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Pay it Back Strategically.
When you’re paying back debts, a little strategy can make a difference of
hundreds or even thousands of dollars. The best strategy is simple, but
effective.
List Your Debts.
Write down a list of every debt you have, how much it is, and what the interest
rate is. You might have trouble finding this information, but it’s worth getting
it all together in one place and write it down. You can’t manage your situation
strategically if you don’t even know it, can you?
Remember to include your credit cards (with the different rates and balances for
purchases and cash advances), other cards, loans, mortgages, and even money
you’ve borrowed from friends and family. Every bit of debt counts, and you’re
trying to get it down to absolute zero.
Bad Debts and Good Debts.
Go through your debts and mark them ‘good’ or ‘bad’. You might think this is
odd, but some kinds of debt are nowhere near as bad as others. A mortgage, for
example, is an investment in a house, paid over a fixed term – there’s no real
risk of paying a ridiculous amount of interest or never getting it paid off,
like you could with a credit card.
Good debts: mortgages, student loans, car loans.
Bad debts: credit cards, store cards.
As a rule, good debts are for a fixed amount of time and allow you to buy
something valuable that you cannot afford, while bad debts are ‘revolving’ and
are just used instead of cash.
Time to Prioritise.
Cross your good debts off your list, for now – you shouldn’t think about paying
them off more quickly until you’ve got all your bad debts out of the way.
Now, arrange your debts in order of interest rate, with the highest interest
rate at the top. The chances are that the debt at the top will be a store card
or credit card, which could have a really huge interest rate. Try to transfer as
much money as you can from the high-interest cards down the list to the
lower-interest ones.
Once you’ve done that, focus all your energy on repaying the new top debt. Pay
the minimum on everything else, and throw as much money as you can find at the
problem. If you have any non-essential monthly commitments, consider cancelling
them for a while, and putting that money towards your payments. Stop saving,
just for a while. Try keeping track of where your money goes, just for a month –
you might find that you’re spending loads on something you don’t even want or
need.
Do your best to give up any expensive habits you might have. You’ll be shocked
how fast your debts can go down if you put the money you’d usually spent on
smoking, drinking or gambling towards them! I’m not trying to spoil your fun
here. You’re just making some small sacrifices for a while, and your life will
be so much better for it in the long run.
You have to be aggressive against that top debt, and determined to defeat it.
This is a war, you’re on the attack, and you want to win against your debt.
Don’t you?
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