Can I become debt free or should I file bankruptcy ? How to manage my debt and finances?In Australia, how to...

Pronunciation of umlaut vowels in the history of German

One Half of Ten; A Riddle

Word or phrase for showing great skill at something WITHOUT formal training in it

Publishing research using outdated methods

Why isn't there a non-conducting core wire for high-frequency coil applications

Why did the villain in the first Men in Black movie care about Earth's Cockroaches?

Find some digits of factorial 17

Why is working on the same position for more than 15 years not a red flag?

What is the wife of a henpecked husband called?

Who is this Ant Woman character in this image alongside the Wasp?

How to remove lines through the legend markers in ListPlot?

What is the lore-based reason that the Spectator has the Create Food and Water trait, instead of simply not requiring food and water?

Does paint affect EMI ability of enclosure?

How do Chazal know that the descendants of a Mamzer may never marry into the general populace?

How to solve a large system of linear algebra?

Can I become debt free or should I file bankruptcy ? How to manage my debt and finances?

Can making a creature unable to attack after it has been assigned as an attacker remove it from combat?

Using only 1s, make 29 with the minimum number of digits

Am I a Rude Number?

Why do neural networks need so many training examples to perform?

How to count the characters of jar files by wc

What is the purpose of easy combat scenarios that don't need resource expenditure?

Writing a character who is going through a civilizing process without overdoing it?

Strange Sign on Lab Door



Can I become debt free or should I file bankruptcy ? How to manage my debt and finances?


In Australia, how to battle credit card debt?How can I manage my Credit Card Debt in Australia?Does a house mortgage make it easier to get a personal loan?Credit increase hurt loan chances?Should I consolidate loans and cards, or just cards, leaving multiple loans?How to calculate the number of months until a loan is paid off (given principal, APR and payment amount)?What is the best way to help my dad consolidate his credit card debt at a lower rate?Someone please help with my credit situationPaying off debt and living within means vs. long term planningHow can I prepare for my US student debt?













7















I am 35 years old and single. My income is 78K to 80K after taxes and insurance.



I pay $1,500 for rent+utilities, $150 for phone bill, $450 for auto loan, $300 for auto insurance (for 2 people, I am helping a friend who can't pay auto insurance), $750 for a personal loan and $750 to $1,000 for credit card. I also need to send $100 to $200 to my home country. Total monthly expenses are $3,950 to $4,200.



I have $16k an auto loan at 7%, $32k of credit card debt at 20-22% and a personal loan of $18k at 17%. Total debt = $64k.



After the above expenses I need money for groceries, clothes, gas and other monthly needs.



I want to be debt free or at least decrease my total debts from $64k to $10k.



I can't consolidate my debts because I already have a personal loan and I have a poor credit score.



Please advise me how to reduce my debt.



Can I be debt free or should I file bankruptcy (I don't know if that's possible because I am not a US citizen).










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Is it fair to assume you're in the US?

    – quid
    9 hours ago






  • 5





    $4,200 * 12 = $50,400. Your income is ~80k after taxes, so where's the $30k/year going?

    – Hart CO
    9 hours ago






  • 2





    Yes I am in US. @HartCO I couldn't manage my finances for various reasons, I need help. I had to spend 10K for a hospital because insurance company denied my claim (I was having a short term insurance because I was not eligible for regular insurance at that time). Then I lost my girl friend, then started drinking more, like I used to spend 500 to 600 dollars on liquor and...

    – The Guest
    9 hours ago








  • 3





    @Hartco, The $4200 doesn't represent his total expenses, in addition he spends money for "groceries, clothes, gas and other monthly needs". But your point is still valid, he should easily have an extra $10k per year to pay down debt, which would take about 6 years. If he scrimped he could put $20k per year on the debt, and pay it off in about 3 years.

    – Glen Yates
    8 hours ago






  • 4





    Yup, OP has some huge money leaks they are not documenting.

    – Harper
    7 hours ago
















7















I am 35 years old and single. My income is 78K to 80K after taxes and insurance.



I pay $1,500 for rent+utilities, $150 for phone bill, $450 for auto loan, $300 for auto insurance (for 2 people, I am helping a friend who can't pay auto insurance), $750 for a personal loan and $750 to $1,000 for credit card. I also need to send $100 to $200 to my home country. Total monthly expenses are $3,950 to $4,200.



I have $16k an auto loan at 7%, $32k of credit card debt at 20-22% and a personal loan of $18k at 17%. Total debt = $64k.



After the above expenses I need money for groceries, clothes, gas and other monthly needs.



I want to be debt free or at least decrease my total debts from $64k to $10k.



I can't consolidate my debts because I already have a personal loan and I have a poor credit score.



Please advise me how to reduce my debt.



Can I be debt free or should I file bankruptcy (I don't know if that's possible because I am not a US citizen).










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Is it fair to assume you're in the US?

    – quid
    9 hours ago






  • 5





    $4,200 * 12 = $50,400. Your income is ~80k after taxes, so where's the $30k/year going?

    – Hart CO
    9 hours ago






  • 2





    Yes I am in US. @HartCO I couldn't manage my finances for various reasons, I need help. I had to spend 10K for a hospital because insurance company denied my claim (I was having a short term insurance because I was not eligible for regular insurance at that time). Then I lost my girl friend, then started drinking more, like I used to spend 500 to 600 dollars on liquor and...

    – The Guest
    9 hours ago








  • 3





    @Hartco, The $4200 doesn't represent his total expenses, in addition he spends money for "groceries, clothes, gas and other monthly needs". But your point is still valid, he should easily have an extra $10k per year to pay down debt, which would take about 6 years. If he scrimped he could put $20k per year on the debt, and pay it off in about 3 years.

