| GreenPath Overview | How We Can Help | How We Are Different | Evaluate Your Options | When to Contact Us | Self Evaluation |
| |
|||||||||||
|
|||||||||||
|
|
Reducing
Debt 1.
Prioritize your debts. Debts are directly related to your ability to
survive such as mortgages or other secured loans like auto loans should take
first priority. If you default on these
kinds of loans, you can face foreclosure or repossession. If, for example, your car is repossessed, it
may affect your ability to work and adversely affect your income. Additionally, the car will be sold or
auctioned off. If the sale of the car
brings in less than you owe, you still have to pay the difference! In effect, you could be sitting on the bus
and still making car payments. 2.
Use cash for new purchases. Unless you pay off the entire balance every
month, you are probably paying interest on new purchases from the date of the
purchase. If you stop using your credit
cards all together, you will be able to reduce your debt more quickly. Because of compounded daily interest, it is
far better to use cash for the things you need and adjust your budget to accommodate
those expenses than to use credit cards and then struggle to send large
payments. 3.
Set your own payment.
Establish a budget and a tracking system for your income and
expenses. Then you will know how much
money you have available for credit payments.
This amount must be more than the creditor's minimum payment. Once you have established amounts for each
creditor, send your payments in regularly.
When smaller balances are paid off, apply that money toward increasing
the payments to your other creditors. 4.
Pay more than the minimum amount due. When you compare the finance charge column
and the minimum payment column, you realize that most of your payment is going
toward interest and little goes toward the principle. When you increase your payment, the
additional funds are applied directly toward the principle. Years of payments and thousands of dollars
can be cut from the life of a debt simply by adding a few dollars to the
payment. For example, if your minimum payment is $25 and $19 dollars are going to pay
interest, that leaves only $6 for the principle. If you increase your payment to $31 this
month, it is like making two months payments toward the principle-essentially
doubling your payment. The more you increases your payment, the less you will ultimately have to
pay.
5.
Pay off higher interest rate cards first. Dedicate more money toward higher interest
rate cards because you will ultimately save in interest. It is better to owe $100 on an account that
has an APR of 14% than to owe $50 to one at 14% and $50 to another at 19%. Note if there are cash advances on any
accounts. Cash advances usually command
higher interest rates than balances on purchases. Usually, your creditor will divide the
payment on a percentage basis between the two balances. If you increase your payment, the creditor
will divide additional payments along the same guidelines unless you specify
otherwise. For accounts such as this,
after you decide how much extra you can send, consider making the minimum
payment as usual and write a separate check for the extra funds. Stipulate in writing that the extra payment
is to be applied directly to the principle balance for cash advances. Verify how the payments were distributed in
your future statements. 6.
Pay your bills when you receive them, not when they are due. Most creditors use the Average Daily Balance
method of calculating interest. Reducing
the average daily balance by making your payment sooner will ultimately reduce
the amount of interest you pay. 7.
Don't accept your creditor's offers to skip payments. Interest continues to compound while you're
skipping your payment. The longer your
balance goes without a reduction, the more interest you'll pay. If you've established your budget and have
scheduled payments, continue to make those payments until the balance is paid
off. 8. Consider transferring balances to lower rate cards. You may receive offers of credit with low-interest teaser rates. These low rates are called teaser rates because they usually only last for 3 to 9 months. They offer to transfer balances from your other credit cards to theirs with the lower interest rates. In general, an opportunity to pay less interest is a fairly good idea but, if you are considering this step, you must consider more than the teaser interest rate. Examine the contract carefully before you apply for the card. |