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Best way to pay off £20,000 debt

monkeyman602
Posts: 4 Newbie
in Loans
Best way to pay off £20,000 debt
Can anyone advise me how is the best way to pay off my debt. I’ve avoided checking how much I owe for ages and so it’s built up to a ridiculous amount.
I have 4 credit cards on 0% interest, 1 with interest, a store card, catalogue debt and a £3,000 overdraft. I am sick of messing about swapping credit cards to get 0% interest and every time I need to buy something I’m getting further in debt.
Would I be better getting a loan and paying it all off and avoiding credit cards altogether? I’m determined to get rid of it one way or another. I know there’ll be interest on a loan but I think I’d feel more in control.
Can anyone advise me how is the best way to pay off my debt. I’ve avoided checking how much I owe for ages and so it’s built up to a ridiculous amount.
I have 4 credit cards on 0% interest, 1 with interest, a store card, catalogue debt and a £3,000 overdraft. I am sick of messing about swapping credit cards to get 0% interest and every time I need to buy something I’m getting further in debt.
Would I be better getting a loan and paying it all off and avoiding credit cards altogether? I’m determined to get rid of it one way or another. I know there’ll be interest on a loan but I think I’d feel more in control.
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Comments
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Morning,
First of all, well done for acknowledging you have a debt problem-sometimes the hardest thing to do! This means you've had enough of having had enough-always a good mindset to be in to get rid of debt.
Secondly, as much as it will pain you, you must check to the penny on what you owe on all of your accounts. You need a clear figure to start tackling it. It may be better, worse than you thought, but got to be done.
Thirdly, if you have debts on 0% leave them for now. Are you constantly in your overdraft? If so, this needs to go ASAP! I never knew until I joined this site, but your bank can reclaim that overdraft at any time. What does it cost you per month?
You need to do a SOA (statement of affairs) to get a clear picture where your money is going, what you owe and what you have left every month etc.
It will all feel scary at the moment, but once you get a clear plan of how you're going to tackle it you will feel nothing, but relief!
There will be more people with much better advice than me along soon.
One thing I can promise is, this site it nothing but supportive, encouraging and great to get your daily thoughts down.
I wish you tons of luck on your debt free journey-smash it penny by penny! :-)0 -
Also, getting a loan to repay debt very rarely works and is advised against on this site.
Knuckle down, budget, earn more, spend less is the best way to get debt free.
Good Luck0 -
Also, getting a loan to repay debt very rarely works and is advised against on this site.
Knuckle down, budget, earn more, spend less is the best way to get debt free.
Good Luck0 -
monkeyman602 wrote: »Best way to pay off £20,000 debt
Can anyone advise me how is the best way to pay off my debt. I’ve avoided checking how much I owe for ages and so it’s built up to a ridiculous amount.
I have 4 credit cards on 0% interest, 1 with interest, a store card, catalogue debt and a £3,000 overdraft. I am sick of messing about swapping credit cards to get 0% interest and every time I need to buy something I’m getting further in debt.
Would I be better getting a loan and paying it all off and avoiding credit cards altogether? I’m determined to get rid of it one way or another. I know there’ll be interest on a loan but I think I’d feel more in control.
How long is a piece of string ?
Thats essentially what your asking us.
We wont know any answers until you complete a statement of affairs for us to look at, you can find the calculator here :
http://www.stoozing.com/calculator/soa.php
When finished, format for MSE when it asks you, then post in the debt free wannabe forum, which can be found here :
https://forums.moneysavingexpert.com/newthread.php?do=newthread&f=76I’m a Forum Ambassador and I support the Forum Team on the Debt free wannabe, Credit file and ratings, and Bankruptcy and living with it boards. If you need any help on these boards, do let me know. Please note that Ambassadors are not moderators. Any posts you spot in breach of the Forum Rules should be reported via the report button, or by emailing forumteam@moneysavingexpert.com. All views are my own and not the official line of MoneySavingExpert.For free non-judgemental debt advice, contact either Stepchange, National Debtline, or CitizensAdviceBureaux.Link to SOA Calculator- https://www.stoozing.com/soa.php The "provit letter" is here-https://forums.moneysavingexpert.com/discussion/2607247/letter-when-you-know-nothing-about-about-the-debt-aka-prove-it-letter0 -
monkeyman602 wrote: »I am sick of messing about swapping credit cards to get 0% interest and every time I need to buy something I’m getting further in debt.Would I be better getting a loan and paying it all off and avoiding credit cards altogether?This is a system account and does not represent a real person. To contact the Forum Team email forumteam@moneysavingexpert.com0
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monkeyman602 wrote: »Best way to pay off £20,000 debt
Can anyone advise me how is the best way to pay off my debt. I’ve avoided checking how much I owe for ages and so it’s built up to a ridiculous amount.
I have 4 credit cards on 0% interest, 1 with interest, a store card, catalogue debt and a £3,000 overdraft. I am sick of messing about swapping credit cards to get 0% interest and every time I need to buy something I’m getting further in debt.
Would I be better getting a loan and paying it all off and avoiding credit cards altogether? I’m determined to get rid of it one way or another. I know there’ll be interest on a loan but I think I’d feel more in control.
Are the things you buy really needed ?
Stop buying things that put your further into debt.
Its possible a loan isn't achieveable based on what you have posted.
Look at your spending and cut back.
Stop the impulse purchases, only buy whats needed.0 -
Getting an interest bearing loan is not a great idea given a large chunk of your existing debt is at 0%. Use the SOA & snowball calc to prioritise your debts and get them paid off in the most effective order.Thinking critically since 1996....0
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Over pay the debt would be the answer - not shift it around, that rarely works.0
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