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DEBT CONSOLIDATION INFORMATION
REASONS FOR CREDIT CARD CONSOLIDATION
- Because interest rates are high
The principal reason why most people consider switching
credit cards and consolidating all of their outstanding credit
card debt into one card is because the interest rates on their
existing credit card are just too high. Here, as you may be aware
(from all the advertising that is thrown at us), not all credit
card issuers offer the same interest rate (although they are closely
related in a broad spectrum). Moreover, in this highly competitive
market, some credit card issuers now offer significantly lower
rates of interest than some of the other more “traditional”
credit card issuers. So, if you think that it is going to be financially
beneficial to you to consolidate all of your existing outstanding
credit card debt into one credit card debt that is offering a
lower interest rate, which will equate in significant savings,
this may well be a very sensible option to take.
- Because of the annual fees
A common trend among credit card issuers over recent years has
been to ask members to pay an annual usage fee for the credit
card. In certain cases this annual fee can be expensive - especially
where you may make use of more than one credit card and are faced
with having to pay several annual membership fees. However, credit
card issuers now know they’re in a fight to get new customers
and so some of them are offering use of their credit card without
you needing to pay any annual membership fee and not asking members
to pay an annual membership fee is a second worthy reason why
you may want to consolidate your credit card debt.Do, however,
keep in mind that if you consolidate credit card debt because
of this issue, make sure that the credit card issuer has not accounted
for this by adding other hidden fees or a higher rate of interest
on the card - otherwise you may find that the overall cost of
funding the debt adds up to more per annum than if you just pay
the annual fee with your existing credit card issuer!
- Consolidating the credit card debt as a personal loan
It is a sad fact of life that many of us do not know how to budget
our spending on our credit cards. We see the limit on our cards
and seem to think that we have to spend all of this money in the
next 24 hours, otherwise they may take the card away from us!
We then spend the next 4 years trying to pay back all the debt
we just accumulated. All of this stress is then compounded by
the fact that we have to make, at minimum, the minimum monthly
repayment to the credit card company. To avoid this, and to try
and find a way to source our debt at a lower cost many of us turn
to the option of consolidating all of our outstanding credit card
debt as a personal loan, which we then pay back monthly. Although
both of these debts are similar in nature, i.e. unsecured, the
personal loan method is much cheaper than the credit card debt.
So, if you have credit card debt outstanding that you believe
will take you more than 1 year to repay, the time may well have
come to consider the third reason why it may be more beneficial
to consolidate your credit card debt as a personal loan.
- Because we now have a bad credit rating
Those of us who allow our existing credit card debt concerns to
get on top of us, to the extent where we are no longer in a position
to make the monthly minimum repayments, have sadly just come across
the fourth reason why you may want to consolidate your credit
card debt - because you now have a bad credit rating!
- Because they’re paying me to do it
The last reason why you may want to consolidate
your credit card debt into one debt is because the credit card
issuer is paying you to do it! Believe it or not, the credit card
industry has now become so competitive that issuers are fighting
among themselves to get people to sign up to their card. Here,
when the card issuer knows you have an existing credit card, they’ll
sometimes ask you to transfer the balance of your outstanding
existing credit card debt to them, in return for which they’ll
reduce some of the debt from your outstanding balance! Be careful
though, those warning signs regarding interest rates and fees
still apply.
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