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Does the extra few quid here and there REALLY make a difference?

*Dusty*
Posts: 59 Forumite
Just curious, if you are paying an extra £5 or £10 per month off your debts, does it make that much of a difference?
CC Debt October[STRIKE]£9000[/STRIKE] [STRIKE]£7000 [/STRIKE]all finally on 0% Digging at the same pile but this month I've got a bigger shovel :cool:
July 2012 finally DEBT FREE
July 2012 finally DEBT FREE

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Just curious, if you are paying an extra £5 or £10 per month off your debts, does it make that much of a difference?
It would depend on the debt in question and the interest being charged....
If interest has been frozen it will make a difference, if it's still going on at say 34.0% then probably not that you'd notice unless you lived to be 100,000 years old.
You can get a decent bottle of vodka for £10 though, that's what I'd do
Good luck"We want the finest wines available to humanity, we want them here, and we want them now!"0 -
I guess it's better than not paying ANY extra.....:)Cross Stitch Cafe member No. 32012 170-194 2013 195-207.Hello Kitty ballerina 208.AVA 209.OLIVIA 210.ELLA 211.CARLA 212.LOUISE 213.CHARLEY 214.Mother & Child 215.Stop Faffing Completed 2014 216.Stitchers Sampler. 217.Let Them Be Small 218.Keep Calm 219. Ups and downs 220. Annniversary piece 221. 2x Teachers gifts 222. Peacock 223. Tooth Fairy 224. Beth Birth pic 225. Circe the Sorceress Cards x 240
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It would depend on the debt in question and the interest being charged....
If interest has been frozen it will make a difference, if it's still going on at say 34.0% then probably not that you'd notice unless you lived to be 100,000 years old.
You can get a decent bottle of vodka for £10 though, that's what I'd do
Good luck
I was literally just thinking today, I mean it has to make some kind of a difference obviously but does it mean you'll be cleared up a bit quicker? In some cases probably not, in others I suppose yes.
I've recently transferred a couple of CC balances to new cards at 0% for a handful of months, so I'm really on a drive!!!! :TCC Debt October[STRIKE]£9000[/STRIKE] [STRIKE]£7000 [/STRIKE]all finally on 0% Digging at the same pile but this month I've got a bigger shovel :cool:
July 2012 finally DEBT FREE0 -
Just to do a bit of a snowball calculation using a very general example, if you owe money at 29.84% APR if you pay £10 right now, you will save the following interest:
1 Year £2.98
2 Years £6.86
3 Years £11.89
4 Years £18.42
Of course a lower APR or higher overpayments all have an effect, but as you can see in this example if you have a debt which will take you 4 years to pay at 29.84% APR £10 now will save you £18.42 in interest as well as clearing £10 off the debt anyway, in basic terms £10 now is worth £28.42 off what you will end up paying.
In short as much as you can't see a big difference straight away every penny really does count, evenmore so over longer time periods.Have my first business premises (+4th business) 01/11/2017
Quit day job to run 3 businesses 08/02/2017
Started third business 25/06/2016
Son born 13/09/2015
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Officially the owner of my own business since 13/01/20120 -
Just to do a bit of a snowball calculation using a very general example, if you owe money at 29.84% APR if you pay £10 right now, you will save the following interest:
1 Year £2.98
2 Years £6.86
3 Years £11.89
4 Years £18.42
Of course a lower APR or higher overpayments all have an effect, but as you can see in this example if you have a debt which will take you 4 years to pay at 29.84% APR £10 now will save you £18.42 in interest as well as clearing £10 off the debt anyway, in basic terms £10 now is worth £28.42 off what you will end up paying.
In short as much as you can't see a big difference straight away every penny really does count, evenmore so over longer time periods.
Thats a brilliant response, I hadn't thought of things that way. Thanks!CC Debt October[STRIKE]£9000[/STRIKE] [STRIKE]£7000 [/STRIKE]all finally on 0% Digging at the same pile but this month I've got a bigger shovel :cool:
July 2012 finally DEBT FREE0 -
It makes a massive difference over time. If you can overpay I would.Barclaycard 3800
Nothing to do but hibernate till spring
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Additionally anything subject to compounding effects (like interest) is also sensitive to when it's paid, so paying off a little extra earlier on is better than the same overpayment later on.If you think of it as 'us' verses 'them', then it's probably your side that are the villains.0
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If interest has been frozen it will make a difference, if it's still going on at say 34.0% then probably not that you'd notice unless you lived to be 100,000 years old.
Lets say you owed £5000 and are paying £100 a month. You consider whether to up this to £110 a month.
If interest had been frozen then previously you were clearing £100 a month from your balance. With the new plan you will be clearing £110 from your balance - an increase of 10%. Worth doing, but not incredible.
If interest was 20% APR, you'd be paying around £83 a month in interest. So previously you were clearing £17 a month from your balance. With the new plan you will be clearing £27 a month from your balance - an increase of 59%. Much more noticable.0 -
Maybe it was a coincidence but last year I started making small overpayments. Didnt make a lot of difference to what I was paying off each month but 6 months later one of my horrible CCs dropped the interest rates I was paying and 2 month ago I got accepted for a 0% balance transfer card - now that is making a difference.When it rains look for RainbowsWhen its Dark look for Stars0
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absolutly it makes a difference. When we started on our dmp I thought I would be very old and grey before it finished, but we overpaid where we could and finished MUCH earlier than we had expected-so still grey but not quite so old. We now over pay on the mortgage and have saved £100's (if not more ) and will finish in less than 2yrs, instead of nearly 5.
I think that it is an attitude of mind as well as an overpayment. We just got used to paying where we could and for me it became addictive, I loved seeing the balance go down each month. If you start seeing £10.00 as a worth while amount of money you don't spend it on rubbish, but maybe save it instead. How much would be worth while ? £20? £30? When do you decide if it is worth doing?
Perhaps if you dont want to put the odd £10. directly onto your debts you could save until you have enough to offer a f&f ?
good luck with it all
churchratLBM-2003ish
Owed £61k and £60ish mortgage
2010 owe £00.00 and £20K mortgage:D
2011 £9000 mortgage0
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