What Would Robert Kiyosaki Say?
The Rich Dad Poor Dad author only cares about one column: assets that put money IN your pocket. See your passive-income ratio and how far you are from leaving the rat race.
The road out of the rat race
If you keep investing at your current pace, when does passive income cover your expenses?
What he'd have you do next
In order. Straight from the philosophy.
The rules this tool applies
The Rich Dad definitions
An asset puts money in your pocket; a liability takes money out. By his definition your home and car are liabilities โ provocative on purpose, and plenty of planners disagree (home equity is real net worth; see the net worth calculator). You leave the rat race when passive income exceeds expenses.
The Cashflow Quadrant
E (employee) and S (self-employed) trade time for money; B (business owner) and I (investor) own systems and assets that earn without them. The score here reflects your passive-income ratio and how much of your wealth sits in the income-producing column.
A grain of salt
Kiyosaki is a polarizing figure whose predictions frequently miss. This tool applies the useful core of his framework โ cash-flowing assets and financial literacy โ as education, not endorsement.
The fine print
This is an educational parody applying Robert Kiyosaki's well-documented public philosophy to your numbers. All verdict lines are paraphrases in his style โ not real quotes. Not affiliated with or endorsed by Robert Kiyosaki. For actual advice, talk to a licensed professional.