Thursday, July 26, 2007

Managing Multiple Credit Cards

If you are struggling with credit cards and are trying to figure out how to manage them without declaring bankruptcy, then you need to read this. Americans are finding themselves with increasing numbers of credit cards. There are some strategies to living without credit cards forever.

Credit card debt accumulates interest faster than any other type of loan. At 20% and sometimes higher, Americans lose thousands paying off credit cards. The first thing to do is to decrease how much you put on them every month. Get to a point where you do not even use your credit cards any more. This may take a while and it will require working out a budget and getting on the straight and narrow. Perhaps selling a new vehicle for a used one or if you need a drastic solution, you may be forced to live with relatives and liquidate your assets in order to prevent a bankruptcy. Please see your financial advisor or a wise relative.

Once you have weaned yourself off the credit cards, determine how much you can pay off each month and find more ways to increase that amount every month. If your first impression is to pay off the cards with the lowest balance, please think again. It would be nice to pay off that one card with only a few hundred on it but your problem is interest. It is costing you a lot of money. Figure out how much you could be paying your balance down if ALL or none of your money went towards interest. You could crawl out of this financial hole much faster if that was the case. Find the credit card that has the highest interest rate and pay that off first. Pay the minimums on everything else until that balance is zero. Do not stop until it is zero or another card's interest rate climbs to become the highest.

Once a credit card is paid off, cut it up and throw it away. Plan to throw away all of your cards but one. Find one card that you have had the longest and keep that one. Even if it is not the lowest interest rate, your plan is to never pay interest again so that does not matter. By keeping the credit card with the most history, your credit score will take account of your long history with the same card and your it will increase faster than with a brand new card with little history.

A popular solution is to transfer credit card balances to a 0% credit card. That interest rate will expire but it does prevent interest from building up. This method would force you to open many accounts and keep opening and closing credit cards in order to escape paying interest. This may work however, your credit score will drop to reflect this behavior. If that credit score drops and you apply for a home mortgage, the interest rate will be higher. One way or another you will pay interest, I suggest not opening new accounts and transferring balance since it only benefits you in the long run and you need a permanent fix.

It may sound simple but it will take patience. Look at the problem at a weekly or monthly and make small steps. If you are late on credit card payments, talk to the lenders and tell them your plan. If you communicate with them, you can manage this debt much easier. If they know you have a plan, they can rest easier. Of course, you still need repay it but if lenders have no idea what is going on, than they will be forced to act and really put you in a bind.

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