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9 Ways to Pay
It Off
You can throw the reminders in the Cuisinart
or chuck them into a garbage can, but that won't make the
debt go away. Debt hovers like a carrion bird over a dying
beast, costing you more than 18% compounded monthly, month
in and month out. You can't wish it away. But you can pay
it down with determination, our free How To Get Out of Debt
online guide, and the good graces of a few wealthy relatives
(see tip No. 5). Here are nine ways to get out of debt:
1. Pay more than the minimum
First, break the habit of only paying the minimum required
each month. Paying the minimum -- usually 2% to 3% of the
outstanding balance -- only prolongs the agony. Besides, it's
precisely what the banks want you to do. The longer you take
to repay the charges, the more interest they make, and the
less cash you have in your pocket. Don't play their selfish
game.
Instead, bite the bullet and pay as much as
you can each month. If your minimum payment is $100, double
that to $200 or more. Examine your normal expenses -- you
can find the money. (For a gazillion ideas, check out our
Living Below Your Means discussion board.) Skip eating out
at lunch, and bring it from home instead. Eliminate desserts.
Give up happy hour. We all have "luxuries," and
you know what yours are.
Make a few sacrifices, and you will find the
extra dollars needed to increase your debt repayments dramatically.
Those increased payments will save you hundreds, if not thousands,
in interest payments. Plus, you will get out of the hole you've
dug for yourself much more quickly. Is it fun? No. But it
sure beats living a hand-to-mouth existence, fearing bills
each month.
2. Snowball your debt payments
Take a long, hard look at all your credit cards. Pay particular
attention to the one with the lowest interest rate. Have you
reached the maximum limit on that card? If not, consider transferring
a higher interest bill to that one. Many credit cards permit
this, and it's positively Foolish to trade an 18% debt for
one at 12% at any time.
If your entire balance is too large to fit
on one low-interest rate card, pay at least the minimum amounts
due on all of your cards except one. Funnel the majority of
your debt repayments into that one credit card, and pay it
off as quickly as possible. When the balance on that card
reaches zero, move on to the next with the same aggressive
repayment plan.
Lather, rinse, and repeat. This method of snowballing
your payments is aptly called "snowballing." As
your debts decrease, the amount of money you have to attack
them increases. Your payments snowball until all of your debt
is pummeled. Pretty neat, eh?
Another way to transfer higher interest debt
to a lower-interest card is to take advantage of the promotional
offers many banks use to entice you to their line of credit.
You've seen the come-ons. "Transfer all your credit card
balances to us, and pay just 5.9% until January 1, 2003."
It could be worth it. Moving to 5.9% from 18% interest could
mean substantial dollars to you. And the money saved in interest
could then be applied toward the principal each month, thus
reducing your outstanding debt balance even further. (For
more on how to take advantage of balance-transfer offers,
head to step 2 of our free How To Get Out of Debt online guide.)
Take care, though, before you act. Examine
the offer closely. Look for the hooks. Will the interest rate
after the introductory period be higher than you're paying
now? If so, you may have to switch again at that time. That,
in turn, could give rise to another surprise. Banks have caught
on to the charge card hoppers who switch from card to card
to take advantage of the low introductory rates. Many of these
offers now stipulate that if you transfer balances from the
new card within a 12-month period, the normal interest rate
will be applied to all outstanding balances retroactively.
That proviso could be a bitter pill to swallow for someone
short on cash, and it certainly doesn't help the debt repayment
schedule. Read the fine print, Fool.
Article continued at http://www.fool.com/ccc/debt/debt03.htm
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