    – Glen Yates
    8 hours ago






  • 4





    Yup, OP has some huge money leaks they are not documenting.

    – Harper
    7 hours ago














7












7








7


1






I am 35 years old and single. My income is 78K to 80K after taxes and insurance.



I pay $1,500 for rent+utilities, $150 for phone bill, $450 for auto loan, $300 for auto insurance (for 2 people, I am helping a friend who can't pay auto insurance), $750 for a personal loan and $750 to $1,000 for credit card. I also need to send $100 to $200 to my home country. Total monthly expenses are $3,950 to $4,200.



I have $16k an auto loan at 7%, $32k of credit card debt at 20-22% and a personal loan of $18k at 17%. Total debt = $64k.



After the above expenses I need money for groceries, clothes, gas and other monthly needs.



I want to be debt free or at least decrease my total debts from $64k to $10k.



I can't consolidate my debts because I already have a personal loan and I have a poor credit score.



Please advise me how to reduce my debt.



Can I be debt free or should I file bankruptcy (I don't know if that's possible because I am not a US citizen).










share|improve this question
















I am 35 years old and single. My income is 78K to 80K after taxes and insurance.



I pay $1,500 for rent+utilities, $150 for phone bill, $450 for auto loan, $300 for auto insurance (for 2 people, I am helping a friend who can't pay auto insurance), $750 for a personal loan and $750 to $1,000 for credit card. I also need to send $100 to $200 to my home country. Total monthly expenses are $3,950 to $4,200.



I have $16k an auto loan at 7%, $32k of credit card debt at 20-22% and a personal loan of $18k at 17%. Total debt = $64k.



After the above expenses I need money for groceries, clothes, gas and other monthly needs.



I want to be debt free or at least decrease my total debts from $64k to $10k.



I can't consolidate my debts because I already have a personal loan and I have a poor credit score.



Please advise me how to reduce my debt.



Can I be debt free or should I file bankruptcy (I don't know if that's possible because I am not a US citizen).







credit-card debt auto-loan bankruptcy personal-loan






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 9 hours ago









Bob Baerker

16.7k12450




16.7k12450










asked 9 hours ago









The GuestThe Guest

1636




1636








  • 2





    Is it fair to assume you're in the US?

    – quid
    9 hours ago






  • 5





    $4,200 * 12 = $50,400. Your income is ~80k after taxes, so where's the $30k/year going?

    – Hart CO
    9 hours ago






  • 2





    Yes I am in US. @HartCO I couldn't manage my finances for various reasons, I need help. I had to spend 10K for a hospital because insurance company denied my claim (I was having a short term insurance because I was not eligible for regular insurance at that time). Then I lost my girl friend, then started drinking more, like I used to spend 500 to 600 dollars on liquor and...

    – The Guest
    9 hours ago








  • 3





    @Hartco, The $4200 doesn't represent his total expenses, in addition he spends money for "groceries, clothes, gas and other monthly needs". But your point is still valid, he should easily have an extra $10k per year to pay down debt, which would take about 6 years. If he scrimped he could put $20k per year on the debt, and pay it off in about 3 years.

    – Glen Yates
    8 hours ago






  • 4





    Yup, OP has some huge money leaks they are not documenting.

    – Harper
    7 hours ago














  • 2





    Is it fair to assume you're in the US?

    – quid
    9 hours ago






  • 5





    $4,200 * 12 = $50,400. Your income is ~80k after taxes, so where's the $30k/year going?

    – Hart CO
    9 hours ago






  • 2





    Yes I am in US. @HartCO I couldn't manage my finances for various reasons, I need help. I had to spend 10K for a hospital because insurance company denied my claim (I was having a short term insurance because I was not eligible for regular insurance at that time). Then I lost my girl friend, then started drinking more, like I used to spend 500 to 600 dollars on liquor and...

    – The Guest
    9 hours ago








  • 3





    @Hartco, The $4200 doesn't represent his total expenses, in addition he spends money for "groceries, clothes, gas and other monthly needs". But your point is still valid, he should easily have an extra $10k per year to pay down debt, which would take about 6 years. If he scrimped he could put $20k per year on the debt, and pay it off in about 3 years.

    – Glen Yates
    8 hours ago






  • 4





    Yup, OP has some huge money leaks they are not documenting.

    – Harper
    7 hours ago








2




2





Is it fair to assume you're in the US?

– quid
9 hours ago





Is it fair to assume you're in the US?

– quid
9 hours ago




5




5





$4,200 * 12 = $50,400. Your income is ~80k after taxes, so where's the $30k/year going?

– Hart CO
9 hours ago





$4,200 * 12 = $50,400. Your income is ~80k after taxes, so where's the $30k/year going?

– Hart CO
9 hours ago




2




2





Yes I am in US. @HartCO I couldn't manage my finances for various reasons, I need help. I had to spend 10K for a hospital because insurance company denied my claim (I was having a short term insurance because I was not eligible for regular insurance at that time). Then I lost my girl friend, then started drinking more, like I used to spend 500 to 600 dollars on liquor and...

– The Guest
9 hours ago







Yes I am in US. @HartCO I couldn't manage my finances for various reasons, I need help. I had to spend 10K for a hospital because insurance company denied my claim (I was having a short term insurance because I was not eligible for regular insurance at that time). Then I lost my girl friend, then started drinking more, like I used to spend 500 to 600 dollars on liquor and...

– The Guest
9 hours ago






3




3





@Hartco, The $4200 doesn't represent his total expenses, in addition he spends money for "groceries, clothes, gas and other monthly needs". But your point is still valid, he should easily have an extra $10k per year to pay down debt, which would take about 6 years. If he scrimped he could put $20k per year on the debt, and pay it off in about 3 years.

