Dave Ramsey's Baby Steps - The UK Version - Debt Free Family (2024)

If you’re looking to secure your financial future, Dave Ramsey offers a step by step guide to transforming your finances, and could take you from ‘in-debt’ to debt free and financially secure in 7 steps.

Dave Ramsey's Baby Steps - The UK Version - Debt Free Family (1)

I'm Steph, mum of three! 👋
Here, I share practical insights on making (and saving!) money. With a knack for budgeting and a passion for financial freedom, I've picked up lots of tips & tricks along the way. And I can't wait to share them with you here!

Dave Ramsey's Baby Steps - The UK Version - Debt Free Family (2)

The original Dave Ramsey baby steps are geared towards the US and some of them are not as relevant to us here in the UK, so we’ve adapted them slightly to reflect the UK.

✅ Dave Ramseys baby steps (UK version)

  • Baby Step 0 – Create a budget
  • Baby Step 1 – Create your emergency fund
  • Baby Step 2 – Pay off all your non mortgage debts
  • Baby Step 3 – Save a fully funded emergency fund
  • Baby Step 4 – Invest in your pension
  • Baby Step 5 – Fund your children’s education
  • Baby Step 6 – Pay off your mortgage
  • Baby Step 7- Invest

✅ Reviews of Dave Ramsey’s UK baby steps

If you know Dave Ramsey and his philosophy, you’ll know how many people he’s helped to get out of debt. But for the people who haven’t heard of him and are researching the best ways to get out of debt, I thought it would be helpful to give you a little ‘Dave’ background.

In a nutshell, Dave Ramsey is an American TV personality / financial guru who helps people get out of debt. He calls the steps he uses to get debt free ‘baby steps’.

There are 6 baby steps in Dave’s debt free plan, but that really is if you’re an American living in the US. A lot of people in the UK who follow Dave Ramsey choose to skip baby step 5. This step is aimed at saving for your children for college. Although this is a great thing to do, the funding in the UK for university is set up totally different to that of the US, so many people don’t do this.

Dave Ramsey's Baby Steps - The UK Version - Debt Free Family (4)Dave Ramsey's Baby Steps - The UK Version - Debt Free Family (5)

If you wanted to though, you could easily do it for a house deposit or similar though.

✅ Dave Ramsey’s UK Baby Step 0 – Create a budget

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Baby Step 0 – Get current on all your debts, so none are in arrears.

You need to commit to NOT taking on any more debt.

Start the Dave Ramsey UK baby step 0 by getting up to date on all your bills, you’re starting this on an even playing field.

If you’re behind on your council tax (we’ve been there!) the budget you’re about to write out is not going to be a ‘true’ picture of your monthly finances, as you’ll be having to spend more of it than you should catching up, where you’re behind.

Do whatever you have to to get on top of yourself with your bills. Coming to agreements with the council, or whoever you owe money to (that’s a non credit debt) is okay when there’s no other way around it, but if you’re committing to the baby steps, you need to get current.

FREE 12 month simple budget planner

GRAB YOURS HERE

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✅ Dave Ramsey UK Baby Step 1 – Create your emergency fund

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Baby Step 1- Start an emergency fund. Save £1000 in a fund for small emergencies.

If you’re on Dave Ramsey’s baby step 1, you’re going to be spending the time in this step getting your Emergency Fund together. The point of this emergency fund is that you’re not going to be ‘borrowing’ to pay for those emergencies anymore.

Things are going to happen. Cars will go wrong, washing machines will break and, in my case, dental fillings will need replacing. But you’re going to have the money to cover them and honestly? It’s an amazing moment when you realise you can cover whatever expense it is, without having to add more debt to the stack you’ve already got.

Dave Ramsey says you need $1000 so of course it’s generally accepted in the UK this simply translates to £1000. Is £1000 enough? It was for us, and if you dip into it as we did a few times, you stop your snowball and get straight back to building up your fund again to £1000.

✅ Dave Ramsey UK Baby Step 2 – Pay off all your non mortgage debt

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Baby Step 2 – Pay of ALL debt apart from your house.

Using the Debt Snowball debt repayment method. Dave Ramsey UK baby step 2 is all about clearing ALL your non mortgage debt.

