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Steve Bucci, the Bankrate.com Debt AdviserTackling debt from multiple credit cards

Dear Debt Adviser,
With the credit card companies charging 4 percent minimums, I was wondering if I can pay less than the minimum on two of my three cards and concentrate extra funds on the third account to get it paid off? Is there a penalty for paying a significant amount on a bill, but not all the way up to the listed minimum? Thank you!
-- Linda

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Dear Linda,
I sure hope you get this before your next minimum payment is due! There's a reason why they call it "minimum" -- it's the smallest amount they'll accept without imposing penalties. You must pay at least the minimum amount due on all your accounts or you will be hit with fees, a higher minimum payment next month and worse. Your creditors view any payment amount that does not cover the minimum amount due as a late payment, because you did not pay as agreed.

A small bit of good news is that the 4-percent number you quoted may be overstated. Each creditor has its own formula for repayment, and yours might well be less than 4 percent. Also, some have already gone to the higher minimums, so you might not have an increase at all. For example, Citibank started moving to the new minimums back in March of 2005.

Here's the bad news if you do not make a minimum payment by its due date:

  • You would be assessed a late fee of up to $39 each month that you did not pay the minimum amount due. This would be added to your next month's minimum payment.
  • If you are not already there, it is likely that your creditors would increase your interest rate to the maximum allowed by law in the state where the card is issued. In Bankrate.com's Feb. 8, 2006, survey of credit card issuers, these "penalty rates" reached as high as 31.5 percent. The reason for the interest-rate increase in is because by not paying as agreed (the minimum due), you are put in a high-risk lending category. The new penalty interest would also be applied to your next month's minimum payment.
  • You would have to make up the shortfall in last month's minimum. So the amount you didn't pay would also be added to your next month's minimum.
  • Your credit score would deteriorate, giving your other lenders the right to move your other accounts to the penalty rate under what is known as "universal default" and you can see that your accounts would be in bad shape very quickly by paying less than the minimum amount due.

You are on the right track by trying to get one of the three cards paid off quickly. My advice is to stick to that plan, but make sure you have enough to pay your other two cards' minimum payments while concentrating on paying more than the minimum to the account with the highest interest rate. Obviously, the larger the payment amount, the quicker the credit card is paid off.

Because it sounds as if you might have trouble making the minimum payments on the other two cards while paying down the third, you might want to consider taking another look at your monthly expenses and income. To reach your goal of paying off the credit card debt you might have to make some temporary sacrifices. Places to look for extra money to pay down debt include eliminating or decreasing eating out, new clothing purchases and even looking at cutting back on cable television. A temporary second job may be worth looking at, too.

If you have cut expenses down to the bare minimum and still don't believe you can make any headway on your credit card debt, contact a reputable credit counselor.

Good luck!

The Debt Adviser, Steve Bucci, is the president of Money Management International Financial Education Foundation and the author of Credit Repair Kit for Dummies. Visit MMI for additional debt advice or to ask a question of the Debt Adviser go to the "Ask the Experts," page to ask a debt question.

Bankrate.com's corrections policy -- Posted: Feb. 10, 2006
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