Your Credit Card Payment Is Rising: Warning Tips
Did you know your minimum credit card payment is rising? A new
government program working to get Americans out of credit card
debt is pushing credit card issuers to raise minimum monthly
payments. Will you be able to make the higher monthly payment?
Here are some tips for getting by. by Joel Walsh
If you're an American, your minimum monthly credit card payment
may soon be doubling. If you're only paying the minimums now,
you'll have to be careful to adjust your budgeting to pay more.
Who's Raising Your Monthly Minimum Credit Card Payment?
*Whose idea was it to increase credit card minimum monthly
payments? The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, a
bureau of the U.S. Treasury Department that has become more and
more involved with reigning in the abuses of credit card
companies. Yes, this credit card minimum payment increase was
thought up by people trying to help you. *Who will be raising
their monthly minimums? So far, some of the largest credit card
issuers have agreed to the new standards. Bank of America has
already been asking for the higher monthly minimum payment.
MBNA, Citigroup (a.k.a. Citibank), Discover, and Chase (on some
of its cards) will be breaking the news to their cardholders as
Fall 2005 progresses.
How Much Will Credit Card Minimums Increase? For many credit
cards, such as MBNA and Bank of America, the new rates mean that
monthly minimum payments will double.
*Right now, the monthly minimum payment is only 2% of the
balance on most of these cards. The new rate will be around 4%
(the actual number may vary from card issuer to card issuer).
This means that if you have the average American credit card
balance of about $10,000, your minimum monthly payment will go
from $200/month to $400/month. *Of course, if you have any
additional fees, whether a late fee or a cash advance fee or any
of the other fees that the credit card guys cook up, you will
have to pay that, too.
Why the Credit Card Minimum Payment Increase? You may be
wondering why anyone would want to make you pay a higher minimum
monthly payment. The basic reason for making you pay more is:
for your own good.
According to Mike Peterson, co-founder of American Credit
Foundation, by doubling the amount you pay per month toward
credit card debt, you will cut down on what you pay toward
interest by much more. Look:
*Old monthly minimum payment of 2% of balance, $2,000 credit
card debt at 18% percent interest: *Time to pay off debt in
full: about 30 years. *Interest paid: about $5,000-two and a
half times what you initially borrowed! *New monthly minimum
payment of 4% of balance, same debt: *Time to pay off debt in
full: about 10 years. Time saved vs. old payment: 20 years.
*Interest paid: about $1,100-slightly more than half what you
originally borrowed. Amount saved vs. old payment: $3,900.
Tips for Paying Double Easily How do you pay off your new,
higher credit card balance?
Stop Charging Yes, you will have to make major sacrifices to
stop using your credit card. But just look at all the money
you'll have in ten or thirty years that you wouldn't have if you
had to pay all that credit card interest. If you have trouble
resisting the temptation to charge, here are some solutions that
have actually worked:
*Give your credit cards to a friend or family member to hold in
safe keeping. *Freeze the cards in a block of ice. *Never carry
more than one credit card with you.
Economize on the Small Things According to Michael Peterson of
the American Credit Foundation, even tiny savings really add up
when it comes to debt. His favorite example is the Diet Coke
example:
*If you buy one Diet Coke a day at $1/day, that's $365/year. *If
you instead invested that one dollar a day at 10% interest (the
average yearly return on major stocks over the last half
century), you would be a millionaire within 56 years. *Of
course, with credit cards, this logic works in reverse: if you
are lucky enough to be paying only 10% interest, fifty years of
charging Diet Coke to your credit card will mean you've lost the
same amount, not only in interest paid, but in the lost
opportunity to save and invest. *You don't have to put aside one
dollar a day for fifty years to see a big difference. One dollar
a day is $30/month, 15% of the average $200 increase in credit
card minimum monthly payments. *In order to get that entire $200
increase out of your daily budget, you would only have to save
$200/30 or less than $7 a day. OK, maybe you aren't drinking
seven Diet Cokes at one dollar each a day. But there are very
few credit-card-holding Americans who can't cut $7 a day out of
their spending. *Put another way, $200/month works out to about
$45/week, or the cost of a restaurant meal for a small
family-another luxury you might want to skip until you're
debt-free.
Bigger Savings
*Taxes. Most Americans could pay hundreds of dollars less tax
each year if they just took all the deductions they were
eligible for upfront, rather than waiting to get a refund in
April. By April, you will have spent a big chunk of money on
interest on debt that you wouldn't have spent if you'd had the
money at hand. *Call the credit card companies and ask if they
can allow you to set up a payment plan, or at least provide a
brief extension. Simply calling and letting them know you
haven't forgotten about them can help keep you out of the worst
trouble. *Credit counseling. Credit counselors can talk with
credit card issuers to help you get a repayment plan you can
keep up with. They can also open your eyes to untapped sources
of income you never knew you had, like kicking the $1,000,000
Diet Coke habit.
In short, don't panic. With only a little bit of planning, you
can make the higher minimum monthly payment work to your
advantage, just as the policy's authors intended.