The post ‘You’re Gonna Go Into Retirement Broke and Wait on Mom to Die’: Dave Ramsey’s Reality Check for a Caller Eyeing His Inheritance appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A 58-year-old caller named Keith dialed into The Ramsey Show sounding less like a man planning his retirement and more like a man waiting on a will to be read. He owns three rental properties worth roughly $800,000, all free and clear, has $500,000 in retirement savings, and earns about $35,000 a year. What he really wanted to talk about was his sister burning through their mother’s money. In Keith’s words: "She’s running up her credit cards and my mom is willing to bail her out. It’s at least into the hundreds of thousands of dollars over the last 5 or 10 years. And so that’s really eating away at what should be coming to my inheritance, my kids’ inheritance."
Dave Ramsey was blunt. "You’re gonna go into retirement broke and wait on mom to die. This is not a good plan."
Ramsey’s response was a two-part reality check, and both parts hold up. First, Keith’s real estate is underperforming so badly it qualifies as a financial emergency. Second, a retirement plan must stand on its own assets, independent of any inheritance.
Start with the rentals. Ramsey’s first reaction: "You only make $35,000 on an $800,000 investment? That sucks." Even after Keith noted that one property is his personal residence and another is still being renovated, Ramsey held the line: "You’re going to be making a whole $45,000 on all of these apartments. That still sucks, man. Your rental rates are horrible for the money you’ve put into these things."
Gross rental yield is annual rent divided by property value. A healthy single-family rental in most U.S. markets targets roughly 6% to 8% gross yield. Net yield, after taxes, insurance, vacancy, and maintenance, typically lands two to three points lower.
Plug in Keith’s numbers. On an $800,000 portfolio producing $35,000 to $45,000 of total income, his gross yield is in the low single digits, and that figure includes his day job and a residence that produces no rent. Compare that against the 1.65% national average 12-month CD rate and the problem is clear: Keith is taking landlord risk for a return only modestly better than an FDIC-insured deposit. Ramsey said it plainly: "I love real estate. I own a bunch of real estate. I can’t imagine how mad I would be at myself if I bought into something that paid no more than that as a rate of return. That’s nothing. Horrible."
Meanwhile the broader housing market keeps moving. The Case-Shiller National Home Price Index stood at 329.9 in March 2026, sitting in the 70th percentile of its 12-month range. Owning appreciating assets is not the same as owning productive ones.
The second half of Ramsey’s response was about entitlement. Keith pegged the family estate at $1 to $2 million and treated the sister’s spending as theft from his future. Legally, it is not. Mom’s money is mom’s money, and she can leave it all to the sister, a charity, or a cat sanctuary.
Banking on an inheritance is one of the most fragile retirement assumptions there is. The money can be spent on long-term care. It can be redirected by a new spouse, a new will, or a serial enabler dynamic exactly like the one Keith described. And the timing is unknowable.
The single factor that determines whether Keith retires comfortably is whether his $800,000 of equity starts producing market-rate income. At a 6% net yield, that portfolio would throw off roughly $48,000 a year on top of his salary. At his current run rate, it produces a fraction of that.
Context matters here. Average annual household expenditures hit $78,535 in 2024, and the 2026 Social Security COLA came in at 2.8%, a modest bump that will not paper over an underperforming asset base.
A retirement plan rests on assets that earn their keep, not on the timing of a parent’s death.
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The post ‘You’re Gonna Go Into Retirement Broke and Wait on Mom to Die’: Dave Ramsey’s Reality Check for a Caller Eyeing His Inheritance appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