– Glen Yates
8 hours ago





@Hartco, The $4200 doesn't represent his total expenses, in addition he spends money for "groceries, clothes, gas and other monthly needs". But your point is still valid, he should easily have an extra $10k per year to pay down debt, which would take about 6 years. If he scrimped he could put $20k per year on the debt, and pay it off in about 3 years.

– Glen Yates
8 hours ago




4




4





Yup, OP has some huge money leaks they are not documenting.

– Harper
7 hours ago





Yup, OP has some huge money leaks they are not documenting.

– Harper
7 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















18















Can I be debt free or should I file bankruptcy




There's no reason to file bankruptcy with $64k in debt and a $80K net salary. You can get out of debt in 1-2 years if you're willing to sacrifice. The harder you sacrifice, the less time it will take.




Please advise me how to reduce my debt.





  • Stop creating any more debt. Cut up all credit cards

  • Put $1,000-2,000 in a cash savings account to cover "emergencies" while you are getting out of debt.

  • Get on a cash budget. List out all of your expenses in order of priority (housing, food, utilities, transportation, etc.). Put debts last.

  • Cut expenses to the bone. No restaurants, no vacations. Every discretionary dollar you spend restricts how quickly you get the debt paid off.

  • Once you have all of your expenses laid out, all remaining cash goes to your highest interest-rate debt (I normally suggest the smallest balance, but the interest rates and balances are so high here it might make more of a difference that most cases). Once the cash runs out, stop spending.

  • Pay minimum payments on all other debts. Do not skip payments unless you're already in default.


Once you determine how much per month you can pay towards debts, you can figure out how long it will take you to pay them off. Don't expect any quick solutions. Your debt has been building up over time; there's no reason to expect to get rid of it quickly.



Some things you can do to jump-start your journey:




  • Sell the car. Use the proceeds to get a cheap car that you can pay for in cash.

  • Sell other stuff. Anything you can sell online will help you get out of debt sooner.

  • Get extra work. You can probably find part-time work that pays $1-2,000 per month.






share|improve this answer


























  • @D Stanley yes, my debt has been building up over time. And I tried many times and I failed to lower it for various reasons including my over spending too. Sadly I can't work extra as per US law and as per the visa I have. Thanks for your answer.

    – The Guest
    8 hours ago








  • 2





    @TheGuest You're not alone. The first step (getting a budget and sticking to it) is the hardest by far. It will take some time and discipline but once you have that down you'll be less inclined to overspend going forward.

    – D Stanley
    8 hours ago






  • 4





    +1, great answer. @TheGuest, if you are having trouble with motivation and the procedure of budgeting, I recommend the book The Total Money Makeover by Dave Ramsey, which will walk you through all the steps necessary to get to being debt free.

    – Ben Miller
    8 hours ago











  • You can also look up Dave Ramsey's radio show/podcast on youtube. Lot's of free advice, inspiration and resources. What's outlined above is fairly close to the Baby Steps you'll hear Dave talk about and has lead millions of people to better financial lives.

    – Adam Klump
    7 hours ago













  • Making a formal budget and sticking to it is probably the most important item in this list. You'll never get out of debt unless you stop accumulating additional debt. If you have trouble sticking to a budget, I've found it helpful to recruit a trusted friend to "audit your books" at the end of the month and help keep you accountable.

    – bta
    4 hours ago



















6














You need to change the way you think. First, understand compounding. Not just intellectually, but viscerally. You need to develop an aversion to spending borrowed money.



A debt with 22% APR doubles every 38 months.



Every dollar you pay down your debt, cuts the total length of time you will be paying that horrible interest. Every $1 you spend now increases your time to get out of debt, and costs you around $3.70 if it takes you 6 years to get debt free.



Take a look at graphs of compounding interest. They're designed to excite you about saving, but debt grows exponentially too. That should scare you. Set one of those graphs in front of you until it does.



Then, use your intellectual knowledge of compounding to change your real-world behavior. Learn to turn price tags into what it will actually cost you, by multiplying by 3.70. That $150 favor you do paying car insurance for a friend actually costs you $555. Every month. You are out $750 for your relatives in your home country to receive $200. The $2 cup of coffee costs you $8 (don't forget sales tax!). The $7 lunch costs you $28. Splitting a night out with your friends is costing them $150 each, but you're out $550!



But lucky for you, you've got a place to put money where you don't get back only 1/3.7 of its value -- your debts. They work in reverse. Where lunch will have you paying $28 for a meal worth $7, every extra $10 you throw at your credit card debt puts $37 into future-you's pocket.



Start seeing the things you spend money on with their true, just-for-you price tags, and you'll find saying no to waste and eating pasta at home at lot more compelling.



The best part is that if you do change your thinking like this, D Stanley's estimate that you could be out of $66k debt in under 2 years, and back to living life normally, paying for things at the same price everyone else gets, is 100% possible.






share|improve this answer
























  • Wow, the part about multiplying by 3.7 is really interesting. Is this a common piece of advice? I've never heard it before

    – Jon
    3 hours ago











  • @Jon: There's nothing special about 3.7, it's just 22% APR compounded monthly for 72 months. You can substitute any APR and duration. If you have no debt except subsidized student loans, your number might be 1.3 or so. If OP had missed a payment before asking here, and therefore was hit with penalty APR, it could be 8.5 (based on 30.99% APR and 7 years).

    – Ben Voigt
    3 hours ago













  • @Jon: The one place you might have seen the multiplier in effect before, is if you take a look at a credit card statement where it says "if you make only minimum payments, it'll take you X years and you'll pay Y in total... if you make 50% larger payments, it'll take you X2 years and you'll pay Z in total". I expect that right now OP's number for Z is somewhere over 3 times his "current balance" (at that doesn't account for the fact every new dollar is effectively paid on the tail end, so it compounds more interest than any other) and Y is simply insane.

