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Friday, April 07, 2023

What debt should I pay off first?

What debt should I pay off first? 

What Debt Should I Pay Off First? | Personal Asset

By
Tori Dunlap

03.13.2020

“Hey Tori,

When you have two pieces of debt, how do you know which to pay off first? I have $35,000 of student loan debt, and $15,000 of credit card debt on two different cards. All of it seems equally overwhelming, and I don’t know where to start. So far, I’ve been putting an extra $50 towards my student debt, and then an extra $50 to my credit cards — is this a good idea?”

 

This is a question that I frequently hear — when you have any sort of debt, it’s hard to know what to do first (especially when it feels like you’re drowning.) 

A good way to determine what sort of debt you pay off first is the one that’s costing you the most, in other words, the one with the highest interest rate. Typically, credit cards can have an interest rate between 15-30%, which is usually considered high-interest debt. Student loans’ interest rates can range from 3-7%, making them much less expensive than credit card debt.

Because you have debt from two different sources, it’s important to figure out which one is more expensive for you right now so we can start paying that off first.

What to do with your debt, and when…

Step 1

The first step to paying off debt is knowing what your interest rates actually ARE.

This is one of those money steps that many people avoid, either because they don’t understand exactly what interest is, or simply don’t want to look at it (both are understandable.)

The easiest way to check your interest rate is by logging on to the company’s online platform and finding it there. You can also call customer service and ask. 

Step 2

This money step is a little like ripping off a Band-Aid…Grab yourself some wine and check your debt balances. 

You can log this in a spreadsheet, a notebook, or link your credit card accounts to Empower’s free financial dashboard to see your balances all in one place.

Now you’re going to organize your debt in two ways: first by interest rate, then by the current balance.

For example, you may organize your debt like this:

Credit Card 1: 18.5% interest. Balance: $4,000

Credit Card 2: 22% interest. Balance: $11,000

Student Loan: 4.3% interest. Balance: $35,000

Step 3

Many forms of advice would tell you to start paying down the one that’s costing the most interest, so in the above example, you should pay down the debt with 22% interest. 

However, if you know you need to be seeing progress in order to stay motivated and to keep going— you may want to consider getting rid of the debt with a lower balance ($4,000) first. Personal finance is, yep, personal — choose what’s right for you.

Regardless, though, you need to pick one to focus your energy on. (This does not mean you stop paying your minimum payments as you should always pay at least your minimum payments on all credit card debt you have). Do not try to aggressively pay down both at the same time, and do not spread your money between both of them!

While we will be aggressively paying down our debt, it’s EXTREMELY important to not go into more debt, especially more credit card debt. In other words: Emergency Funds are for emergencies, credit cards are not. It’s super hard to dig yourself out of a hole while at the same time, shoveling sand back in it. This is why we set aside an emergency fund first, to cover us should something happen.

Where you might get tripped up: stay consistent. 

There’s no magical debt elimination button. There is no magic wand. It’s hard work.

Know that you have resources on your side, such as financial professionals and free tools like the Personal Asset Personal Dashboard.

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Tori Dunlap

Tori Dunlap

Contributor

Tori Dunlap is a millennial money and career expert. After saving $100,000 at age 25, Tori founded Her First $100K to fight financial inequality by giving women actionable resources to better their money. A Plutus award winner, her work has been featured on Good Morning America, New York Magazine, Forbes, CNBC, and more. An honors graduate of the University of Portland, Tori currently lives in Seattle, where she enjoys eating fried chicken, going to barre classes, and attempting to naturally work John Mulaney bits into conversation.

 

Personal Asset compensates Tori Dunlap of Her First $100k (“Author”) for providing the content contained in this article. Author is not a client of Personal Capital Advisors Corporation or Personal Asset Advisory Group, LLC. Additionally, in a separate referral arrangement between Author and Personal Asset Personal Wealth LLC (“EPW”), Author is paid $70 and $150 for each person who uses Author’s webpage (www.HerFirst100k.com) to register with Personal Asset and links at least $100,000 in investable assets to the Personal Asset Personal Dashboard™. As a result of these arrangements, Author may financially benefit from referring potential clients to Personal Asset and/or be incentivized to present blog content that is favorable to EPW. No fees or other amounts will be charged to investors by Author or Personal Asset as a result of the Referral Arrangement. Investors that are referred to EPW and subsequently subscribe for investment advisory services provided by EPW’s affiliated adviser, Personal Capital Advisors Corporation (“PCAC”) or Personal Asset Advisory Group, LLC (“EAG”) will not pay increased management fees or other similar compensation to Author, EPW, EAG or PCAC as a result of this arrangement.

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