credit card debt

How I Paid Off Over $175,000 in Debt in 7 Years

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First some legal jargon:

This blog is not intended to provide professional financial advice. You should consult a certified financial professional to support you in your individual needs. The purpose of this blog represents my own experience, and should not be used as professional financial advice.

Now on to our blog…

In true transparency, I know a reader somewhere is going to be kind enough to do the math for me, and my debt is probably going to be even higher than what I am saying here, but for simplicity sake, we will round the number I owed to $175,000.  This was a mixture of student loan and credit card debt. 

In staring at this massive task before me, I took the first step forward.  I made a budget.

1) Make a budget

At this point, it seems cliché with many financial gurus stating this as the first step, but I am going to tell you.  This. Is. The. First. Step.

You will not be able to efficiently track your spending unless you actively make a budget that encompasses your financial goals.  There are lots of apps out there that can help you with this, but I am a fan of a good old excel spreadsheet.  Each column represents a month and you should plan out 12-18 months.  Do a top row for monthly income, and then in the first column list out all of your monthly expenses.  Go into your bank accounts and credit card statements to get your spending for the last few months to estimate your spending for the upcoming months.  Subtract your expenses from your income, and this is the amount you have left over for the month.

Why is this important?  That leads us to the next step.

 

2) Cut your spending

No, I am not telling you to cut out the coffee in the morning from your favorite coffee shop, and live on rice and beans (although, you could do this, and it would probably supercharge your ability to pay down your debt), but you need to take a long, hard look at that leftover money at the end of the month.  How much is it?  Is it enough to make a significant dent in your debt?  If not, what can you reasonably cut from your expenses that can increase that leftover amount? One of the exercises I did at this stage and continue to do on a quarterly basis is to give myself three expenses that I will not sacrifice on:  they are books, travel, and takeout 2 nights per week.  Everything else, I either cut or find a way to reduce my spending such as shopping with coupon codes.  The more you have leftover each month, the quicker you can reduce the debt.

 

3) Move to cash flow

What does it mean to move to cash flow?  Put your credit cards in a box somewhere and lock them up….give someone else the password, and remove them from all of your saved payments.  Do not use them.  All of your spending needs to come from your bank account.  Trust me…this was the hardest for me, but it is necessary.  You can’t pay off your debt if you keep spending it.

 

4) Select the debt you are going to focus on first

Dave Ramsey refers to this as the “snowball” debt method, but for me it was more than taking the smallest debt and paying that first to get the momentum.  I felt very strongly that I needed to pay off my student loan debt first, as I knew that this is a debt that would stay with me until death.  Typically, even if someone files bankruptcy, student loans will remain as they are difficult to discharge.  For me, personally, I selected my student loans as the debt I was going to work on with my leftover money each month, and I selected the student loans first that had the highest interest rate.  (Interestingly, selecting the debt with the highest interest rate and paying them down first is called the “avalanche” method).

 

5) Start paying it off…and don’t stop.

With the leftover money I had each month, subtracting my expenses from my income, I focused on one loan at a time, until eventually, I was left with $22,000 in credit card debt alone.  This led me to step 6….

 

6) Look into refinancing/debt consolidation programs/lowering your interest rate

This is where you should get help, or reach out to a financial professional to evaluate your options.

For me, this is where my story may diverge from what is typical or able to happen for some people, but this blog is sharing how I did it.  I was fortunate that we were able to refinance our home when interest rates dropped lower than the interest rate we had on our mortgage, and we also had 10 years of equity in our home.  In refinancing, I lowered our monthly payments on the mortgage, and used the cash out to pay off the remaining $22,000 credit card debt.  This may not be an option for some, and I do feel fortunate that we had this option.  There are debt consolidation programs that may also help you to consolidate loans with lower interest rates, cutting the overall cost of what you would owe on those remaining loans.  You could also try to call your credit card company and negotiate a lower interest rate, especially if you have been a customer for a long period of time and have always paid your bills on time. I will say that with the clip I was going, had we not refinanced, I still would have paid off the credit card debt in 8 years rather than seven.

 

So….this is all fine and good, but what if when you do your budget, and your expenses are more than your income?….and you cut everything you can down to the bare minimum, but it is still not enough to pay down the debt?  This is where you will need  to “diversify your income stream.”  I’ll talk more about this in my next blog!

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Financial Blunders of a Young College Kid: How I Racked Up $175,000 in Debt

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I started college the summer of 2003.  I went to an in-state school with lower tuition that was 6 miles from my house, however; I made the choice to live on campus for the “experience” for freshman and sophomore year.  In doing so, I left my bachelor’s degree with $25,000 in student loan debt.  I then made the decision to immediately go back for my master’s, the summer of 2007, and at the time (pre-2008 crash), graduate students could take out up to $25,000 per year of student loans to pay for cost of school, even if tuition was not that expensive.  I made the decision to do so, even though my tuition was around $20,000 for the full two year program.  My justification was that I was going to school full time, and I needed the funds to cover living costs while I was in school.

So, in doing the math, I left my master’s degree with $75,000 of student loan debt.  If I stayed at home for my undergraduate degree, and took the minimum needed for tuition in my master’s program I would have left with a little more than $50,000….a big difference from $75,000.

So, what about that other $100,000 I mentioned above?  Some can be attributed to interest, and I can also look to freshman year of college for the addition of the other major blunder.  As a freshman in 2003, living on my own for the first time, I came across a table in the student center during my first week of class.  This table offered a remarkable display of pens, t-shirts, and assorted pins….which could be mine if I filled out an application today for a credit card!  It would be easy, they said…I would receive notice in a few minutes.  So, I filled in that application and was approved for a $500 credit limit, along with a shiny bag full of new pens and a t-shirt.

As soon as I had that piece of plastic in hand, I went right to the Apple store to purchase my very first ipod (yes, ipod…).  It was all I wanted, but my parents could not afford one for my birthday or Christmas….but, hey, I could afford it all by myself now!  Or so I thought.

Fast forward to 10 years later--credit line increases, 20.99% APR, and a spending habit all equaled to $32,000 of credit card debt.

What did this all cost me in the long run?  For that, I am still doing the math for the interest I’ve accrued over 10 years…so let’s go with around $175,000 (but I am fairly positive it is more, and I’m sure a kind reader somewhere will do that math for me). 

What was that reality of living with this debt?

After I graduated, I was luckily able to obtain work with a decent wage, earning $50-70,000 per year in the time frame I started paying off my debt.  However, despite the decent wage, there were several roadblocks that popped up preventing me from achieving goals due to my financial blunders.  For one, when we went to purchase our home, I could not be on the note, and if it wasn’t for my partner’s frugal spending habits and lack of debt we would never have been able to afford a home at all.  Why?  My debt to income ratio was too high—the majority of which came from student loans.  I also was not able to significantly contribute to my retirement accounts as most of my income was tied up with paying minimum payments on those loans, while I continued my spending habits.  During those first 3 years, I learned hard lessons about my choices in racking up student loan and credit card debt.

But…after 3 years of paying the minimum payments each month, I took a long, hard look at my spending and my debt, and I made the commitment that I was going to get out of it.  It would take me 7 years or so, but I was committing to this action…to improve my spending habits and to decrease my debt significantly.  I made the goal that by the age of 35, I would have no credit card debt, and no student loan debt…and I would learn from the mistakes of the past.

How did I do it?  I’ll share my strategies in the next blog…sign up below to get the link sent directly to your email!