5 ways to pay off your credit cards

So, another Christmas season has come and gone and for many of us, that means dealing with the upcoming credit card statements and figuring how to pay off the debt. The worst thing you can do financially is carry credit card debt especially debt that is costing you 18 to 28%. Christmas is fun because it is the season for giving but remember, the bills will still be there long after the thrill of giving and receiving has gone.

In today’s world almost everyone uses credit but most people get little to no training on budgeting, saving money or using credit wisely. Hear are some strategies to get out of credit card debt:

1. Pay more than the minimum. Most credit cards require a minimum payment of 3% of the outstanding balance. Paying the minimum only prolongs the agony. Quite frankly that’s exactly what the banks want you to do. If you carry a $1000 balance on your credit card at 28.8% interest, your minimum payment is $30 per month. At that rate, it would take you 68 months (over 5 years) to pay off that $1000 balance and you would pay about $1040 of interest on a $1000 debt. That’s crazy! If you double up the minimum payment to $60 per month, .you will have the debt paid off on only 22 month and your total interest would be less than $300. That’s over $700 of interest saved on a $1000 credit card debt. Pay down your credit card debt as much as possible or best yet, pay it off every month.

2. Consolidate your debt to a lower interest rate. According to Tricia French, Financial Cousellor for SISIP Financial Services, “There are really only two ways to get out of debt; pay it down as fast as you can and find credit at the lowest interest rate.” One of the ways to get a lower interest rate is to consolidate your loan into one lower rate. The best option rate if you have good credit is a line of credit because it usually has the lowest. Let’s say you have $10,000 of credit card debt from various credit cards and on average you are paying 15% in interest. Your minimum monthly payment on that debt would total $300 per month. Of that $300 in payment, $125 would go to interest and $175 would go to principal. If you consolidated that debt into a line of credit at 8% and continued to pay the same $300 per month in payments, the interest portion would only be $67 per month which means $233 would go towards principal.

3. Pay the highest interest first. For some people, debt has become so overwhelming that consolidation is not an option. In that case, it’s time to get really serious and start attacking the highest interest debt first. The math on this strategy is really simple, higher interest rates means more money in the banks pockets. Pay high interest first. Once a card is paid off, don’t run it up again. A credit card with a zero balance can often be a temptation to spend. To avoid the urge, stash it away, lower your credit limit or better yet, cut up the card.

4. Switch to low interest rate credit cards. If you are carrying a balance on your card of more than $1000 it makes sense to ask your lender about switching to their low rate card. Despite the annual fee, you will save interest and speed up your repayment. If you plan to pay your balance in full each month once you’ve got your card paid off, then you can switch back to the standard card and save the annual fee.

5. Cash out your savings accounts. Often people keep money in savings accounts or money markets earning as high as 4%. If you have debt even as low as 6%, you are much better off using money earning 4% to save interest on money that is costing you more than 6%.

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Written by Jim Yih

Jim Yih is a Fee Only Advisor, Best Selling Author, and Financial Speaker on wealth, retirement and personal finance. Currently, Jim specializes in putting Financial Education programs into the workplace. For more information you can follow him on Twitter @JimYih or visit his other websites Group Benefits Online and Advisor Think Box.

3 Responses to 5 ways to pay off your credit cards
  1. Strategies to Manage your debt
    July 17, 2011 | 11:48 pm

    [...] Are you at or near the limit on most of your credit cards? [...]

  2. Financial Routines for Financial Success
    September 5, 2011 | 1:54 am

    [...] Cut up the credit card is an example of a strategy to break the old routine.  We live in a society where it is so easy to spend money we do not have.  Cutting up the credit cards may help to reinforce this common problem of overspending. [...]

  3. [...] for paying back on time. They try to teach you good spending habits early on.      The credit card companies have put us through so much over the past few years. We have suffered slas…plastic once and for all. What is it even worth; really, we seem to ask ourselves often. Come to [...]

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