    – Ben Voigt
    3 hours ago











  • +1 because you showed how much money a $8 coffey will cost you in 7 years. Its sometimes helpful to see things this way. May i ask you if you could improve your answer by adding the formular to get to the 3.7 factor? It could also help future readers.

    – some_coder
    18 mins ago











Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "93"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});

function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: true,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: 10,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});


}
});














draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmoney.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f105885%2fcan-i-become-debt-free-or-should-i-file-bankruptcy-how-to-manage-my-debt-and-f%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









18















Can I be debt free or should I file bankruptcy




There's no reason to file bankruptcy with $64k in debt and a $80K net salary. You can get out of debt in 1-2 years if you're willing to sacrifice. The harder you sacrifice, the less time it will take.




Please advise me how to reduce my debt.





  • Stop creating any more debt. Cut up all credit cards

  • Put $1,000-2,000 in a cash savings account to cover "emergencies" while you are getting out of debt.

  • Get on a cash budget. List out all of your expenses in order of priority (housing, food, utilities, transportation, etc.). Put debts last.

  • Cut expenses to the bone. No restaurants, no vacations. Every discretionary dollar you spend restricts how quickly you get the debt paid off.

  • Once you have all of your expenses laid out, all remaining cash goes to your highest interest-rate debt (I normally suggest the smallest balance, but the interest rates and balances are so high here it might make more of a difference that most cases). Once the cash runs out, stop spending.

  • Pay minimum payments on all other debts. Do not skip payments unless you're already in default.


Once you determine how much per month you can pay towards debts, you can figure out how long it will take you to pay them off. Don't expect any quick solutions. Your debt has been building up over time; there's no reason to expect to get rid of it quickly.



Some things you can do to jump-start your journey:




  • Sell the car. Use the proceeds to get a cheap car that you can pay for in cash.

  • Sell other stuff. Anything you can sell online will help you get out of debt sooner.

  • Get extra work. You can probably find part-time work that pays $1-2,000 per month.






share|improve this answer


























  • @D Stanley yes, my debt has been building up over time. And I tried many times and I failed to lower it for various reasons including my over spending too. Sadly I can't work extra as per US law and as per the visa I have. Thanks for your answer.

    – The Guest
    8 hours ago








  • 2





    @TheGuest You're not alone. The first step (getting a budget and sticking to it) is the hardest by far. It will take some time and discipline but once you have that down you'll be less inclined to overspend going forward.

    – D Stanley
    8 hours ago






  • 4





    +1, great answer. @TheGuest, if you are having trouble with motivation and the procedure of budgeting, I recommend the book The Total Money Makeover by Dave Ramsey, which will walk you through all the steps necessary to get to being debt free.

    – Ben Miller
    8 hours ago











  • You can also look up Dave Ramsey's radio show/podcast on youtube. Lot's of free advice, inspiration and resources. What's outlined above is fairly close to the Baby Steps you'll hear Dave talk about and has lead millions of people to better financial lives.

    – Adam Klump
    7 hours ago













  • Making a formal budget and sticking to it is probably the most important item in this list. You'll never get out of debt unless you stop accumulating additional debt. If you have trouble sticking to a budget, I've found it helpful to recruit a trusted friend to "audit your books" at the end of the month and help keep you accountable.

    – bta
    4 hours ago
















18















Can I be debt free or should I file bankruptcy




There's no reason to file bankruptcy with $64k in debt and a $80K net salary. You can get out of debt in 1-2 years if you're willing to sacrifice. The harder you sacrifice, the less time it will take.




Please advise me how to reduce my debt.





  • Stop creating any more debt. Cut up all credit cards

  • Put $1,000-2,000 in a cash savings account to cover "emergencies" while you are getting out of debt.

  • Get on a cash budget. List out all of your expenses in order of priority (housing, food, utilities, transportation, etc.). Put debts last.

  • Cut expenses to the bone. No restaurants, no vacations. Every discretionary dollar you spend restricts how quickly you get the debt paid off.

  • Once you have all of your expenses laid out, all remaining cash goes to your highest interest-rate debt (I normally suggest the smallest balance, but the interest rates and balances are so high here it might make more of a difference that most cases). Once the cash runs out, stop spending.

  • Pay minimum payments on all other debts. Do not skip payments unless you're already in default.


Once you determine how much per month you can pay towards debts, you can figure out how long it will take you to pay them off. Don't expect any quick solutions. Your debt has been building up over time; there's no reason to expect to get rid of it quickly.



Some things you can do to jump-start your journey:




  • Sell the car. Use the proceeds to get a cheap car that you can pay for in cash.

  • Sell other stuff. Anything you can sell online will help you get out of debt sooner.

  • Get extra work. You can probably find part-time work that pays $1-2,000 per month.






share|improve this answer


























  • @D Stanley yes, my debt has been building up over time. And I tried many times and I failed to lower it for various reasons including my over spending too. Sadly I can't work extra as per US law and as per the visa I have. Thanks for your answer.

    – The Guest
    8 hours ago








  • 2





    @TheGuest You're not alone. The first step (getting a budget and sticking to it) is the hardest by far. It will take some time and discipline but once you have that down you'll be less inclined to overspend going forward.

    – D Stanley
    8 hours ago






  • 4





    +1, great answer. @TheGuest, if you are having trouble with motivation and the procedure of budgeting, I recommend the book The Total Money Makeover by Dave Ramsey, which will walk you through all the steps necessary to get to being debt free.

    – Ben Miller
    8 hours ago











  • You can also look up Dave Ramsey's radio show/podcast on youtube. Lot's of free advice, inspiration and resources. What's outlined above is fairly close to the Baby Steps you'll hear Dave talk about and has lead millions of people to better financial lives.

