Debt Management Changes Spending Habits

June 28, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Business debt help 

Chances are, if I asked anyone on the street if they were in debt, the answer would be yes.  Milions of Americans fall further into debt every single day.  What used to be the American Dream has now become the American Way.  We see something, we want it, we buy it.  No cash on hand?  No problem, just use credit.  Right?  Wrong!  Credit card debt is sweeping the country in very much the same way an illness or plague could.  Infecting uneducated buyers and reducing their lives to a stressful, existence of trying to make ends meet.  It is time to stop the infection.  Now is the time to get some decent advice about consolidating debt.

Debt consolidation is not really an easy solution, but it is one with proven results.  There is no waving of a magic wand to make the debt go away, instead it requires looking at the debt, recognizing the vastness of it, and actually creating a plan to pay it.  The load is reduced as the payments are applied.  Slowly and steadily the load gets smaller and smaller until eventually credit cards, student loans, and all the other consumer debts that you ran up without giving a second thought are removed from your shoulders where they have been weighing you down.

One prudent debt management solution would be to consider a consolidation loan that would lump all the little burden bills into one bigger burden bills.  The advantages would be that you have only one monthly bill to pay.  This is a good thing unless you have incredibly low interest rates on your individual debts.  I’m guessing you don’t.  You can look online for debt consolidation advice.  There are many qualified credit counseling professionals that can help you map out a debt consolidation plan and help you find low interest rate consolidation loans to replace the multitude of little higher interest rate debts you juggle on a monthly basis.  You may even find that you can keep more money in your pocket each month for the necessities you have been doing without.

I know that for me, the debt consolidation advice I found online was not only useful, but truly life changing.  It was free.  Yes, free.  And it was so incredibly easy to talk to the representative and then make a plan that I could live with.  Now, I pay one bill with payments that are about half of the combined total I paid before.  Try it.  You don’t have anything at all to lose, except that stress headache you get every time you try to stretch your paycheck to cover all those little bills that are piling up.

Debt Consolidation Mortgage Loans: Easy Way to Save Money:

June 4, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Business debt help 

Swimming in heavy credit card debt sometimes means getting deeper in debt simply because of high interest rates.  The IRS no longer allows credit card interest as a deduction.  If you use a home equity loan to consolidate and pay-off your bills, you could actually save cash three ways: 1. No interest accrues on your credit card balances, 2. Your new loan could have a lower interest rate, lowering your monthly mortgage payment, and 3.  At the end of the year, three IRS allows you to deduct most if not all of the interest from your mortgage.

One possible glitch in the system is a variable rate loan.  If your home equity loan has a higher interest rate, the potential exists you could have more out of pocket expenses than you had before.

While equity loans usually offer a lower interest rate, the closing costs could be higher.  And, some lenders could charge a pre-payment penalty, almost forcing you to stay in your home rather than sell if a potential buyer makes an offer.

One way around these restrictions is a home equity line of credit.  Those usually don’t carry any closing costs, and there usually aren’t any pre-payment penalties.

If you have extremely good equity built up, you may want to consider cash-out refinancing.  No matter what your home is worth, borrow only enough to pay off the existing mortgage and a specified amount you need to spend.  For example, if your home is worth £300,000, but you only have £100,000 to pay-off.  Borrow more than the existing mortgage, but less than the homes market value.  You will then have lower payments, and probably less restrictions for an early pay-off.