Dave Ramsey has shaped more American insurance decisions than most licensed agents ever will. His radio show reaches roughly 18 million listeners per week, and when it comes to insurance, he does not equivocate. He tells his audience what to buy, what to skip, and how much to carry. Most of his advice is sound. Some of it needs a local adjustment before you follow it.
The Deductible Rule
Ramsey tells anyone with a fully funded emergency fund to raise their auto deductible to $1,000. The reasoning is simple: a higher deductible lowers your premium, and if you have cash reserves, you can absorb the hit. According to the Insurance Information Institute, raising a deductible from $250 to $1,000 can reduce collision and comprehensive premiums by 15% to 30%. For a family paying $2,400 per year, that is $360 to $720 in annual savings.
The caveat is that Ramsey assumes you actually have the emergency fund. Many listeners hear the advice and apply it immediately, regardless of where they are in his “Baby Steps” framework. A $1,000 deductible without $1,000 in savings is not a smart trade.
Liability Limits: Where He Is Most Right
Ramsey has called state minimum liability limits “insane” and “lawsuit bait.” He is correct. Arizona, for example, requires just 25/50/15. If you cause an accident that sends someone to the hospital, a $25,000 limit will be gone before the first surgery. Ramsey recommends 500/1000 or the maximum available. The incremental cost of going from state minimum to 250/500 is often only $200 to $400 per year, because the probability of a catastrophic claim is low even though the consequences are devastating.
For families with teen drivers, this advice is especially important. The combination of an inexperienced driver and inadequate liability coverage creates significant financial exposure. Understanding how teen drivers affect your household policy is essential before applying any blanket rules.
Term Life: His Longest-Running Crusade
Ramsey calls whole life insurance “the worst financial product in America”. His position: buy a 20-year term policy at 10 to 12 times your annual income, and invest the premium difference in growth stock mutual funds. Whole life cash values typically grow at 1.5% to 3.5% annually.Â
Long-term equity returns have historically averaged 10% to 12%. Over 20 years, the gap is enormous. For high-net-worth individuals dealing with estate planning, whole life has legitimate uses. However, for Ramsey’s core audience of middle-class families paying off mortgages and building retirement accounts, the term-plus-investing approach is almost certainly the better path.
One of his most underappreciated recommendations: both spouses need coverage, even if one does not earn income. The replacement cost of a stay-at-home parent, including childcare, household management, and transportation, can exceed $40,000 to $60,000 per year. A $500,000 term policy on a non-earning spouse often costs under $300 annually. It is one of the most cost-effective risk transfers available.
Where the National Advice Needs Local Adjustment
This is the gap that Ramsey’s format cannot easily close. Insurance is a state-regulated product, and the differences are not trivial. Liability minimums vary from Florida’s notoriously low requirements to Alaska’s higher thresholds. No-fault states like Michigan and New York have entirely different liability structures than tort states like Arizona and Texas.
His deductible advice interacts differently across state markets. In states with high average premiums like Michigan and Louisiana, a $1,000 deductible saves more in absolute dollars. In states with lower premiums like Maine and Idaho, the savings may be modest enough that the risk tradeoff is less compelling.
Endnote
Ramsey’s insurance framework is directionally right for the vast majority of families. His emphasis on high liability limits, term life, guaranteed replacement cost on homeowners policies, and disciplined deductible management reflects sound insurance principles translated into language that normal people can act on. The gap is in the details, which depend on your state, your household, and your stage of life. The framework is the starting point, not the finish line.
This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute insurance advice. Coverage requirements, rates, and availability vary by state and insurer. Consult a licensed insurance professional for guidance specific to your situation.







