Anonymous wrote:DH and I have about $6K in credit card debt. We are strapped at the moment, however, and are unable to pay anything more than the minimum payments on each. In January, we will have a car loan paid completely off which will be $450 that we will have to put towards the credit card debt. We plan to not even have the money that is currently being directly deposited to the car loan even touch our checking account, since we know that we would blow it if it did. We are going to use the Dave Ramsey strategy and pay off the smallest card first since we both need to see something happening and not get discouraged. Even though $6K doesn't seem like a lot to many folks for us it is since we are not in high paying careers. We want the debt gone. I've already cut up the damn cards!
The cards we have are Target, Walmart, Khols, TJ Max/Marshalls & an American Express. Each of them have high interest rates. We are not savvy at playing the interest rate game but have heard many people opening up 1% or 0% cards and transferring balances, then paying off. Is this a good thing to do? When I did the math, paying $450 per month on $6K would take us a little over a year to pay off. Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:If you don't have any emergency savings, I would establish some. Personally, I'd put $250 extra towards debt and $200 toward savings until I saved at least 1K. That way you don't have to use your credit cards again when unexpected expenses come up (and they always do).
I'm not a fan of transferring to 0% cards since there is usually a fee involved and it is tempting to run the old cards back up again. Just concentrate on paying the cards you have down. And remember, once you pay off one card you can use that money (minimum + $450) towards the next card.