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Constant
Credit Card Payments
Are
you trapped into making only minimum payments on your credit
cards? I hope not.
Minimum
payments decline as the balance on the credit card declines.
Let's
take a credit card with a $2000 balance at 15% interest to use as
an example. You would expect to pay about a $40 (2%) monthly
payment when you start making your payments:
By
making the minimum payment only, it will take you 13 years and 11
months to pay off your credit card and you would expect to pay
$2,126 in interest.
However,
if you continued paying that $40 until the credit card was paid
off, it would only take you 6 years and 6 months to pay off the
credit card and you would pay about $1,100 in interest.
You
could save over $1,000 in interest and pay it off in half the
time. This is what simply starting with a set payment and
sticking to it could save. If you can afford that $40
payment when you start, odds are it won't hurt you later.
Now,
let's take that a step further. What if you paid just $10
more, $50 instead of $40?
That
same credit card could be paid off in 4 years and 7 months with
only $740 in interest.
Here
is how it breaks down:
Minimum
Payments - $4126 total payments - 13 years 11 months
Paying $40 per month - $3100 total payments - 6 years 6 months
Paying $50 per month - $2740 total payments - 4 years 7 months
The
fact is that every dollar you add to your payment goes toward the
balance of the credit card.
I
recently completed a Debt Elimination Summary for a couple that
had $46,500 in credit card debt on 6 credit cards. Most
people would be considering filing bankruptcy in that situation
but this couple were determined to pay
it off.
Here
are the results of the Summary:
They
were already paying $785 per month on the credit cards. They
decided they could afford to pay another $200 to eliminate their
debt sooner.
Minimum
Payments - The credit cards would never be paid off.
Paying $785 per month - $78,761 total payments - 8 years 5 months
Paying $985 per month - $66,059 total payments - 5 years 8 months
Would
you have thought that you could pay off over $46,000 in credit
card debt in just 5 years and 8 months? I've seen this done
dozens of times. It can and it does work if you stick to it
and quit using your credit cards.
If
you have multiple credit cards and would like to pay them off as
quickly as possible the best way to do this is to write down your
credit card name, balance, interest rate and minimum monthly
payment.
Then
you must decide which credit card to pay off first. There
are two schools of thought on this. Most experts believe
that you should pay off your highest interest credit card first.
You would definitely pay less in the long run.
However,
if you need to see results quick to give you an incentive to keep
going you could start with the credit card with the lowest
balance.
Which
ever way you choose, simply add as much money as you can spare to
that credit card until it is paid off. Then take the amount
you were paying to the first credit card and add it to the next
credit card payment and so on until they are all paid in full.
Interest,
late fees and penalties are wasted money. The only way to
avoid this is to use cash to make your purchases when ever you can
THIS CONTENT IS FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY. THIS IS IN NO
WAY GIVING ANY LEGAL ADVICE OR REPRESENTATION. THE INFORMATION
CONTAINED HEREIN WAS COMPILED FROM VARIOUS ARTICLES. FOR ANY LEGAL
ADVICE OR REPRESENTATION SEEK YOUR OWN LEGAL COUNSEL.
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