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Avoiding College Credit Card Traps
Congratulations college freshman! You’re about to embark on one of the most exciting times of your life. By now your parents, siblings, and friends have offered you all kinds of advice on how to make your transition to college smoother - how to get...

Bad credit personal loans – pertinent pedestal for a financial resumption
In the arena of loan borrowing, there is hardly an opponent more difficult to tackle than bad credit. Bad credit implies that your personal credit history is integral and decisive in making the personal loan available for you. Bad credit history is...

What is Credit Repair and How Can It Help You?
There are millions of consumer credit reports on file from mainly three major reporting bureaus which include Trans Union, Experian, and Equifax. These credit gathering agencies store huge amounts of data about every person that takes out a loan,...

What is on Your Credit Report?
Your credit report is a very important piece of the puzzle in your financial picture. It contains a historical record of your personal and financial information including a listing of your current and past debts and the timeliness of your payments....

Why Consumers Need A Nationwide Credit Freeze Now
What do a shoe retailer, an online discount broker, and a popular clothing retailer all have in common? All three - DSW Shoe Warehouse, Ameritrade, and Polo Ralph Lauren - sustained breaches to their customers’ accounts. Unfortunately, these three...

 
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Pay Off Your Credit Card Debt Quicker

Here are ten simple tips to help you pay off your credit card debts sooner. First the boring bit: the first three steps are boring but vital. If you want to take control, you have to know what's going on. Taking control of your finances can feel like a straitjacket, so plan in some light relief for when you achieve each step - but make sure it doesn't cost much money. For example, when you've done step one, invite some friends round for a meal, or go for a walk in a favorite park, or treat yourself to time listening to your favorite album. Repeat your mini-celebrations as you achieve each step.

1. It's likely that if you have a credit card debt, you've got some other debt too. But whether you have or you haven't the first thing you need to do is make a total of all your debts. Don't hide anything - don't pretend it isn't a debt. The more honest you are with yourself, the sooner you'll get financial control back in your life.

2. Once you've got all your debts listed and totaled, make a check on all your regular outgoings for credit cards, food, rent, bills, gas, whatever - weekly, monthly and yearly. For the weekly and yearly ones, convert them into monthly figures. You should now have a clear picture of your regular outgoings as well as how much debt you have.

3. Now what's your monthly income? This figure should be the amount that goes into your paycheck before anything else comes out. Subtract your monthly outgoings from your monthly income. Hopefully the figure you've got has a plus sign in front of it! But even if it doesn't, now's the time to move on to stage 4.

4. How many credit cards do you have? How many loans? You've already totaled the amount of debt. Now


you need to get clear about how spread out it is. Debts spread out like an octopus are not a good idea. You end up losing track of some and trying to juggle between them - and all that does is increase your debt.

5. We're talking here about credit card debt, so the next step is to gather all your credit card debts onto one card. You can either use one card to pay off others (use the one with the lowest APR interest). But this is usually a good opportunity to search for a new card with a really low or even interest free offer. You can find these at the American Credit Cards Guide (see link below).

6. When you've got your new card, pay off all the other credit cards immediately and destroy them. No hesitating here. You have to destroy the old cards.

7. Also, immediately set up an automatic payment (to pay the new credit card) to come out of your bank account the day after your salary goes in. This is so you don't see the money in your account and think you've got more money than you really do have.

8. Set the repayment level to at least the total of whatever you paid before when you were paying off several cards. For example, if you had five credit cards and you were paying $100 a month, now you are paying at least $100 a month to one card.

9. Hide your new card until you have paid off your consolidated debt.

10. Finally be careful about switching cards too often - it might not look good on your credit profile.

For a simple, easy to use guide to available credit cards in the USA check out American Credit Cards Guide - http://www.americancreditcardsguide.com.
About the Author

Craig Brown is a life coach