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debt problem
5 Ways to Reduce Your Debt payment...
Here's just one reason to start managing your credit debt now: If you should ever not pay a credit card balance, that blotch stays on your record and can prevent you from getting a car loan, a mortgage or a plain old department store credit card. Using credit card counseling from credit consolidation companies can also reduce your debt payment.
(If you should ever declare bankruptcy, forget it -- it will be on your credit record and affect your credit rating for seven to ten years.)
Here are some things you should know about getting off the revolving credit
merry-go-round:
- Pay more than the minimum payment each month, if you ever hope to pay
off your debt payment.
You must also pay on time or a finance charge will be added onto the total,
creating a larger minimum payment for the next month -- and a larger finance
charge added to the total again if you don't pay it.
- Get a system for debt payment reduction.
You need your own deadline each month for paying bills. There are great
software programs for keeping track of your financial records (and even writing
checks). Quicken, by Intuit, is a popular money-management program. So is
Microsoft's Managing Your Money.
- Negotiate with credit card companies.
The amount of debt payment in this country has made creditors realize
that if they don't want people backing down from their obligations completely
(in other words, if they want to get any money back), they have to make deals,
like these:
Scenario One: You tell the company's collection department that you're having
financial difficulties and need to have your interest rate lowered, simple
as that. They say, ''What can you manage?'' You tell them. (I recently got
one account to lower my rate to 10 percent and cut off future finance charges.)
Scenario Two: A credit card company has offered to pay off all your old debt
payment at nine percent if you switch. Call your old companies and tell them
the deal you've been offered; ask if they can do better, and go with whichever
is lowest.
- If you have a limited budget for debt reduction, write letters to each
of your creditors acknowledging the situation, and tell each one when you
can begin repayment.
They'll appreciate your openness and likely be a lot nicer to you. You'll
get yourself some breathing space (something we all need when we're dug in
deep), and dealing rather than hiding will help boost your bruised self-esteem.
- If you have a limited budget for debt repayment, write down what you
can pay each creditor each month.
Here's a sample budget:
Say you owe a total of $1,000: $200 to the dentist, $400 to the doctor, and
$400 to the accountant who got you out of trouble with the IRS last year.
That means 40 percent of your debt is to the doctor, 40 percent is to the
accountant, and 20 percent is to the dentist. If you have $50 a month for
repaying debt, that means the doctor gets 40 percent of $50, which is $20,
as does the accountant. The dentist gets $10, or 20 percent of $50.
A final note on dealing with creditors: Keep your cool. It will make you feel better. And remember, some creditors have been taught to be mean and nasty.
Don't be intimidated. You have figured out a plan and are truly attempting to deal with your situation.
5 Ways to Reduce Your Debt payment...
Here's just one reason to start managing your credit debt now: If you should ever not pay a credit card balance, that blotch stays on your record and can prevent you from getting a car loan, a mortgage or a plain old department store credit card. Using credit card counseling from credit consolidation companies can also reduce your debt payment.
(If you should ever declare bankruptcy, forget it -- it will be on your credit record and affect your credit rating for seven to ten years.)
Here are some things you should know about getting off the revolving credit
merry-go-round:
- Pay more than the minimum payment each month, if you ever hope to pay
off your debt payment.
You must also pay on time or a finance charge will be added onto the total,
creating a larger minimum payment for the next month -- and a larger finance
charge added to the total again if you don't pay it.
- Get a system for debt payment reduction.
You need your own deadline each month for paying bills. There are great
software programs for keeping track of your financial records (and even writing
checks). Quicken, by Intuit, is a popular money-management program. So is
Microsoft's Managing Your Money.
- Negotiate with credit card companies.
The amount of debt payment in this country has made creditors realize
that if they don't want people backing down from their obligations completely
(in other words, if they want to get any money back), they have to make deals,
like these:
Scenario One: You tell the company's collection department that you're having
financial difficulties and need to have your interest rate lowered, simple
as that. They say, ''What can you manage?'' You tell them. (I recently got
one account to lower my rate to 10 percent and cut off future finance charges.)
Scenario Two: A credit card company has offered to pay off all your old debt
payment at nine percent if you switch. Call your old companies and tell them
the deal you've been offered; ask if they can do better, and go with whichever
is lowest.
- If you have a limited budget for debt reduction, write letters to each
of your creditors acknowledging the situation, and tell each one when you
can begin repayment.
They'll appreciate your openness and likely be a lot nicer to you. You'll
get yourself some breathing space (something we all need when we're dug in
deep), and dealing rather than hiding will help boost your bruised self-esteem.
- If you have a limited budget for debt repayment, write down what you
can pay each creditor each month.
Here's a sample budget:
Say you owe a total of $1,000: $200 to the dentist, $400 to the doctor, and
$400 to the accountant who got you out of trouble with the IRS last year.
That means 40 percent of your debt is to the doctor, 40 percent is to the
accountant, and 20 percent is to the dentist. If you have $50 a month for
repaying debt, that means the doctor gets 40 percent of $50, which is $20,
as does the accountant. The dentist gets $10, or 20 percent of $50.
A final note on dealing with creditors: Keep your cool. It will make you feel better. And remember, some creditors have been taught to be mean and nasty.
Don't be intimidated. You have figured out a plan and are truly attempting to deal with your situation.
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