ThirdAge
Health Relationships Money Work Beauty Fun Classes Blog
- advertisement -
  Money
 Budgeting & Bargains
 Estate Planning
 Retire Well
 Classes: Register Now!
 FREE Workshops
 Money Quizzes
 
 

Pay credit card bill early and save

Page | 1 | 2 |

Paying early in the month also has other potential advantages. For example, it may help prevent a late charge. Saving $39 by not having to pay a late penalty is a huge step forward, Crawford says.

- advertisement -

And if the cardholder stumbles upon a windfall and plans to apply the money to credit card debt, paying early can create big savings.

For example, a cardholder who applies a $5,000 windfall to a $10,000 debt at 29 percent interest can save $115 by paying the debt off on Day 2 of the billing cycle rather than waiting until Day 31.

Corbett offers a spreadsheet at his blog that cardholders can use to plug in their own numbers and find out how much they'll save.

Try micropayments
If you can't afford to fork over a big chunk of change toward your debt all at once, consider micropayments. Corbett made online payments of $5 each day for an entire month just to see if the credit card company would accept the payments and apply it to the principal. It did.

While Corbett doesn't recommend repeating his approach, he does urge cardholders to set up an online payment program through a bank account. That way, cardholders can make micropayments when they get a bit of extra cash.

Another technique cardholders can use is to divide their monthly payment in half and send half of it early.

A few additional steps can help cardholders get the most out of the "pay early" approach.

Cardholders who make an early payment and want the card company to apply the money toward principal right away are urged to write "apply to principal" on the check or to make a note on their online transaction. Otherwise, the company could hold the money as prepayment of next month's bill.

“If you're not getting away from credit card use altogether none of these strategies will help.”

Cardholders also should closely track when they've made a payment and the amount paid, says Sandra Shore, a counseling training manager with Novadebt, a nonprofit consumer credit counseling agency based in Freehold, N.J.

"If you make two payments in one cycle it can become confusing ... and you could end up missing a payment the following month and get slapped with late fees and even more interest charges," Shore says.  

Remember, whatever you pay in one cycle goes toward that one cycle's debt. You can't pay ahead to next month's minimum payment.

While it is nice to pay early in the cycle, it's foolish to jeopardize the ability to pay next month's bill.

"Keep in check your excitement of paying things down and make sure you have enough to take care of minimum amounts for all your credit cards," says Ken Clark, a Certified Financial Planner and author of "The Complete Idiot's Guide to Getting Out of Debt."

Paying credit cards early can help reduce a cardholder's debt burden in the short run. But it isn't the final word in debt reduction strategies, says Greg Ward, a Certified Financial Planner with Financial Finesse, a Manhattan Beach, Calif.-based provider of financial education for organizations, employees and customers.

"Paying early should be part of many things you do to pay down your debt," Ward says. "Just one strategy is not enough."

The ultimate goal, Ward says, is to get rid of your credit card debt.

"If you're not getting away from credit card use altogether none of these strategies will help," he says.

"You'll forever be on the hamster wheel."

Bankrate.com's corrections policy -- Posted: April 21, 2009
 
 
Create a news alert for "credit card"
Page | 1 | 2
 
 RESOURCES
Credit Card Basics
Contacting the credit bureaus
How to get your free credit report
 TOP CREDIT CARD STORIES
6 ways to build credit on campus
Find a gift card
Winner or loser: Mortgage shopper
 

Credit Cards
Compare weekly rates
WEEKLY AVERAGES
Type Fixed Variable
Standard 13.92% 12.53%
Gold 11.74% 10.84%
Platinum 11.30% 14.38%
All 12.40% 13.63%
ADVERTISING PARTNERS
RELATED CALCULATORS
  Loan calculator (includes amortization schedule)  
  See your FICO score range -- free  
  What will it take to pay off your credit card?  
VIEW ALL  
FINANCIAL LITERACY
Rev up your portfolio
with these tips and tricks.
- advertisement -
 
- advertisement -

News & Advice | Compare Rates | Calculators
Mortgage | Home Equity | Auto | Investing | Checking & Savings | Credit Cards | Debt Management | College Finance | Taxes | Personal Finance
About Bankrate | Privacy | Online Media Kit | Partnerships | Investor Relations | Press/Broadcast | Contact Us | Sitemap
NASDAQ: RATE | RSS Feeds | Order Rate Data | Bankrate Canada | Bankrate China

* Mortgage rate may include points. See rate tables for details. Click here.
* To see the definition of overnight averages click here.

Bankrate.com ®, Copyright © 2010 Bankrate, Inc., All Rights Reserved, Terms of Use.

© copyright 1997 - 2007 ThirdAge Inc. All rights reserved.