    – Adam Klump
    7 hours ago













  • Making a formal budget and sticking to it is probably the most important item in this list. You'll never get out of debt unless you stop accumulating additional debt. If you have trouble sticking to a budget, I've found it helpful to recruit a trusted friend to "audit your books" at the end of the month and help keep you accountable.

    – bta
    4 hours ago














18












18








18








Can I be debt free or should I file bankruptcy




There's no reason to file bankruptcy with $64k in debt and a $80K net salary. You can get out of debt in 1-2 years if you're willing to sacrifice. The harder you sacrifice, the less time it will take.




Please advise me how to reduce my debt.





  • Stop creating any more debt. Cut up all credit cards

  • Put $1,000-2,000 in a cash savings account to cover "emergencies" while you are getting out of debt.

  • Get on a cash budget. List out all of your expenses in order of priority (housing, food, utilities, transportation, etc.). Put debts last.

  • Cut expenses to the bone. No restaurants, no vacations. Every discretionary dollar you spend restricts how quickly you get the debt paid off.

  • Once you have all of your expenses laid out, all remaining cash goes to your highest interest-rate debt (I normally suggest the smallest balance, but the interest rates and balances are so high here it might make more of a difference that most cases). Once the cash runs out, stop spending.

  • Pay minimum payments on all other debts. Do not skip payments unless you're already in default.


Once you determine how much per month you can pay towards debts, you can figure out how long it will take you to pay them off. Don't expect any quick solutions. Your debt has been building up over time; there's no reason to expect to get rid of it quickly.



Some things you can do to jump-start your journey:




  • Sell the car. Use the proceeds to get a cheap car that you can pay for in cash.

  • Sell other stuff. Anything you can sell online will help you get out of debt sooner.

  • Get extra work. You can probably find part-time work that pays $1-2,000 per month.






share|improve this answer
















Can I be debt free or should I file bankruptcy




There's no reason to file bankruptcy with $64k in debt and a $80K net salary. You can get out of debt in 1-2 years if you're willing to sacrifice. The harder you sacrifice, the less time it will take.




Please advise me how to reduce my debt.





  • Stop creating any more debt. Cut up all credit cards

  • Put $1,000-2,000 in a cash savings account to cover "emergencies" while you are getting out of debt.

  • Get on a cash budget. List out all of your expenses in order of priority (housing, food, utilities, transportation, etc.). Put debts last.

  • Cut expenses to the bone. No restaurants, no vacations. Every discretionary dollar you spend restricts how quickly you get the debt paid off.

  • Once you have all of your expenses laid out, all remaining cash goes to your highest interest-rate debt (I normally suggest the smallest balance, but the interest rates and balances are so high here it might make more of a difference that most cases). Once the cash runs out, stop spending.

  • Pay minimum payments on all other debts. Do not skip payments unless you're already in default.


Once you determine how much per month you can pay towards debts, you can figure out how long it will take you to pay them off. Don't expect any quick solutions. Your debt has been building up over time; there's no reason to expect to get rid of it quickly.



Some things you can do to jump-start your journey:




  • Sell the car. Use the proceeds to get a cheap car that you can pay for in cash.

  • Sell other stuff. Anything you can sell online will help you get out of debt sooner.

  • Get extra work. You can probably find part-time work that pays $1-2,000 per month.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 1 hour ago









Brythan

17.8k64059




17.8k64059










answered 9 hours ago









D StanleyD Stanley

55.8k9166171




55.8k9166171













  • @D Stanley yes, my debt has been building up over time. And I tried many times and I failed to lower it for various reasons including my over spending too. Sadly I can't work extra as per US law and as per the visa I have. Thanks for your answer.

    – The Guest
    8 hours ago








  • 2





    @TheGuest You're not alone. The first step (getting a budget and sticking to it) is the hardest by far. It will take some time and discipline but once you have that down you'll be less inclined to overspend going forward.

    – D Stanley
    8 hours ago






  • 4





    +1, great answer. @TheGuest, if you are having trouble with motivation and the procedure of budgeting, I recommend the book The Total Money Makeover by Dave Ramsey, which will walk you through all the steps necessary to get to being debt free.

    – Ben Miller
    8 hours ago











  • You can also look up Dave Ramsey's radio show/podcast on youtube. Lot's of free advice, inspiration and resources. What's outlined above is fairly close to the Baby Steps you'll hear Dave talk about and has lead millions of people to better financial lives.

    – Adam Klump
    7 hours ago













  • Making a formal budget and sticking to it is probably the most important item in this list. You'll never get out of debt unless you stop accumulating additional debt. If you have trouble sticking to a budget, I've found it helpful to recruit a trusted friend to "audit your books" at the end of the month and help keep you accountable.

    – bta
    4 hours ago



















  • @D Stanley yes, my debt has been building up over time. And I tried many times and I failed to lower it for various reasons including my over spending too. Sadly I can't work extra as per US law and as per the visa I have. Thanks for your answer.

    – The Guest
    8 hours ago








  • 2





    @TheGuest You're not alone. The first step (getting a budget and sticking to it) is the hardest by far. It will take some time and discipline but once you have that down you'll be less inclined to overspend going forward.

    – D Stanley
    8 hours ago






  • 4





    +1, great answer. @TheGuest, if you are having trouble with motivation and the procedure of budgeting, I recommend the book The Total Money Makeover by Dave Ramsey, which will walk you through all the steps necessary to get to being debt free.

    – Ben Miller
    8 hours ago











  • You can also look up Dave Ramsey's radio show/podcast on youtube. Lot's of free advice, inspiration and resources. What's outlined above is fairly close to the Baby Steps you'll hear Dave talk about and has lead millions of people to better financial lives.

