Me also. I do tell the kids to use the credit cards instead of debit and we use ours also. Reason? The points and reward programs. Never pay any interest but charge over $5000/month. |
| None. We pay them off in full every month. But Christmas was bad, so was January. Just paid a credit card bill for over $5k. But from here on out it should be fine. |
| Well now it makes more sense how Obama got elected twice. People busy running up their own deficits aren't going to be too worried about the nation's. All I can say is "wow" to some of the pps. |
+1 |
Oh yes and I'm so sure you were so worried when Bush plowed through a surplus and created a trillion dollare deficit. Um, he got elected twice as well. What the hell is your point!? You're on the wrong thread! |
| We pay it off every month. But are drowning in education debt... |
| Zero. Pay off in full each month, including last month's 11k AMEX bill. We charge just about everything to earn freq flyer miles. We have a high limit because of excellent credit rating but we keep our spending reasonable and never get near our maximum level. |
We didn't treat our cc'd as part of our budget, but we were young and stupid and didn't really know how to communicate about money (or how to manage it for that matter). DH was out of work/under employed for nearly two years during this time and we didn't know how to say no to ourselves. We've gotten much more disciplined now, but a toddler in daycare eats up a ton of our budget, so we haven't been able to pay it down as quickly as we would have liked. I take responsibility for our situation AND I know if wouldn't have been this bad if I didn't have lines of credit that far exceeded our annual income. |
To be able to pay off $11,000 in one month, your monthly take home pay must be enormous! Just curious, how much do you bring home every month? I have around $10K in credit card debt from a few yrs of not being able to find a job in my field. I still had to pay my student loans and my job didn't offer health insurance so I paid for that out of pocket. I also became a single parent so I actually had no choice (short of moving into a shelter) to use my credit cards. Now that I have a decent paying job w/ health insurance, I can start making a dent in the $10K. |
The rewards programs are nice
Don't use debit cards as they have way fewer fraud protections than credit cards. If you have paid off your CC in full for 2+ years and have the usual 3+ months of take home in the bank, then I would feel safe using credit cards as you have demonstrated your trustworthiness. |
That's what I'm asking. All credit card debt can't be due to medical emergencies. |
| $10,000 roughly. It's not a good scene and we're trying hard to get a handle on it. But we live on very little with two kids under the age of 3 so I think this period of our life is simply marked by debt. |
Just because their last month's bill was $11K doesn't mean that it is every month or that they paid it out of one month's income. I've had months where our credit card bills were that high (like the month we charged having our basement replumbed and then waterproofed or the months after big vacations). We always pay it off but the high expenses have been budgeted for all along and are paid for out of the money we've saved for those purposes. |
how did you decide you could afford two children? |
| If I told you I'd have to kill you. |