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‘It Won’t End Until You End It’

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  • Ramsey warned the couple that without restrictions, financial support becomes the only permanent subscription they can cancel.

  • George Kamel clarified that the $33,000 in unsecured credit card debt is inherited by the father-in-law, meaning the heirs owe nothing if there are no assets.

  • Ramsey pushed the couple to call their four siblings through a scripted, time-limited program instead of taking on the full responsibility alone.

  • A recent study identified one trend that doubled Americans’ retirement savings and moved retirement from a dream, to a reality. Read more here.

The couple called the Ramsey Show and explained that their 84-year-old father-in-law lost his retirement savings due to bad investments and a divorce, living on Social Security alone, with $33,000 in credit card debtand probably $100 left each month. Basically, they wanted to know: When can we stop sending him money that we didn’t plan for? Dave Ramsey’s answer was vague.

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“Truth will never end before you finish it.”

After knee surgery, the requests for money increased: a new recliner, a shower remodel for accessibility, then $1,000 more, and now hearing aids cost between $1,500 and $5,000. Ramsey warned the caller, whom he nicknamed Susan, that “It’s Susan’s Bank forever, and she’ll come in $1,000, then $2,000, then $5,000.”

A Mistake George Kamel Warns Couples Not To Make

Ramsey’s advice is sound, and George Kamel’s addition provided helpful insight that many families would miss. Kamel told the caller that if his father-in-law didn’t have the assets to repay $33,000 in unsecured credit card debt, it wouldn’t be the couple’s problem to solve: “If they sue him, they can’t take anything. And it won’t go past his mother either.”

As Ramsey explained in other episodes, when someone passes away with credit card debt and no assets, “those who owe get nothing,” and children, parents, and in many states the spouse, are not liable.

Read: Data Shows One Habit Doubles America’s Savings and Boosts Retirement

Most Americans underestimate how much they need for retirement and overestimate how much they are prepared for. But the data shows that people with one habit have more than twice as much income as those who do not.

Now see why it can really hurt a couple to help pay this off. The current average credit card APR is 21%, near a record high. With a balance of $33,000 at 21%, the interest alone could reach approx $578 per month before one dollar of principal is touched. The father-in-law cannot make a fuss about that $100 per month remaining after expenses, and the couple will not be able to without reorganizing their budget forever on his card statement.

One Condition Ramsey Set Before Giving More Money

Ramsey’s expression before another dollar went out the door was telling. “If you’re going to give him one more dollar, you’re going to be more involved in the finances and understand what’s coming in and what’s going out.” Besides it seems, all gifts are guesswork.

The second variable is siblings. The husband has three siblings, but he never talks to them because he “doesn’t think they can afford it.” Ramsey backed away forcefully, telling the couple to call the meeting again “put a limit on it, even a time limit and a number limit so they know that this is not the eternal money of my father’s life.” Four households contributing $150 a month is $600 in combined support. The assumption of only one family becomes an automatic safety net.

Context is important here. The US personal savings rate fell to 3.7% in the first quarter of 2026, down from 6.2% in early 2024. Many families supporting elderly parents are doing so with smaller cushions than they had two years ago. Thinking that siblings can’t help, without asking, is locking in the worst possible divorce.

A Study of Families in Similar Situations

Dave Ramsey’s advice was to stop treating every new expense as an emergency that had to be handled by their household alone. Before handing over another dollar, he urged the couple to benefit full visibility from their father-in-law’s money and involve other siblings in the conversation. Without a clear picture of revenue, costs, and available resources, Ramsey explained how financial support will always be operational rather than intentional.

Kamel’s point about credit card debt reinforced that idea. The couple’s challenge is not the $33,000 balance itself, but determining how much support they can provide without jeopardizing their financial future.

Ramsey’s closing message was simple: Generosity needs limits. Otherwise, as he warned, “it’s Susan’s Bank forever.”

Data Shows One Habit Doubles America’s Savings and Boosts Retirement

Most Americans underestimate how much they need for retirement and overestimate how much they are prepared for. But the data shows that people with one habit have more than that twice the savings of those who do not.

And no, it has nothing to do with increasing your income, saving, cutting coupons, or even reducing your lifestyle. It’s more direct (and powerful) than any of that. In fact, it’s shocking how many people don’t take this practice for granted.

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