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A Dentist’s Take on Dave Ramsey’s Baby Steps

A Dentist’s Take on Dave Ramsey’s Baby Steps

4/29/2026 4:10:28 PM   |   Comments: 0   |   Views: 112

I followed Dave Ramsey’s Baby Steps when I got out of dental school, and they changed my financial life.

That’s not an exaggeration. I graduated as a periodontist at 30 years old with over $300,000 in student loan debt and zero financial education. Nobody taught me about money in school. Nobody explained debt, investing, or wealth building. Dave Ramsey was one of the first voices that made personal finance feel clear, actionable, and achievable.

But here’s what I’ve learned after years of practicing dentistry, paying off debt, investing in real estate syndications, and building passive income outside of clinical work: the Baby Steps are an outstanding starting point for most Americans. They’re not the complete roadmap for high-income professionals who want to achieve work-optional status faster.

In this article, I’m going to walk through all seven Baby Steps, share exactly what I did, what I changed, and why high earners like doctors and dentists may need to adapt this framework to match their unique financial situation.


 

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What Are the Dave Ramsey Baby Steps?

Before getting into my take on each step, here’s a quick breakdown of the full framework.

Dave Ramsey designed the Baby Steps as a sequential, debt-first approach to financial independence. The idea is that you complete each step before moving to the next, creating momentum and discipline as you go.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   
StepGoal
Baby Step 1Save $1,000 for a starter emergency fund
Baby Step 2Pay off all debt except the mortgage using the debt snowball method
Baby Step 3Save 3 to 6 months of expenses in a fully funded emergency fund
Baby Step 4Invest 15% of household income into retirement
Baby Step 5Save for your children’s college fund
Baby Step 6Pay off your home early
Baby Step 7Build wealth and give generously
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It’s a clean, logical framework. And for the vast majority of Americans who are living paycheck to paycheck with little to no financial education, it’s genuinely life-changing advice. That’s exactly the audience Ramsey built this for.

The challenge is that doctors and dentists aren’t the average American. Our income is higher, our debt is larger, and our financial decisions are more complex. What works brilliantly for someone earning $60,000 a year with credit card debt doesn’t always translate perfectly to a physician earning $400,000 a year with $300,000 in student loans and a practice to run.

Here’s my honest step-by-step review.

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

My take: Follow this one exactly as written.

This step is about behavior change more than the dollar amount. Saving $1,000 before doing anything else builds the habit of setting money aside and creates a small psychological safety net that keeps you from going further into debt when something unexpected happens.

When I got out of school, I had essentially nothing saved. Starting with $1,000 felt achievable even with a mountain of student debt staring me down. I kept mine in a separate Vanguard Money Market account, so it wasn’t sitting in my regular checking account, where it was easy to spend.

The key is that this isn’t your full emergency fund. It’s a temporary buffer to hold you while you attack your debt in Step 2.

Don’t overthink it.

Hit $1,000 and keep moving…

Baby Step 2: Pay Off All Debt Using the Debt Snowball Method

My take: Great for behavior change, but high earners may want to adjust.

The debt snowball method means paying off your smallest debt first, regardless of interest rate, then rolling that payment to the next smallest, and so on. The psychological momentum of eliminating individual debts keeps you motivated.

Ramsey’s audience is largely people who have struggled with financial discipline for years. For them, the psychological win matters more than the mathematical optimization. And I respect that approach completely. Behavior change is more important than perfection when you’re starting from zero financial literacy.

For high-income earners, though, I’d consider a hybrid approach. Pay the minimums on everything, attack the highest-interest-rate debt first to minimize total interest paid, but don’t ignore the motivational benefits of clearing smaller balances quickly when it makes sense.

What I Did

I used a version of the debt snowball to eliminate my student loans. It took discipline and years of sacrifice, but watching those balances drop to zero was one of the most freeing experiences of my financial life.

The Ramsey framework gave me the structure I needed to stay focused when I could have been spending that money on lifestyle upgrades.

Baby Step 3: Build a Fully Funded Emergency Fund of 3 to 6 Months

My take: Follow the principle, but customize the amount to your situation.

Once your debt is gone, Ramsey says to build your emergency fund up to cover 3 to 6 months of living expenses. This is where I deviate slightly from the standard advice.

As a dentist with a stable practice income, I’ve always felt comfortable with a larger cushion than the minimum. I keep closer to 18 months of living expenses in liquid savings. That might sound excessive to some people, but after a ski trip wrist injury nearly took away my ability to work, I learned firsthand what it feels like to realize your entire income depends on your physical ability to show up.

That experience changed how I think about financial security forever.

How to Calculate Your Emergency Fund

Track your monthly expenses across:

        
  • housing
  •     
  • food
  •     
  • transportation
  •     
  • utilities
  •     
  • insurance

Multiply that monthly total by the number of months you want covered. Then build toward that number systematically.

The right emergency fund size depends on your job stability, how easily you could generate income in other ways, your family situation, and your personal risk tolerance.

Three months is the floor.

More is rarely a bad idea.

Baby Step 4: Invest 15% of Household Income into Retirement

My take: 15% is the floor for high earners, not the target.

Ramsey recommends putting 15% of your household income into retirement accounts like 401(k)s and IRAs. For most Americans, this is a stretch goal that requires real discipline to hit.

For high-income professionals, 15% is where you start, not where you stop.