Dave says we have to also pay off our student loan debt. I did not. UK student loans are totally different to those in the US, and it is NOT always beneficial to pay them off.

Martin Lewes of Money Saving Expert explains why inthis article.It’s one of those things about Dave Ramsey that differs from country to country. In the US, I agree whole heartedly, but not in the UK.

The Dave Ramsey baby step 2 way is theDebt Snowball. I used this method along with 5 million other people, and I can tell you, it works. You list all your debts from smallest to largest, then start by paying off the smallest.

Once the smallest is paid off, your going to take that minimum payment and add it to the next smallest, and keep going until you’re debt free.

✅ Dave Ramsey UK Baby Step 3 – Save a fully funded emergency fund

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Baby Step 3 – Save 3-6 months worth of expenses.

You’re debt free (except the house) but not secure for the future. Dave Ramsey suggests 3-6 months of emergency fund and I think this is reasonable.

If you happen to have a particularly good redundancy package you could go for 3 months expenses.

The rest of us? 6 months is really where you want to aim for. This is scary. At least it was for us.

Most (all?) of my adult life I’ve been in debt of some sort. I’veneverhad any savings, so the thought of saving up SIX MONTHS worth of salary was huge. BUT…and I think this is really important, it’s 6 months of savings that would literally ensure you ate and had a roof over your head, rather than 6 months of living as you are now.

This is NOT the time to be including city breaks in your monthly budget or thinking about upgrading your car.

This is the Bare Bones of expenses. Use our budgeting sheet here to figure out what the VERY least you could survive the month on would be. For us, it was about half our monthly income (remember you’ve got no debts to repay now!).

✅ Dave Ramsey UK Baby Step 4 – Invest in your pension

  • Invest 15% of household income for retirement. Not started saving for retirement yet? Now’s the time! You’re debt free, you’ve got surplus money from not having to make the debt repayments, so here’s where you start to build up your retirement fund. You’re going to be relying on the power of compounding and that needs time which is why Dave says to do this NOW!

✅ Dave Ramsey UK Baby Step 5 – Save for your children’s education

Save for children’s college (optional if in the UK) – we didn’t do this. See above!

✅ Dave Ramsey UK Baby Step 6 – Pay off your mortgage

Pay off your home early through overpayments – we’re not here yet. This is the dream :)

✅ Dave Ramsey UK Baby Step 7 – Invest & give

This is the stage where you’re totally debt free with a fully funded emergency fund to see you through any tough times. Invest? For sure. Give? Yep….Dave Ramsey does this through the church…if that’s not really your thing, there are lots of other ways to give back to your community!

FREE 12 month simple budget planner

GRAB YOURS HERE

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✅ Free Dave Ramsey UK Printable’s

We used these printable’s on our debt free journey and know they’re really helpful

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We called this one our Bare Bones budget sheet simply because we’d stripped everything right back to basics so we could save as much as we possibly could.

We found that so many of the things we thought were ‘essentials’ just were not. It was about being honest with ourselves and actually asking the question…”what will happen if we don’t have this?”. The answer? Nine times out of ten, nothing was going to happen!!

I’ll be upfront about this….i’m not one for colouring! But…..I do see the positives in a simple progress tracker, so this honeycomb one came everywhere with me, tucked away on the inside of my weekly planner, reminding me when I needed it that we WERE making progress no matter what it felt like. I just didn’t want it on the fridge :)

P.S There are approximately 200 honeycombs!

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✅ Top 5 Tips For Success with Dave Ramsey’s UK Debt Free Method

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1. Use the cash envelope method to budget

Using cash to budget means you’ve accounted for every penny, and know where you are for the month.

Before you get paid, write out a budget and give every penny a home, so set aside money for food, bills, entertainment, fuel etc… and once this is done, and you know you’ve got enough to last, don’t spend a penny more!

You’re FAR less likely to overspend if you know where every penny is going. Read our post on cash budgeting here to get started!

2. Earn more money

Seems easy when you put it like that right? Well…it’s actually not as hard as it first seems.

We don’t all have thousands to throw at our debts when we’re in baby step 2, but there are lots of ways to bring in a little extra cash when you need it.