    – Adam Klump
    7 hours ago













  • Making a formal budget and sticking to it is probably the most important item in this list. You'll never get out of debt unless you stop accumulating additional debt. If you have trouble sticking to a budget, I've found it helpful to recruit a trusted friend to "audit your books" at the end of the month and help keep you accountable.

    – bta
    4 hours ago

















@D Stanley yes, my debt has been building up over time. And I tried many times and I failed to lower it for various reasons including my over spending too. Sadly I can't work extra as per US law and as per the visa I have. Thanks for your answer.

– The Guest
8 hours ago







@D Stanley yes, my debt has been building up over time. And I tried many times and I failed to lower it for various reasons including my over spending too. Sadly I can't work extra as per US law and as per the visa I have. Thanks for your answer.

– The Guest
8 hours ago






2




2





@TheGuest You're not alone. The first step (getting a budget and sticking to it) is the hardest by far. It will take some time and discipline but once you have that down you'll be less inclined to overspend going forward.

– D Stanley
8 hours ago





@TheGuest You're not alone. The first step (getting a budget and sticking to it) is the hardest by far. It will take some time and discipline but once you have that down you'll be less inclined to overspend going forward.

– D Stanley
8 hours ago




4




4





+1, great answer. @TheGuest, if you are having trouble with motivation and the procedure of budgeting, I recommend the book The Total Money Makeover by Dave Ramsey, which will walk you through all the steps necessary to get to being debt free.

– Ben Miller
8 hours ago





+1, great answer. @TheGuest, if you are having trouble with motivation and the procedure of budgeting, I recommend the book The Total Money Makeover by Dave Ramsey, which will walk you through all the steps necessary to get to being debt free.

– Ben Miller
8 hours ago













You can also look up Dave Ramsey's radio show/podcast on youtube. Lot's of free advice, inspiration and resources. What's outlined above is fairly close to the Baby Steps you'll hear Dave talk about and has lead millions of people to better financial lives.

– Adam Klump
7 hours ago







You can also look up Dave Ramsey's radio show/podcast on youtube. Lot's of free advice, inspiration and resources. What's outlined above is fairly close to the Baby Steps you'll hear Dave talk about and has lead millions of people to better financial lives.

– Adam Klump
7 hours ago















Making a formal budget and sticking to it is probably the most important item in this list. You'll never get out of debt unless you stop accumulating additional debt. If you have trouble sticking to a budget, I've found it helpful to recruit a trusted friend to "audit your books" at the end of the month and help keep you accountable.

– bta
4 hours ago





Making a formal budget and sticking to it is probably the most important item in this list. You'll never get out of debt unless you stop accumulating additional debt. If you have trouble sticking to a budget, I've found it helpful to recruit a trusted friend to "audit your books" at the end of the month and help keep you accountable.

– bta
4 hours ago













6














You need to change the way you think. First, understand compounding. Not just intellectually, but viscerally. You need to develop an aversion to spending borrowed money.



A debt with 22% APR doubles every 38 months.



Every dollar you pay down your debt, cuts the total length of time you will be paying that horrible interest. Every $1 you spend now increases your time to get out of debt, and costs you around $3.70 if it takes you 6 years to get debt free.



Take a look at graphs of compounding interest. They're designed to excite you about saving, but debt grows exponentially too. That should scare you. Set one of those graphs in front of you until it does.



Then, use your intellectual knowledge of compounding to change your real-world behavior. Learn to turn price tags into what it will actually cost you, by multiplying by 3.70. That $150 favor you do paying car insurance for a friend actually costs you $555. Every month. You are out $750 for your relatives in your home country to receive $200. The $2 cup of coffee costs you $8 (don't forget sales tax!). The $7 lunch costs you $28. Splitting a night out with your friends is costing them $150 each, but you're out $550!



But lucky for you, you've got a place to put money where you don't get back only 1/3.7 of its value -- your debts. They work in reverse. Where lunch will have you paying $28 for a meal worth $7, every extra $10 you throw at your credit card debt puts $37 into future-you's pocket.



Start seeing the things you spend money on with their true, just-for-you price tags, and you'll find saying no to waste and eating pasta at home at lot more compelling.



The best part is that if you do change your thinking like this, D Stanley's estimate that you could be out of $66k debt in under 2 years, and back to living life normally, paying for things at the same price everyone else gets, is 100% possible.






share|improve this answer
























  • Wow, the part about multiplying by 3.7 is really interesting. Is this a common piece of advice? I've never heard it before

    – Jon
    3 hours ago











  • @Jon: There's nothing special about 3.7, it's just 22% APR compounded monthly for 72 months. You can substitute any APR and duration. If you have no debt except subsidized student loans, your number might be 1.3 or so. If OP had missed a payment before asking here, and therefore was hit with penalty APR, it could be 8.5 (based on 30.99% APR and 7 years).

    – Ben Voigt
    3 hours ago













  • @Jon: The one place you might have seen the multiplier in effect before, is if you take a look at a credit card statement where it says "if you make only minimum payments, it'll take you X years and you'll pay Y in total... if you make 50% larger payments, it'll take you X2 years and you'll pay Z in total". I expect that right now OP's number for Z is somewhere over 3 times his "current balance" (at that doesn't account for the fact every new dollar is effectively paid on the tail end, so it compounds more interest than any other) and Y is simply insane.

    – Ben Voigt
    3 hours ago











  • +1 because you showed how much money a $8 coffey will cost you in 7 years. Its sometimes helpful to see things this way. May i ask you if you could improve your answer by adding the formular to get to the 3.7 factor? It could also help future readers.

    – some_coder
    18 mins ago
















6














You need to change the way you think. First, understand compounding. Not just intellectually, but viscerally. You need to develop an aversion to spending borrowed money.



