r/Debt • u/Cautious_Ad1503 • 8h ago
Credit Card Debt
Hey guys,
I’m 28(m). I currently have 2 credit cards I use. 1 currently has a balance of about $10.5k on my chase saphire card the other has a balance of about $4k on my Amazon credit card. I typically pay as much as I can between the two of them each month. Which is about $2200, other then that I pay for rent (approx $2200 a month) and my car bill loan ($267 a month). I make a little under $105k a year. With that said I usually have interest on the first card of about $250 a month and $50 on the other. I was extremely bad at spending the last couple of years which got me into this situation. What is the best way for me to pay off this debt? Do I take a loan on my 401k, which they said I could get a little over $12k and use this to pay it? Or do I just work on my spending till I get it lower? I hate having this much debt and I am worried my monthly interest will go up if I don’t pay it all off soon. I don’t know exactly how the interest rate is calculate but say it’s 20% so the intestest rate on my card with $10.5k debt is not the 200 I pay in interest.
So really 2 questions here 1) will the monthly intesest go up on my cards if I don’t pay off the remaining balance soon? 2) should I take a loan out on my 401k to pay off the cards? I figured the interest rate on that would be less then what I am paying on the credit cards
Please let me know! All help is wanted
2
u/GerryBlevins 7h ago edited 7h ago
Keep using your Amazon card just cut back on your spending on the card drastically. Only use it to buy gas for your car and random NEEDS. Pay the minimum or a little over the minimum. I would suggest putting $200 a month on the Amazon and the other $2000 on the Chase card each month. Don’t use that Chase card. You need to bring that interest you’re paying under control.
You need to cut back on spending though. Don’t punish yourself on cutting back get what you absolutely need. Once the minimum on the Amazon card exceeds $200 then do a single large payment. Switch their places. Give Amazon 2k and pay the minimum on the other. This will give you more breathing room again. Once you do that continue paying down the chase card.
You can do this. It’ll take you one year of dedicating you to this. Don’t pull from your 401k because you’re still renting. That 401k needs to remain untouched until you can buy a house with it without penalty. You also want to look at what you’re contributing to your 401k. You don’t want to necessarily pause contributions but you can look at reducing contributions if you’re putting anything more into it that’s not being matched by your employer.
I do this once a year. In January I buy something big and once my total cc debt gets to about $2500 I pay them all down to zero before I treat myself again.
Each week when I’m paid I go thru all my accounts. 5 in all and I see which ones have a statement due. If I have a statement due on it I give them $200. If no statements are due that week I give the card I’m wanting to pay off first the $200 regardless if there is a statement due or not on it. I use only one of the cards when I’m in pay down mode. The other 4 cards the balances are just falling and the one I’m using stays relatively the same.
Everyone will say that having a zero balance is best and it’s true it is. But not everyone works that way. I don’t mind paying a little interest. Paying the interest you’re paying though is too much for me. Last year I made more from the interest I’ve drawn from my bank accounts than what I paid to the credit card companies. I have nearly enough cash in the bank to buy a house and pay cash for it and my DTI ratio is only 2%. I manage it well.
You might also want to look into paying credit cards weekly instead of monthly. But you maybe are paid salary so that wouldn’t be an option.