Anonymous wrote:Pay your debt. Your credit line could always be used again in a true emergency beyond your current funds. Why on earth would you pay interest when you have money in the bank?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Use the cash on hand and rebuild savings over time?
Use monthly left over to pay off balance gradually while paying cc interest?
Loan from 401k and pay off balance ASAP with monthly cash?
With that kind of money and obviously high income there is no excuse for having 20K in cc debt. Can't imagine how that happened.
Bought first house and furnished it and replaced some things. Most of the cc debt from tools, furniture, replacing/fixing appliances.
Why didn't you pay for all of that using the cash you had in hand? You sound dumb.
Hence why I am asking. Would you cut your safety net near half, if you have one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Use the cash on hand and rebuild savings over time?
Use monthly left over to pay off balance gradually while paying cc interest?
Loan from 401k and pay off balance ASAP with monthly cash?
With that kind of money and obviously high income there is no excuse for having 20K in cc debt. Can't imagine how that happened.
Bought first house and furnished it and replaced some things. Most of the cc debt from tools, furniture, replacing/fixing appliances.
Why didn't you pay for all of that using the cash you had in hand? You sound dumb.
Hence why I am asking. Would you cut your safety net near half, if you have one.
Anonymous wrote:Pay your debt. Your credit line could always be used again in a true emergency beyond your current funds. Why on earth would you pay interest when you have money in the bank?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Use the cash on hand and rebuild savings over time?
Use monthly left over to pay off balance gradually while paying cc interest?
Loan from 401k and pay off balance ASAP with monthly cash?
With that kind of money and obviously high income there is no excuse for having 20K in cc debt. Can't imagine how that happened.
Bought first house and furnished it and replaced some things. Most of the cc debt from tools, furniture, replacing/fixing appliances.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not understanding why you would not use the cash? Why pay interest to either your credit card of your 401K? I'm not seeing any advantage.
I like a cushion for emergencies.
Your emergency is that you racked up 20k in cc debt.