Have a look through our posts on making extra money to get some ideas to boost your income!

3. Pack your own lunch

Taking your own lunch to work five days a week can save upwards of £780 a year, and that’s if you only spend £3 a day on lunch. Lots of us spend a lot more than this!

Make a little extra dinner and have the leftovers for lunch the following day. Likely to be healthier, it’s a win win situation!

4. Stop buying coffee out

I don’t mean always, no. I’m a big coffee fan here and I LOVE going to sit quietly in a coffee shop…just not everyday!

Use discount vouchers when you can, use loyalty cards to get free coffee and simply cut back a bit!

Nero’s and Costa both have good loyalty schemes to get free coffees and McDonalds coffee is half the price of high street coffee shops, but is still ground coffee.

5. Buy preloved

Secondhand clothes, furniture and other bits and pieces are often as good as new for a fraction of the price.

Once you’re in the mindset of paying off your debts in Baby Step 2, paying over the odds for items becomes quite painful! Don’t go without though, go preloved instead!

✅ What’s Dave Ramsey’s baby step 1

Baby step 1 is where you gather £1000 as a small emergency fund to cover any unexpected expenses that arise before you’re debt free.

✅ What’s Dave Ramsey’s baby step 2

Baby step 2 is where you pay all your non mortgage debts off. So that’s credit card, loans, car payments, student loans, and anything else you owe, apart from your house.

✅ What’s Dave Ramsey’s baby step 3

Here’s where you save for you fully funded emergency fund. That’s going to be 3-6 month’s worth of expenses.

✅ What’s Dave Ramsey’s baby step 4

Investing for your retirement. 15% of your income (remember you have no debts to repay!) needs to go towards security in retirement.

✅ What’s Dave Ramsey’s baby step 5

Savings for your children, if you have any. This step is often skipped in the UK as we don’t have to pay upfront for college education.

✅ What’s Dave Ramsey’s baby step 6

Overpay your mortgage and get rid of your home-loan. The ultimate debt free goal….owing your home outright!

Need some more Dave Ramsey inspiration?

(and here’s our post on exactly how WE’RE going to save a Million!)

And if you’re still wondering if being financially free can really change your life, Eileen, from blog Your Money Sorted, has a pretty awesome post here that might just convince you!

Do you have any other tips you think might be helpful to other people? Share them in the comments below :)

Dave Ramsey's Baby Steps - The UK Version - Debt Free Family (15)
Dave Ramsey's Baby Steps - The UK Version - Debt Free Family (16)

Previous posts you might like

Questions about the baby steps? Leave me a comment below and I’ll do my best to help you!

Dave Ramsey's Baby Steps - The UK Version - Debt Free Family (2024)

FAQs

What is the Dave Ramsey debt plan? ›

The debt snowball method is a debt-reduction strategy where you pay off debt in order of smallest balance to largest balance, gaining momentum as you knock out each balance. When the smallest debt is paid in full, you roll the minimum payment you were making on that debt into the next-smallest debt payment.

What are the debt free baby steps? ›

You can too!
  • Save $1,000 for Your Starter Emergency Fund.
  • Pay Off All Debt (Except the House) Using the Debt Snowball.
  • Save 3–6 Months of Expenses in a Fully Funded Emergency Fund.
  • Invest 15% of Your Household Income in Retirement.
  • Save for Your Children's College Fund.
  • Pay Off Your Home Early.
  • Build Wealth and Give.

Why doesn t Dave Ramsey like debt? ›

Ramsey has made it clear that he doesn't think there's ever a reason to borrow because of the financial danger that being in debt presents. "Debt always equals risk, and it's always dumb," he said.

What are Dave Ramsey's 7 baby steps in order? ›

Dave Ramsey's post
  • Put $1,000 in a beginner emergency fund.
  • Pay off all debt using the debt snowball.
  • Put 3–6 months of expenses into savings as a full. emergency fund.
  • Invest 15% of your household income for retirement.
  • Begin college funding for your kids.
  • Pay off your home early.
  • Build wealth and give generously.
Mar 19, 2024

How to pay off $10,000 credit card debt? ›

7 ways to pay off $10,000 in credit card debt
  1. Opt for debt relief. One powerful approach to managing and reducing your credit card debt is with the help of debt relief companies. ...
  2. Use the snowball or avalanche method. ...
  3. Find ways to increase your income. ...
  4. Cut unnecessary expenses. ...
  5. Seek credit counseling. ...
  6. Use financial windfalls.
Feb 15, 2024

What debt should I pay off first Dave Ramsey? ›

With the debt avalanche method, you order your debts by interest rate, with the highest interest rate first. You pay minimum payments on everything while attacking the debt with the highest interest rate. Once that debt is paid off, you move to the one with the next-highest interest rate . . .