A debt with 22% APR doubles every 38 months.



Every dollar you pay down your debt, cuts the total length of time you will be paying that horrible interest. Every $1 you spend now increases your time to get out of debt, and costs you around $3.70 if it takes you 6 years to get debt free.



Take a look at graphs of compounding interest. They're designed to excite you about saving, but debt grows exponentially too. That should scare you. Set one of those graphs in front of you until it does.



Then, use your intellectual knowledge of compounding to change your real-world behavior. Learn to turn price tags into what it will actually cost you, by multiplying by 3.70. That $150 favor you do paying car insurance for a friend actually costs you $555. Every month. You are out $750 for your relatives in your home country to receive $200. The $2 cup of coffee costs you $8 (don't forget sales tax!). The $7 lunch costs you $28. Splitting a night out with your friends is costing them $150 each, but you're out $550!



But lucky for you, you've got a place to put money where you don't get back only 1/3.7 of its value -- your debts. They work in reverse. Where lunch will have you paying $28 for a meal worth $7, every extra $10 you throw at your credit card debt puts $37 into future-you's pocket.



Start seeing the things you spend money on with their true, just-for-you price tags, and you'll find saying no to waste and eating pasta at home at lot more compelling.



The best part is that if you do change your thinking like this, D Stanley's estimate that you could be out of $66k debt in under 2 years, and back to living life normally, paying for things at the same price everyone else gets, is 100% possible.






share|improve this answer
























  • Wow, the part about multiplying by 3.7 is really interesting. Is this a common piece of advice? I've never heard it before

    – Jon
    3 hours ago











  • @Jon: There's nothing special about 3.7, it's just 22% APR compounded monthly for 72 months. You can substitute any APR and duration. If you have no debt except subsidized student loans, your number might be 1.3 or so. If OP had missed a payment before asking here, and therefore was hit with penalty APR, it could be 8.5 (based on 30.99% APR and 7 years).

    – Ben Voigt
    3 hours ago













  • @Jon: The one place you might have seen the multiplier in effect before, is if you take a look at a credit card statement where it says "if you make only minimum payments, it'll take you X years and you'll pay Y in total... if you make 50% larger payments, it'll take you X2 years and you'll pay Z in total". I expect that right now OP's number for Z is somewhere over 3 times his "current balance" (at that doesn't account for the fact every new dollar is effectively paid on the tail end, so it compounds more interest than any other) and Y is simply insane.

    – Ben Voigt
    3 hours ago











  • +1 because you showed how much money a $8 coffey will cost you in 7 years. Its sometimes helpful to see things this way. May i ask you if you could improve your answer by adding the formular to get to the 3.7 factor? It could also help future readers.

    – some_coder
    18 mins ago














6












6








6







You need to change the way you think. First, understand compounding. Not just intellectually, but viscerally. You need to develop an aversion to spending borrowed money.



A debt with 22% APR doubles every 38 months.



Every dollar you pay down your debt, cuts the total length of time you will be paying that horrible interest. Every $1 you spend now increases your time to get out of debt, and costs you around $3.70 if it takes you 6 years to get debt free.



Take a look at graphs of compounding interest. They're designed to excite you about saving, but debt grows exponentially too. That should scare you. Set one of those graphs in front of you until it does.



Then, use your intellectual knowledge of compounding to change your real-world behavior. Learn to turn price tags into what it will actually cost you, by multiplying by 3.70. That $150 favor you do paying car insurance for a friend actually costs you $555. Every month. You are out $750 for your relatives in your home country to receive $200. The $2 cup of coffee costs you $8 (don't forget sales tax!). The $7 lunch costs you $28. Splitting a night out with your friends is costing them $150 each, but you're out $550!



But lucky for you, you've got a place to put money where you don't get back only 1/3.7 of its value -- your debts. They work in reverse. Where lunch will have you paying $28 for a meal worth $7, every extra $10 you throw at your credit card debt puts $37 into future-you's pocket.



Start seeing the things you spend money on with their true, just-for-you price tags, and you'll find saying no to waste and eating pasta at home at lot more compelling.



The best part is that if you do change your thinking like this, D Stanley's estimate that you could be out of $66k debt in under 2 years, and back to living life normally, paying for things at the same price everyone else gets, is 100% possible.






share|improve this answer













You need to change the way you think. First, understand compounding. Not just intellectually, but viscerally. You need to develop an aversion to spending borrowed money.



A debt with 22% APR doubles every 38 months.



Every dollar you pay down your debt, cuts the total length of time you will be paying that horrible interest. Every $1 you spend now increases your time to get out of debt, and costs you around $3.70 if it takes you 6 years to get debt free.



Take a look at graphs of compounding interest. They're designed to excite you about saving, but debt grows exponentially too. That should scare you. Set one of those graphs in front of you until it does.



Then, use your intellectual knowledge of compounding to change your real-world behavior. Learn to turn price tags into what it will actually cost you, by multiplying by 3.70. That $150 favor you do paying car insurance for a friend actually costs you $555. Every month. You are out $750 for your relatives in your home country to receive $200. The $2 cup of coffee costs you $8 (don't forget sales tax!). The $7 lunch costs you $28. Splitting a night out with your friends is costing them $150 each, but you're out $550!



But lucky for you, you've got a place to put money where you don't get back only 1/3.7 of its value -- your debts. They work in reverse. Where lunch will have you paying $28 for a meal worth $7, every extra $10 you throw at your credit card debt puts $37 into future-you's pocket.



Start seeing the things you spend money on with their true, just-for-you price tags, and you'll find saying no to waste and eating pasta at home at lot more compelling.



