Quote:
Originally Posted by FoolFromAZ
I have balances in 6 credit cards. Total CC debt comes around $55000. I am paying $2400 every month for home mortgage. I have a car loan for $26000K, paying $550 per month.
Intrest Rate on CC ranging from 12% to 5%.
Intrest Rate on First Mortgage (243K) : 6.25%
Intrest Rate on Second Mortgage (40K): 7.5%
Intrest Rate on my car loan (26K) : 7.5%
Me and my wife together have $10000 in 401k and Roth IRA.
I make 9K per month and my wife makes 5.5K per month (Gross). Our employers are not contributing for our 401K but we can contribute if we want.
This is our situation. How should we manage our finance from here. Should we contribute for 401k? or wait till we get rid of our CC debt? our credit score is around 625, which is very poor.
Any kind of advice is greatly appreciated.
Thanks
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Disney Steve's first post was excellent. You need to be organized about how you attack the debt.
It appears as though you have 12k of room on HELOC from anothe post. I would look to transfer any debt to the HELOC to keep rate low while other debts are tackled.
List the CC debts in order of highest interest rate to lowest interest rate. List balance in second column and minimum payment in third column.
Then move the 12% balance to HELOC or pay off in less than 3 months.
Then repeat with next highest interest rate
then repeat with next highest interest rate
and keep continuing to do this until debts are paid off.
I assume HELOC rates will be around 5-8%. The goal is to lower overall debt burden as quickly as possible- and lowering the rates even by 1% will help speed this up. If you have $4400 to pay off debt each month, then apply minimum payments to everything, and then send the rest to the card with highest rate (keeping in mind if highest rate was transferred to HELOC, it is no longer the highest rate).
Repeat this cycle until the only debts left are the 1st mortgage and HELOC, then go for the HELOC.
Once the only debt is HELOC and 1st mortgage, I would look to invest. Get 15% of income going to savings. I would use a 401k enough to lower MAGI, so that you can contribute to a Roth IRA.
My advice- all disposable income to debt until only debt remaining is mortgage.
When mortgages are only debt left, 15% to retirement savings, remainder to HELOC
When HELOC is paid off, I would invest the money and increase 15% savings rate to something higher.
If you transfer money to HELOC, it will make it harder to refinance. Assuming this whole process takes 2 years, I would suggest refinancing once HELOC is paid off.