*The Dave Ramsey 'Baby Steps' Thread*

Just wondering how you calculate your House's Value? Assessed Tax Value or go with Zillow/Realtor Value?
Assessed tax value has absolutely nothing to do with reality. My $1 million house has an assessed tax value of $400,000. Counties and municipalities have their own complicated formulas that include things like homestead exemptions that are specific to that jurisdiction.

The most realistic value would be the average estimate from at least three different real estate sites, minus the 6% commission you'd have to pay to a realtor to sell it.
 
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I work for county govt too. Part B required, govt insurance is the supplement. While I'd have to pay for it, not grandfathered for free (25 years awhile ago) it's a lot better than most supplement.

dh is retired fed. he has the option to take part b. if he does, than his Fhlbp has no deductibles or co pays. if he doesn't take part b he would. so have to figure cost of part b (which is high because I'm still working) vs savings

when I retire have to figure if better to pay for my govt insurance and part b vs going on dh as spouse. his is cheaper but out of network coverage not as good. and my 1 prescription would cost $350 per month vs 0. and whether to take part b if I go on his.
it's crazy


you know how every year during employee open enrollment you get sent paperwork that says 'save this for your records' and it details your coverage for if/when you apply for Medicare? SAVE THOSE SUCKERS!!! because after I retired I had to stay on my employer's plan to keep the kids insured, when I decided to just go pure Medicare I had to prove my previous prescription coverage met some kind of criteria or be penalized for every month from the month I became Medicare eligible (and it was a good number of years). I was so thankful I had hoarded all those yearly papers away b/c you would think if you had the same insurance carrier/same plan for over a decade that it would just take someone in hr or at the insurance company printing up a verification but nooooooooooooooo-because they would change their plan name by a smidge or rearrange the name from Healthnet plan A to Healthnet A plan (and back again the next year) they claimed there was no way to trace the information down.

HOARD YOUR PROOF OF COVERAGE :crazy: :thumbsup2
 
Assessed tax value has absolutely nothing to do with reality. My $1 million house has an assessed tax value of $400,000. Counties and municipalities have their own complicated formulas that include things like homestead exemptions that are specific to that jurisdiction.

The most realistic value would be the average estimate from at least three different real estate sites, minus the 6% commission you'd have to pay to a realtor to sell it.
Yeah, since my bank will give me a loan of 80% of the assessed tax value without an inspection, I will just go with that.

I would not trust Zillow's valuations, they are starting to get unreliable in my area because things are really slowing down.
 

Question a question about the Every Dollar website. How do you change the dates of the month? We get paid every 4 weeks, so I want to work off a 4 week budget based on our paydays. I don't want to use the first and last day of the month cause that's not how our checks fall. Don't think it matters, but I just have the basic thing.
 
It's the Annual Giving Show!

One of the things I love about the Baby Steps (and that is missing from other financial programs) is the emphasis on giving, no matter your financial situation. I think it's important to include Giving as a planned item in your budget and to also look for additional ways to spontaneously give. I personally believe there is too much need in the world for anyone to keep 100% of their income for themselves. We can all do something to help someone else!

 
While I'm not 100% following Dave, I do like multiple points he makes and including giving in the budget is something I'm including next year.

I want to include a budget for stocking little free pantries once or twice a month, provide holiday meals for those who need it, angel tree shopping as much as I can, back to school sponsorships, etc.
 
Happy New Year!

--Ran all of our numbers for end-of-month and end-of-year. This final week of December was disappointing for investments, but overall, still climbing for the month and year.

--It was an extra paycheck month, which helped us have a little fun for the holidays. We paid for the next semester of college in full, which means we have finished cash flowing the first three years of college. Over a year ago, we started taking the cash from our wallet at the end of a month and putting it into a paper envelope. This year we only pulled from it once and ended with almost $800. So, we took $500 of that and put it in our recently-started Annual Expense fund, and the rest we rolled over to start next year's end-of-month cash envelope. Since the system is working, I upgraded the paper envelope to a basic wallet from the Ramsey store (along with some other goodies like Jade's new book and another year of FPU All Access/Ramsey+, which came with a free physical workbook and contentment journal).

--Looking ahead to 2026: our paychecks will be less due to increased deductions, but many expenses loom on the horizon. We recently had our rear brakes done and still have thousands of dollars of other repairs and maintenance to schedule. We have another child starting college, plus we will eventually need to upgrade our home computer, add a laptop for college, and replace three cell phones.

--No real goals because the Baby Steps always tell you what you should be working on! For us, it's continuing to try to find more margin to increase our investing. Oh, and probably reduce the almost 30,000 emails I have in my inbox (half of which are unread)!

January budget is set!
 
--No real goals because the Baby Steps always tell you what you should be working on! For us, it's continuing to try to find more margin to increase our investing. Oh, and probably reduce the almost 30,000 emails I have in my inbox (half of which are unread)!
This was one of my goals as well. A few things that have worked well for me:
Every time I see an email from a vendor, I scroll to the bottom and click "unsubscribe". I don't need to devote the mental energy to those emails every time they come through.
I've started using a second email address for any and all online shopping, a couple exceptions - important accounts like property taxes, etc. but generally it means I can look through my other email address when I want to find a promo code, but am not looking at this stuff all the time. This is not the same as "hide my email", which still forwards to my inbox, it is a completely separate email account only for online shopping.
 
Every time I see an email from a vendor, I scroll to the bottom and click "unsubscribe". I don't need to devote the mental energy to those emails every time they come through.
Thanks! Agreed. I recently started unsubscribing instead of just ignoring. Most of my emails are homeschool, college, and charity related, so I always felt like I needed to see what comes through. But homeschool is winding down, college is decided, and I can always add charities back if I miss their updates. I recently turned on some retail emails for the holidays, but have already turned them back off. Now, it's a matter of mass deleting some and picking through the rest to file away.

I once saw this graphic and had to laugh:

Screenshot 2026-01-01 at 10.18.28 AM.png
 


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