Why Making Minimum Payments is Insane

Dec 21
20:17

2009

Jesse Niesen

Jesse Niesen

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If you can't write a check, and you don't have the resources like a 401k or equity in a home to pay off your debt, what can you do? Most people out th...

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If you can't write a check,Why Making Minimum Payments is Insane Articles and you don't have the resources like a 401k or equity in a home to pay off your debt, what can you do? Most people out there are just making minimum monthly payments, exactly what the banks want them to do.

The average client I deal with these days has around $40,000 in credit card debt. This is a lot of debt, on top of which they're paying 20% to 30% interest. This large payment is really hurting their debt-to-income ratio.

Most of these folks are over half-way utilized. Many people are already maxed out, hurting their credit again on the third leg, (debt to credit limit ratio) and they're struggling to achieve the holy grail of credit by making their minimum payments on time. Unfortunately, that's a trap! There are a lot of false beliefs that keep people in this cycle for a long time. You're basically trapped if you don't get off of that treadmill. You will be on it forever, making those minimum payments.

What most don't realize is even if they have perfect payment histories and a "great" credit score, if they're over utilizing their available credit or have a high debt to income ratio, they won't be able to get affordable financing for the things they really want (cars, homes, etc). Those minimum payments aren't getting them any closer to these goals.

Minimum payments on $40,000 of debt with 20% interest are going to take you 60 to 70 years to pay off. That's a long time, too close to forever. Even if you owed $20,000 with an 18% interest rate, you're still looking at 30 years or more to get out of debt. Making minimum payments is only good for you in the very extreme short term to maintain cash flow.

The appeal to buying on credit is overwhelming. You can have a lot of leverage because you can buy a whole bunch of stuff with a small monthly payment. This allure is what has trapped most people in America and is causing the current debt epidemic.

Really, there's an epidemic out there! There's over $2.3 trillion of consumer debt.  The credit card companies are raking it in with little to no regulation on how they conduct their business (ie: interest rate hikes, penalties, fees, etc). This is not a small problem, and this is the trap you're falling into when making minimum payments. There's got to be a better way; unless you just want to be a slave to debt for the rest of your life.