Getting Out Of Debt and Managing Your Current Debt

It is not easy to think about managing your debt when there seems to be no end in sight or any remedy available to help. Perhaps the best way to deal with that is to design your own budget and payment plan that ensures you will pay off your debt within a specific time frame. Unfortunately this approach rarely works for people with serious debt problems. Often the only way to put a stop to the debt spiral is to use one of the more common debt management strategies.

Debt consolidation

Credit counseling

Debt settlement

While these approaches can help you pay off your existing debts they won’t necessarily help you avoid getting back in debt. The strategy you choose depends on the amount of debt and urgency of your financial situation. Filing bankruptcy is a legal proceeding that has gained popularity recently. Once reserved for the most extreme debt situations, bankruptcy and personal bankruptcy have reached epidemic proportions in many states. If you have tried conventional approaches to getting out of debt then it might be best for you to consider bankruptcy. Remember bankruptcy should be used as a last resort.

The spiral of debt is often reborn after managing or paying off debt. Once you settle your debts, you can prevent future debt by tracking your spending and following a monthly budget that prevents you from spending more than you earn more that you can afford.

This is where the rubber meets the road for many people. Living in debt or living beyond your means becomes a way of life. This culture and its philosophy is often born with your first new credit card, usually around your 18th birthday. Credit card companies insist through their advertisements that your life will be better, especially if you buy the things you’ve always wanted and that you deserved with a credit card. That simple strategy in advertising unfortunately loops in many people to an introduction to debt.

If you have spent a number of years living the life of a credit card abuser or a personal loan abuser you can expect the challenge of living without credit cards to be significant. If you are married it will take a total commitment to living debt free. If you are single it may be even more difficult. We have talked with many people in their 50s who have gone through several debt spirals. The cycle of debt is vicious and relentless. Use caution when you get a handle on your debt not to get back in.

Obviously debt problems almost always lower your credit score. While that will not be a priority when you are involved in managing your debt it is something you should consider once on solid financial ground. Improving your credit score is best accomplished by simply paying your bills on time. That sounds too easy doesn’t it? You will likely find many companies that offer credit repair services. The fact is you do not need a credit repair service if you structure a plan and follow your plan to pay your bills on time. Over time your credit score will improve naturally and prove to lenders that you are indeed a good credit risk in the future.

Once you are managing your current debt you can begin to build your cash reserves again. One of the most common things that we hear from people in debt is that they do not have enough money to pay their bills, how could they possibly save money. Again this is part of the new process you must adopt. Quite simply if you want to save money, pay yourself first. Think about that.

Let’s assume your paycheck is $500 for the week. A modest savings plan of 5% and you would take $25 and deposit them in a savings account or savings instrument of some type. That does not sound like a lot of money but over time you can increase the amount and what you are doing is developing a discipline of saving and not spending. That bears repeating develop the discipline of saving and not spending. Before you know it saving money will be the new priority in your life, and managing your debt will become much easier.

That tendency for people that are in serious is to think of hopelessly. To some extent it does feel that way. You must look beyond the present and to your future. As you know if you are in debt or in that hopeless situation, the stress and anxiety you feel on a day-to-day basis is overwhelming. Imagine yourself and your financial situation without that stress. That may be the motivation that you need to make a concerted effort to getting out of debt and staying out of debt.

Whether you choose debt consolidation, credit counseling, debt settlement or find it necessary to file bankruptcy, you must choose a plan that will get you on the road to recovery.

Do not fool yourself into thinking that you do not have debt problems because you are paying your bills. If you are paying the minimum payments on your credit accounts it is likely you will spend years and years paying off the debt. Generally speaking paying the minimum payments is risky. What if you miss a paycheck? What if you become unemployed? Both of those scenarios are happening to thousands of people every day.

If you can make your mortgage payments, may cure car payment and pay off your credit card in full each month then you are among the minority. Essentially if you make your payments on time to your good debts and pay off your bad debts in full each month you may not need to use the debt strategies we have outlined.

Determining where you are with regard to debt is not difficult. Simply ask yourself and answer this question honestly. Am I in debt? An honest answer should provoke an honest action. Whether that is continuing on your present course or charting a new course for debt free living is up to you.