What High Earners Should Do Differently

First, maximize every tax-advantaged account available to you. If your practice offers a 401(k), max it out. Consider adding a cash balance plan if you want to shelter even more income before taxes. Contribute to a backdoor Roth IRA if your income exceeds the direct contribution limits.

Second, don’t stop at retirement accounts. This is where my approach diverges most significantly from Ramsey’s framework. Retirement accounts alone won’t get most doctors to work-optional status before their mid-60s.

After my wrist injury wake-up call, I started investing in mobile home park syndications through Perdido Capital. These investments generate passive income that isn’t tied to my ability to see patients.

That passive income is now a meaningful part of my financial picture, and it’s the kind of income that continues whether I’m in the office or not.

Why Passive Income Matters for Doctors

The fundamental problem with relying solely on retirement accounts is that all the money is locked away until traditional retirement age. If you want to work less, take time off, or transition out of clinical work before 65, you need income-producing assets outside of those accounts.

Real estate syndications, dividend investments, and other passive income streams fill that gap in a way that 401(k) contributions alone never can.

Baby Step 5: Save for Your Children’s College Fund

My take: 529 plans are a solid tool, but not the only option.

Ramsey recommends using Education Savings Accounts (ESAs) and 529 plans for college savings. Both are legitimate tax-advantaged options, and I’ve used 529 plans for my own kids.

That said, with hindsight, I’d consider splitting college savings between a 529 plan and passive income investments. Both of my boys ended up earning scholarships, and the college costs were largely covered. Money sitting in a 529 plan that isn’t used for education comes with restrictions on how it can be deployed.

Passive income investments would have offered more flexibility, and the process of setting them up would have given my kids a firsthand look at real estate investing that no textbook could replicate.

Teaching your children about money through real action is one of the most valuable things a parent can do.

Baby Step 6: Pay Off Your Home Early

My take: A personal decision that depends on your goals and rate of return.

Paying off the mortgage gives you peace of mind and eliminates a major monthly obligation. I paid off our first home, and the feeling of owning it outright was genuinely satisfying.

But I also realized in retrospect that the capital I used to accelerate that payoff could have been deployed into income-producing real estate investments at a higher return than my mortgage interest rate. That’s not a criticism of Ramsey’s advice. It’s a recognition that the math looks different for people who have other investment options available.

The right answer here comes down to your interest rate, your investment alternatives, your risk tolerance, and what financial security means to you personally. There’s no single correct answer.

What I’d caution against is paying off a low-interest mortgage aggressively while missing out on passive income investments that could be building cash flow simultaneously.



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Baby Step 7: Build Wealth and Give Generously

My take: This is where the real work begins.

The final Baby Step is intentionally open-ended. Ramsey’s vision is that once you’ve eliminated debt, built your emergency fund, and started investing, you focus on building wealth and giving back.

I agree completely with the spirit of this step. Where my approach differs is in how I define wealth building.

For me, real wealth isn’t a number in a retirement account I can’t touch for 20 years. It’s passive or “owner” income that covers my living expenses and gives me the freedom to practice dentistry because I want to, not because I have to. That distinction matters enormously for how you feel about your work and your life.

Building wealth also means teaching the next generation. Getting my kids involved in understanding real estate, passive income, and investing early has been one of the most meaningful things I’ve done.

Financial literacy doesn’t come from school. It comes from conversations at home and exposure to how money actually works in the real world.

What Dave Ramsey Gets Right

It would be easy to focus only on where I’ve diverged from Ramsey’s framework and miss what he gets profoundly right.

The Baby Steps work because they address behavior first and math second. Most financial problems aren’t math problems. They’re behavior problems. Ramsey understands that, and his framework is designed accordingly. The structure, the sequential approach, and the psychological momentum built into the debt snowball are all features, not limitations.

For anyone starting from zero financial education, the Baby Steps remain one of the best frameworks available. I followed them, they worked, and I’d recommend them to any doctor or dentist who needs a starting point.

Where High Earners Need to Adapt

The limitations of the Baby Steps become clear when you apply them to a doctor or dentist’s specific financial situation.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  
Baby StepRamsey’s ApproachHigh Earner Adaptation
Step 2Debt snowball onlyHybrid approach targeting high-interest debt first
Step 33 to 6 months expensesConsider 12 to 18 months given income dependence on physical ability
Step 415% into retirement accountsMax retirement accounts plus passive income investments outside them
Step 5529 plans for college529 plus flexible passive income investments for education funding
Step 6Pay off home aggressivelyBalance payoff against passive income investment returns
Step 7Build wealth and give backBuild passive income that makes work optional, not just retirement wealth

The Bottom Line 

Dave Ramsey’s Baby Steps gave me a foundation I didn’t have coming out of dental school. The framework is clear, actionable, and designed to change behavior before it changes bank balances. For that it deserves enormous credit.

For those who want to achieve true financial freedom sooner than 65, the Baby Steps are a starting point, not the finish line. Layer in passive income investing, real estate syndications, and income-producing assets outside of retirement accounts, and you build something the Baby Steps alone can’t give you: the ability to practice medicine or dentistry because you love it, not because you need the paycheck.

That’s what work-optional actually means. And it’s within reach for every high-income professional who’s willing to go beyond step seven.

If you want to learn more about how doctors and dentists are building passive income alongside their clinical careers, check out the Passive Investors Circle.

Disclaimer: This is not financial or tax advice. Consult your financial advisor or accountant before making any financial decisions.


 
 

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