Skip to main content

Pay Off Your Debt


Pay Off Your Debt
If you are dealing with debt, you aren't alone. The average American household has an average balance of about $6,600 in credit card debt, and that's not taking into account home, auto, and student loans. Paying off your debt isn't always easy, but having a plan can go a long way in achieving your financial goals.

Two of the most popular strategies for paying off debt on your own are the snowball method and the avalanche method. Both methods require making the minimum monthly payments on all but one debt, which you put extra money towards.

The Snowball Method
With the snowball method, you begin by paying off your smallest debt first. This method creates a sense of motivation and accomplishment from being able to pay off smaller bills at a higher frequency.

How it Works
Let's say you have the following debts:


  • Credit Card A: $3,500, 17.99% APR
  • Credit Card B: $7,500, 15.00% APR
  • Personal Loan: $1,000, 10.05% APR

Using the snowball method, you would pay the minimum monthly payments to the credit card debts, and pay any extra that you can to the personal loan until it is paid off. You would then apply the extra payments to Credit Card A until it is paid in full.

Pros and Cons
With the snowball method, you are able to see progress faster. Quick wins can help you stay motivated to keep going. However, with this approach, it will take you longer to pay off your largest debts -- and those are often the ones that carry the highest interest, so you'll likely end up paying more overall. 

The Avalanche Method
The avalanche method takes into account the fact that high-interest debts cost you the most money over time. Using the avalanche method, you pay off your highest interest debts first. 

How it Works
Let's look at the same scenario as above.

  • Credit Card A: $3,500, 17.99% APR
  • Credit Card B: $7,500, 15.00% APR
  • Personal Loan: $1,000, 10.05% APR
With the avalanche method, you'd pay the minimum monthly payment on Credit Card B and the Personal Loan, and pay extra towards Credit Card A, since it has the highest interest rate. Once it was paid off, you'd move on to Credit Card B.

Pros and Cons
This is the fastest way to eliminate debt and save on interest payments. However, it can take years to eliminate this debt while other smaller bills still trickle in. 

What option is best for you?
It comes down to what you feel most comfortable with. Ultimately the best method is the one you can stick to. If you're motivated by quicker victories, the snowball method may be the right option for you. If you want to pay the lowest amount of interest, you're likely better off choosing the avalanche method. 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Best Way To Budget? Try Pen And Paper -- How Bullet Journaling Can Fix Your Spending

Bullet journaling is a new and trendy way to track your spending. Using pen and paper can make you more active in your budgeting and can be fun too. Here's how to start keeping a bullet journal. You can hear it in the swell of retro-inspired music. You can see it in the resurgence of vinyl records and vintage cameras. You can feel the hum of simple circuitry in the air. Analog is back. Analog products fill a very real, very legitimate desire to untether from the digital world we've been enslaved by. In a society where the speed of information is ramping up at an exponential rate, the world of analog is a reminder to slow down and connect to your surroundings. The analog approach can be implemented in a variety of ways -- even budgeting. The bullet journal community has embraces this pen and paper approach to money-management, developing simple and time-saving methods to track and organize your finances offline. What is bullet journal budgeting? The goal of bulle...

How to Recognize the Signs of a Gambling Problem

 Whether it's buying a weekly lottery ticket or taking an annual trip to Vegas to blow off some steam, gambling is a fun and harmless diversion for many people. For others it can become a problem that creates a variety of issues, including extreme financial hardship and deep debt. Let's take a look at some of the tell-tale signs of a gambling problem.  When Gambling Goes Beyond Entertainment Win or lose, gambling should be nothing more than a fun activity. When it stops being fun and becomes something that dominates your thoughts or conversations, that's a sign it's becoming a problem.  Gambling with Money Meant for Other Things It's one thing to have a few dollars set aside every week for lottery ticket or putting a line item in your entertainment budget for a trip to the casino every few months. It's something else entirely if you're gambling with money intended for other things like rent, food, and paying bills. Gambling with money originally planned to c...

How to Avoid Debt Consolidation Scams

  If you're in significant debt, the prospect of becoming rent-free can be alluring. So alluring, in fact, that you might find yourself caught in any number of scams along the way.  One common way to pay off debt is through consolidation. This involves combining all your debt and taking out a loan that goes toward paying it off each month. Debt Consolidation can help simplify and streamline the debt payoff process, and it might even save you a little bit of money, too.  Still, the debt consolidation industry is rife with scams. Companies might say they offer debt consolidation when, in reality, they're for-profit debt settlement companies looking to take advantage of people.  Warning signs of a debt consolidation scam  When you're searching for a way to consolidate and pay off your debt, you might come across companies online that promote debt consolidation.  But some of these companies aren't offering to help you with debt consolidation. Instead, they're d...