Young, unmarried Pittsburgh couple wants to build a $700K home. The Ramsey Show warns they're hurtling toward being 'house poor'
- - Young, unmarried Pittsburgh couple wants to build a $700K home. The Ramsey Show warns they're hurtling toward being 'house poor'
Vawn HimmelsbachDecember 22, 2025 at 1:00 AM
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The Ramsey Show co-hosts Jade Warshaw and George Kamel speak with Joseph of Pittsburgh.
A 21-year-old Pittsburgh man and his girlfriend want to build a $700,000 home, despite both earning variable incomes.
âWe want to know if weâre way over our heads or if this is actually feasible,â Joseph told The Ramsey Show in a clip posted Dec. 3. (1)
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He says his girlfriend is an insurance agent who earns commission, and he runs his own company. In total, they bring in approximately $10,000 a month â but thatâs not guaranteed income. Theyâre looking to put down up to $130,000, plus a matching amount from her parents, on a house that hasnât even been built yet.
âNumbers aside, youâre in way over your heads,â co-host George Kamel said. âThereâs not even a ring on the finger and youâre going to sign up for a mortgage and put your names on a deed together?â
Hereâs why The Ramsey Show hosts warn Joseph not to âleapfrogâ into an upper-middle-class lifestyle long before their finances can support it â and what they should do instead to avoid becoming âhouse poor.â
When aspiration doesn't meet financial readiness
Pittsburgh was labelled the lowest-priced major housing market in the country in October by Realtor.com, with a median listing price of $250,000, more than $150,000 below the national median. (2) A $700,000 home in this market would most likely fit the bill of a luxury property â but is that achievable to the young couple?
A general rule of thumb to avoid becoming house poor is to keep your monthly household costs â including mortgage payments, property taxes, insurance and utilities â under 30% of your gross monthly income. You can calculate your debt-to-income ratio by adding up all of your debt payments and dividing that by your gross monthly income (multiply this number by 100 to get a percentage).
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Buying a $700,000 home with a $260,000 down payment (thanks in part to the girlfriendâs rich parents) and 30-year mortgage with a 6.5% interest rate would result in monthly mortgage payments of around $2,800. Payments for a 15-year mortgage would be around $3,800 monthly. This doesnât count property taxes, insurance or fees. Since Joseph and his girlfriend canât count on consistent incomes month-to-month, there may be stretches where housing becomes unaffordable.
âI love to plan. I love goals. But youâre setting yourself up in a situation where everything must go as planned for this to work out,â co-host Jade Warshaw said. And, even if everything does go to plan, they may be house poor for many years.
Grow into a lifestyle that matches your financial reality
Itâs possible that Joseph and his girlfriend wouldnât be able to get a loan to finance a $700,000 home. Lenders consider your income, debt and credit history, as well as the amount of your down payment, to determine if and how much theyâll loan you.
Even if they were able to fund a $700,000 home, a loan that leaves you house poor means youâre cash-strapped in other areas. If they have to use credit cards or take out loans to cover other expenses or emergencies, they could end up getting further and further into debt.
Joseph mentions he and his girlfriend want to start having kids in the next couple of years â adding enormous costs â and being house poor may mean theyâd have to delay those plans.
âWhy not get engaged, get married, rent together, save up on your own and then purchase a house or build when youâre financially ready?â Kamel proposed.
That would mean building an emergency fund (three to six monthsâ worth of income), growing their income substantially before considering a luxury property and renting or buying a more modest home in the meantime. They could then aim for a larger home once they can afford to put 20% down on a 15-year mortgage and ideally keep their housing costs under 30% of their take-home pay.
Kamel recommends that, instead of building a $700,000 home, the couple look for a more modestly priced home with a smaller mortgage they can âknock out quicklyâ and then upgrade their home over time.
âI would move real slow and realize you donât need the lifestyle that her parents have today at 21 years old. Itâs okay for it to take a while,â he said. âThatâs actually healthy.â
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Article sources
We rely only on vetted sources and credible third-party reporting. For details, see our editorial ethics and guidelines.
The Ramsey Show Highlights (1); Realtor.com (2)
This article provides information only and should not be construed as advice. It is provided without warranty of any kind.
Source: âAOL Moneyâ