I don't know why a person who is in the shape in bold would listen to DR. He give horrible advice about finances. His best ability is as a motivator. That is great for a person who needs to get out of debt.
I much prefer Gail Vaz-Oxlades way of doing things.
35% - Housing (mortgage, taxes, insurance, PMI)
15% - Transportation (gas, auto repairs, car payments)
25% - Life (health insurance, vacation, life insurance, gym membership)
10% - Savings (emergency fund, retirement, college fund)
15% - Debt repayment.
Once you are debt free, other than car and mortgage, then you redistribute the 15% into the other categories. She usually says add half to savings and spend the rest as you wish.
To answer the question, if you can make your debt repayments and it will not take you longer than three years (a number Gail always tries for on her show) and you can afford it from the Life and still pay the other things that life has to cover.
None of the financial people you see on tv are cut and dry how it should be. Gail's 15% for transportation is $111 shy of just my gas costs. That's not including the cost of vehicles (have to buy one now and then), insurance (short another $105), and maintenance/repair. How do I cut transportation costs down that far when it doesn't even cover gas?
25% in the life category doesn't come close to covering groceries and I still have medical insurance and my kids' prescriptions to pay for.
I just looked at one of her articles. It was about raises. She says, what if you save just half your raise? "With Connie's $400/month...." What? How out of touch with reality is that? My raises net me about $400 a year, and I don't think I know anyone who would tell different of theirs. The norm seems to be lower than that.
Same with Dave Ramsey. All I heard about when looking at Dave Ramsey was about how "inspirational" it was to hear from the folks who claim, "I paid off $60,000 worth of debt in 12 months!" Wow, how inspirational to those of us in the real world who don't even make that much in a year, let alone pay for all expenses plus pay that amount towards debt.
I hunted for years for informational help on debt reduction. All I could come up with is that you have to be making a hefty salary because there isn't any help when you are in the norm. I ended up taking out a [[
gasp!] home equity loan to pay off CC debt so that I could change from paying debt payments and turning right around with putting living expenses (groceries, electric bill, car insurance, heating oil, etc.) right back on the credit card.
Yeah, sure I still have debt. But the difference is, the payment is a very small fraction of what the CC payments were and I have $600 sitting in the bank right now to pay for my local taxes. I have $300 sitting in the bank right now to pay for my quarterly car insurance. I had $600 sitting in the bank last month when they came and filled my oil tank for heat. Prior to the home equity loan, that $600 for heating oil and $300 for car insurance would have been paid out as a CC payment, then when the oil came and the insurance bill was due, there would have been nothing but a CC to pay for it.