The best part is that if you do change your thinking like this, D Stanley's estimate that you could be out of $66k debt in under 2 years, and back to living life normally, paying for things at the same price everyone else gets, is 100% possible.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 5 hours ago









Ben VoigtBen Voigt

2,3181316




2,3181316













  • Wow, the part about multiplying by 3.7 is really interesting. Is this a common piece of advice? I've never heard it before

    – Jon
    3 hours ago











  • @Jon: There's nothing special about 3.7, it's just 22% APR compounded monthly for 72 months. You can substitute any APR and duration. If you have no debt except subsidized student loans, your number might be 1.3 or so. If OP had missed a payment before asking here, and therefore was hit with penalty APR, it could be 8.5 (based on 30.99% APR and 7 years).

    – Ben Voigt
    3 hours ago













  • @Jon: The one place you might have seen the multiplier in effect before, is if you take a look at a credit card statement where it says "if you make only minimum payments, it'll take you X years and you'll pay Y in total... if you make 50% larger payments, it'll take you X2 years and you'll pay Z in total". I expect that right now OP's number for Z is somewhere over 3 times his "current balance" (at that doesn't account for the fact every new dollar is effectively paid on the tail end, so it compounds more interest than any other) and Y is simply insane.

    – Ben Voigt
    3 hours ago











  • +1 because you showed how much money a $8 coffey will cost you in 7 years. Its sometimes helpful to see things this way. May i ask you if you could improve your answer by adding the formular to get to the 3.7 factor? It could also help future readers.

    – some_coder
    18 mins ago



















  • Wow, the part about multiplying by 3.7 is really interesting. Is this a common piece of advice? I've never heard it before

    – Jon
    3 hours ago











  • @Jon: There's nothing special about 3.7, it's just 22% APR compounded monthly for 72 months. You can substitute any APR and duration. If you have no debt except subsidized student loans, your number might be 1.3 or so. If OP had missed a payment before asking here, and therefore was hit with penalty APR, it could be 8.5 (based on 30.99% APR and 7 years).

    – Ben Voigt
    3 hours ago













  • @Jon: The one place you might have seen the multiplier in effect before, is if you take a look at a credit card statement where it says "if you make only minimum payments, it'll take you X years and you'll pay Y in total... if you make 50% larger payments, it'll take you X2 years and you'll pay Z in total". I expect that right now OP's number for Z is somewhere over 3 times his "current balance" (at that doesn't account for the fact every new dollar is effectively paid on the tail end, so it compounds more interest than any other) and Y is simply insane.

    – Ben Voigt
    3 hours ago











  • +1 because you showed how much money a $8 coffey will cost you in 7 years. Its sometimes helpful to see things this way. May i ask you if you could improve your answer by adding the formular to get to the 3.7 factor? It could also help future readers.

    – some_coder
    18 mins ago

















Wow, the part about multiplying by 3.7 is really interesting. Is this a common piece of advice? I've never heard it before

– Jon
3 hours ago





Wow, the part about multiplying by 3.7 is really interesting. Is this a common piece of advice? I've never heard it before

– Jon
3 hours ago













@Jon: There's nothing special about 3.7, it's just 22% APR compounded monthly for 72 months. You can substitute any APR and duration. If you have no debt except subsidized student loans, your number might be 1.3 or so. If OP had missed a payment before asking here, and therefore was hit with penalty APR, it could be 8.5 (based on 30.99% APR and 7 years).

– Ben Voigt
3 hours ago







@Jon: There's nothing special about 3.7, it's just 22% APR compounded monthly for 72 months. You can substitute any APR and duration. If you have no debt except subsidized student loans, your number might be 1.3 or so. If OP had missed a payment before asking here, and therefore was hit with penalty APR, it could be 8.5 (based on 30.99% APR and 7 years).

– Ben Voigt
3 hours ago















@Jon: The one place you might have seen the multiplier in effect before, is if you take a look at a credit card statement where it says "if you make only minimum payments, it'll take you X years and you'll pay Y in total... if you make 50% larger payments, it'll take you X2 years and you'll pay Z in total". I expect that right now OP's number for Z is somewhere over 3 times his "current balance" (at that doesn't account for the fact every new dollar is effectively paid on the tail end, so it compounds more interest than any other) and Y is simply insane.

– Ben Voigt
3 hours ago





@Jon: The one place you might have seen the multiplier in effect before, is if you take a look at a credit card statement where it says "if you make only minimum payments, it'll take you X years and you'll pay Y in total... if you make 50% larger payments, it'll take you X2 years and you'll pay Z in total". I expect that right now OP's number for Z is somewhere over 3 times his "current balance" (at that doesn't account for the fact every new dollar is effectively paid on the tail end, so it compounds more interest than any other) and Y is simply insane.

– Ben Voigt
3 hours ago













+1 because you showed how much money a $8 coffey will cost you in 7 years. Its sometimes helpful to see things this way. May i ask you if you could improve your answer by adding the formular to get to the 3.7 factor? It could also help future readers.

– some_coder
18 mins ago





+1 because you showed how much money a $8 coffey will cost you in 7 years. Its sometimes helpful to see things this way. May i ask you if you could improve your answer by adding the formular to get to the 3.7 factor? It could also help future readers.

– some_coder
18 mins ago


















draft saved

draft discarded




















































Thanks for contributing an answer to Personal Finance & Money Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid



  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmoney.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f105885%2fcan-i-become-debt-free-or-should-i-file-bankruptcy-how-to-manage-my-debt-and-f%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

is 'sed' thread safeWhat should someone know about using Python scripts in the shell?Nexenta bash script uses...

How do i solve the “ No module named 'mlxtend' ” issue on Jupyter?

Pilgersdorf Inhaltsverzeichnis Geografie | Geschichte | Bevölkerungsentwicklung | Politik | Kultur...