|
Pay Off Debt
Now: 5 Steps To Getting Your Finances In Order
by: Drew
Harris
In our world of dizzying
change, nothing is more true than the time honored statement
that circumstances always change.
No where is this more true than
with financial issues.
Have you ever borrowed money,
or charged up the VISA card at Christmas, all the while telling
yourself that you would pay everything off with a coming tax
refund or bonus?
Sound familiar. And then what
happens when the bonus money arrives?
Let me guess - circumstances
changed, the car needed brakes (or the kids needed braces, etc),
and the VISA debt and interest charges keeps piling up.
Unless you have a plan, you
will always be caught in the unpredictable grip of 'changing
circumstances'.
This is a slippery slope that
can very quickly become serious financial stress. Consider the
fact that Americans are declaring bankruptcy at record rates.
One in every 100 families is affected by a bankruptcy.
I was on this slope 10 years
ago. Declaring personal bankruptcy and filing for divorce went
hand in hand.
One of the most insightful
moments of the process was preparing a written log for the
trustee of all of our spending for the 5 years leading up to
bankruptcy.
While all of the individual
decisions made sense in the moments that they were made, they
looked totally foolish in the context of the 'bigger picture'.
In other words, constantly
changing circumstances drove us off our financial roadmap.
Consider this five step plan
for getting on, and staying with, your financial roadmap.
Step No. 1: Make a list of what
you owe & prioritize: Put all your bills in a pile. Then
list your debts in order, starting with the largest balance
first. Then prioritize your repayments (ie paying down the
highest interest rate first).
Step No. 2: Eliminate credit
cards and don't roll over balances. Once paid off, notify the
company that you want to close the account.
Step No. 3: Make a spending
plan. Change your free-spending ways. Track the money that's
coming in and going out. Use a debit card instead of your credit
card. Download your bank transactions into a computer program
for easy categorizing.
Step No. 4: Be careful about
the equity in your home. Billions of dollars worth of equity has
been withdrawn from millions of homes in the last few years. But
many people pay down credit cards only to charge them up again -
and then you don't have the safety net of the equity in your
home.
Step No. 5: Get help. For some
people, the problem of overspending is a psychological one.
Spending can become a habit that's as difficult to kick as
alcohol, drugs or gambling. Sometimes, it's due to circumstances
they truly could not avoid: medical bills or divorce or loss of
a job.
You can talk with a credit
counselor on a private basis. It only appears on your credit
report if you enter their debt repayment program.
As you consider your finances,
remember that Americans are now carrying $683 billion in
revolving credit card debt. 47% of the people who paid less than
the full amount on their credit card bills in a recent month,
made only the minimum payment due.
The good news is that planning
and professional help will definitely help you turn things
around.
Case in point: I went from
bankrupt with zero assets living in a boarding house, to
gainfully employed, running my own home based business, with 2
houses and excellent re-established credit.
In other words, it can be done.
About The Author
Pay-off-debt-now.com
is run by Drew Harris and is a one-stop-shop web portal for
those facing crushing debt issues. Multiple pages of resources,
referrals and tools. Expert advice on credit cards, loans and
avoiding bankruptcy. http://tinyurl.com/4bbum
|