Debt Management
Advice on How To Manage Your
Debt
The first step to handling excessive debt is to
focus on the real facts. This site provides you with debt
advice, that could help you to get out of your debt.This
can be achieved by finding out how much you actually
owe and what is the monthly payments and interest costs on
the outstanding amounts, in short your debt consolidation
information.
It's surprising, though maybe it shouldn't be, how many
people that are troubled by debt problems, don't actually know
how much monthly interest they're paying. Part of the problem
may be that they really don't want to know. Considering how
much it sometimes is, one can hardly blame them.
But the first step back to financial health is a good
diagnosis. If you're paying $200 per month in interest charges
alone on a monthly net income, say, of $4,000, then you are
paying 5% PER MONTH of your income for essentially nothing.
It's not entirely nothing, since you are enjoying the things
you bought early. You would have had to save to purchase them
outright. But is that worth 5% of your income?
When that $200 a month (and for many, it's much more)
becomes the total you can pay each month, you have reached a
point where you will never pay off the debt. If all the money
is going to interest none is going to principle. That may be an
extreme case, but consider how much of the monthly payment in
your circumstances goes for interest versus repayment of
principle.
Suppose it's 90% interest, 10% principle. That's
approximately the case for the average home loan for the first several
years. You can use an online calculator to see how long that
will take in your situation.
Suppose, for example, you owe $10,000 at 7%. You could pay
only $116 per month, but it would take you 10 years to pay it
off. The interest would cost you $3,933 - almost 40% of the
total amount.
Now that you've seen your situation, you need to take two
further steps. Develop a
budget that will allow you to make payments as large as you
can handle to get the bills paid off. You could use the
'snowball method'
and pay off the smallest one first. Then apply what you were
paying to the smallest to the next smallest (now the
smallest), until you've reached the end.
Alternatively you could pay down the largest bill. That
would save you the most in interest charges, but it's hard for
many people to stick to it, when they see such slow
progress.
Now, for the hardest - and most important - step (which
should be carried out simultaneously with the first): stop
borrowing. You should not allow yourself to incur any further
debt until you have paid the first down to a reasonable level.
That level is zero for credit card junkies. For others, it may
be in the 5% range. For some with good willpower and are
willing to eat the overhead, 20% is the maximum.
Facing reality and making a commitment to long-term change
are the two hardest things for anyone who has entered
financially turbulent waters to do. But they are the bare
minimum required, if you want to recover your financial health
and independence.
|