a $103,000 mortgage, and they had planned to be debt-free in a year to 18 months.

Her question: keep attacking the student loans on schedule, or pause and write a check to seal the house?

Dave Ramsey, best known for telling people to throw every spare dollar at debt until it is gone, told her to pause. “Health is such a big part of our life. Otherwise, what are we doing it all for? If you don’t deal with this, it could cause more bills and health issues down the line,” he said. His co-host was blunter: “To me, this is an emergency.”

The verdict: Ramsey is right, and the math is not close

Pausing aggressive debt payoff to neutralize an active health hazard is correct. The reason is straightforward opportunity cost. Every month the family stays on schedule with student loans is a month two children continue absorbing lead from peeling exterior paint. Doing nothing carries real costs that compound in pediatric specialist visits, developmental interventions, and potential lost earnings decades from now. None of that shows up on an amortization table.

Walk through the actual cash flow. Say the couple was throwing an extra $1,500 a month at the student loans to hit that 12-to-18-month payoff. If they redirect that surplus to a remediation fund, they accumulate the full $10,000 in roughly seven months while still making minimum payments. The loans simply get pushed back by about six months. The co-host said as much directly to the caller: “You’re not a failure because it took you 6 months longer to pay off the student loans. We’re still going to cheer you on.”

Compare that with the alternative. Financing the remediation on a credit card at 24% APR while staying on the original debt schedule adds thousands in interest on top of an already painful expense. Waiting a year and self-financing through ongoing exposure is the worst option of all. The co-host framed the urgency in concrete terms: “Imagine your child needed an emergency procedure or medicine and you had to come up with $10,000 to get it. That’s the level of urgency I would personally have for my family.”

The variable that decides this: is it actually an emergency?

The one factor that determines whether Ramsey’s advice applies to your situation is whether the expense prevents ongoing harm or simply something you want done. Lead exposure in a child’s bloodstream prevents ongoing harm. A leaking roof over a bedroom prevents ongoing harm. A new kitchen because the old one is dated does not.

If the expense passes that test, the next move is to shrink it. Ramsey pushed the caller to break the project into phases: “Can you do the scraping first? And that’s the first thing we do. And then for a while your house looks, you know, ratchet. And then once you’ve saved up the other half, kind of break it up so it’s a little bit more bite-sized.” He also told her to get a separate estimate for removal alone: “How much is it to get rid of the paint that’s on the house? You might find that that’s $3,000 or $4,000.”

That phasing matters. Removing the hazardous paint stops the exposure. Repainting is cosmetic finishing that can wait until cash is rebuilt. A $3,000 to $4,000 first phase is roughly two months of redirected debt payments, not seven.

What to actually do this week

  1. Define the hazard. Get a written estimate that separates remediation (the part that stops the harm) from finishing work (the part that makes it look normal again). Pay for the first, defer the second.
  2. Drop to minimums on non-mortgage debt until the hazard is funded. Calculate how many months of redirected surplus it takes to cash-flow phase one, then restart the snowball the day the check clears.
  3. Get a second and third bid. Lead-paint remediation prices vary widely by contractor and by whether the work requires EPA RRP certification. Three estimates frequently saves 20% to 30%.
  4. Document it. If the children have elevated blood-lead levels, ask the pediatrician for a referral to your county health department. Many jurisdictions offer remediation grants or zero-interest loans specifically for this.

Pausing debt payoff to protect your kids is the plan.

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The post Dave Ramsey Tells Couple Whose Kids Have Lead in Their Blood to Pause Their Debt Payoff: ‘What Are We Doing It All For?’ appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

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