What is the difference between total money makeover and baby steps? ›

What The Total Money Makeover is for paying off debt and living on a budget, Baby Steps Millionaires is for building wealth. In Baby Steps Millionaires, Dave lays out the step-by-step plan to understand what it takes to become a millionaire.

How much should you have in Dave Ramsey's baby Step Number 1? ›

Baby Step 1: Save $1,000 for Your Starter Emergency Fund

In this first step, your goal is to save $1,000 as fast as you can. Your emergency fund will cover those unexpected life events you can't plan for.

What is baby Step 3 on Dave Ramsey's plan? ›

Baby Step 3: Ramsey's third step is to save three to six months of expenses in an emergency fund. The goal here is to beef up your savings so that you can withstand unexpected events that may come your way – such as a job loss, per Kamel.

Why did Dave Ramsey lose everything? ›

Debt caused us, over the course of two and a half years of fighting it, to lose everything,” Ramsey says. “If we had to do it again, we would learn from the wisdom of others who have been through it.” Ramsey decided to share what he'd learned—and his money-management empire was born.

How to pay off $20,000 in debt? ›

If you have $20,000 in credit card debt that you need to pay off in three years or less, you have multiple options to consider, including:
  1. Take advantage of a debt relief service.
  2. Consolidate your debt with a home equity loan.
  3. Take advantage of 0% balance transfer credit cards.
Feb 15, 2024

What is a millionaire's best friend? ›

It may sound like an intimidating term, but it really isn't once you know what it means. Here's a little secret: compound interest is a millionaire's best friend. It's really free money.

How much should my mortgage be Dave Ramsey? ›

We recommend keeping your mortgage payment to 25% or less of your monthly take-home pay. For example, if you bring home $5,000 a month, your monthly mortgage payment should be no more than $1,250.

What are Dave Ramsey's five rules? ›

Dave Ramsey: Follow These 5 Rules That Lead to Wealth '100% of the Time'
  • Get on a Written Budget. Ramsey advised to first make a written plan. ...
  • Get Out of Debt. ...
  • Foster High-Quality Relationships. ...
  • Save and Invest. ...
  • Be Generous.
Feb 22, 2024

How much do I need to retire? ›

Most people need around 70% of their take home pay to maintain their current lifestyle in retirement. Each person's retirement plan is different. It will depend on when you want to retire, what you're going to do in retirement and where you live.

Is there such a thing as good debt Dave Ramsey? ›

Mortgages are considered good debt because not only does a home provide shelter but its value tends to appreciate over time. Same with student loan debt, as it can be considered an investment in one's future income prospects. Ramsey, however, tries to avoid debt altogether.

What is Dave's plan for getting out of debt called? ›

Dave Ramsey says most people get out of debt in two years using the debt snowball method. With the debt snowball, you prioritize paying off your smallest debts first. The debt snowball is a good option, but if you have a high credit score, debt consolidation will save you more money.

What are the 4 Dave Ramsey funds? ›

And to go one step further, we recommend dividing your mutual fund investments equally between four types of funds: growth and income, growth, aggressive growth, and international.

How to pay down $100,000 in debt? ›

How To Eliminate $100,000 of Debt
  1. Recognize You Have a Big Problem on Your Hands. ...
  2. Make a Plan. ...
  3. List Out All Your Debts. ...
  4. Create a Hard Budget. ...
  5. Focus On Paying Off Debts With the Highest Interest Rates First. ...
  6. Don't Skimp On an Emergency Fund. ...
  7. Get a Personal Loan To Consolidate Debt. ...
  8. Consider Debt Resolution (Settlement)
Feb 15, 2024

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