24 Feb 2008 12:33:29 | Johann Erickson
Need a new iPod? The computer store running a special this week?
Want that new outfit? Got to have that CD? Before you reach for
your credit card and make that impulse buy, think for a moment.
The payments won’t be much? Think again. Paying only the minimum
payments on your credit cards can cost you.
“But,” you
say, “my balance is low, and with this purchase, it will only be
$1,000. I can pay that off in no time!”
Well, if you
enter the Twilight Zone and never again use the card for any
purchases, are never late, and go over your credit limit, you
can pay off the card by making minimum payments. It’ll only take
a little under five years! Just fifty-eight short months of your
life, costing you $154.48 in interest charges, that is, if your
card rate is only six percent.
But what about higher
rates? Generally, the higher the interest rate, the more you pay
and the longer it takes to pay off the card.
But what
about higher rates? Generally, the higher the interest rate, the
more you pay and the longer it takes to pay off the card.
Everybody knows that, you argue. Everybody uses credit.
Well, true, nearly everybody uses credit, because it seems like
we’re not really spending our money, but someone else’s. Plastic
is deceptive.
Most folks do make impulse buys,
rationalizing that they can pay off their card balance in a
short time. But life happens to the best repayment plans. Think
you’ll never get sick, fired, laid off or downsized? Do you
drive a forever car that will never need major repairs? Think
again. And when these things happen, the minimum payment beckons
like a shining solution.
But is it?
Hardly.
Let’s say that you had several cards, all having a $1,000
balance at different interest rates. Note the long repayment
times, assuming, unrealistically, that you never make another
purchase with any of these again. Check the chart for repayment
times and interest rates.
RateMonthsYearsInterest
9%635.8$258.46 12%69 5.75$389.16 15% 796.58$579.48
18%998.25$987.05 24%42635.50$7,521.85
By the time you
zero out a card with 18% interest, the going rate today, you’ve
added more than 50% of the total you spent on the purchase in
interest charges during the eight plus years it took to repay.
So what, you got a low rate? Perhaps you were offered a
low rate of six or nine percent during a card issuer’s
promotional period. Naturally you used the card to charge items
until you reached your set credit limit. After a specified
period, maybe six months, that promotional rate will end and
your interest rate will increase to 12% or more.
And
heaven help you if you incur any late charges. This year almost
all credit card companies have raised their late fees to $35
from $29 in 2004. But that’s not all they will do. If you’re
late on any card that you use, expect to see that rate increase
dramatically. Up to 24% or higher depending upon the area in
which you live. Unbelievable? It can happen faster than you can
blink.
Unsecured cards are bad enough. Secured cards
targeting those with credit problems are worse, usually starting
at 24%! Add late, overlimit and credit line increase fees, and
you can see what a masterful trap credit can be. All of the fees
add up quickly and interest is charged on everything.
So before you reach for your card and make that impulse buy,
think again. Pay cash. Cash makes you live within your means.
Buy when stuff is on sale. Avoid the minimums. If you use
credit, pay amounts above the minimum to shorten your repayment
time and lower your costs. For more credit repair tips, please visit us at Helpful
Home Ideas.
About Author :
Johann Erickson is the owner of Online Discount
Mart and TV
Products 4 Less. He is also a contributing writer for sites
such as Helpful Home
Ideas. Please include an active link to our site if you'd
like to reprint this article.