A credit card minimum payment means that you can spend more and
pay as little back as the credit card issuer will allow you.
Sounds great in theory but it is a system that will turn out to
be your worse nightmare. If you stick to it before long you will
find that you have reached your limit, have nothing left to
spend and all the while your past purchases are totting up
interest charges. These sequence of events make your minimum
payments so high, that you can only afford to pay back the
interest charges and your debt remains the same, with no light
at the end of the tunnel as to how you are going to clear it.
This is where the credit card companies have gotten wise and by
reducing the minimum payment steadily from 10% on original
credit cards to the 2% that most now have set, they have seen a
way of making as much profit from you and I as possible. By
reducing the minimum payment to such a low level, they have
given the customer a false picture on how much they can spend on
their credit cards and how much they can really afford. With the
minimum payment now sitting at 2%, those who cannot clear their
credit cards in full each month, will now see interest charges
being added to interest charges, as their balance increases
month by month.
To reduce your debt stop using your credit card
This is a position that many find themselves in and by noticing
it early on you could be saving yourself a lot of grief and a
good bit of money. If you are there at this point, then the best
thing that you can do is to stop using the credit card
altogether and start to look at ways to reduce your outstanding
debt. Even if you find that you have to cut back on other
expenditure, you should deal with a debt that is a drain to your
finances and by saving now on a few luxuries it will be to your
advantage. As you pay off you balance quicker you will save more
in interest charges.
Always remember that by paying minimum payments and minimum
payments only, you are playing a very dangerous game with your
hard earned cash. So why should you work many hours a week just
to feed the profits of a bank or credit card issuer, who will be
your friend until such a time you cannot afford to pay back the
cash that they let you borrow.
Take action today!
About the author:
Peter Kenny is a writer for creditcards-gb, For additional
articles and an extensive resource for everything about credit
cards, please visit us at
http://www.creditcards-gb.co.uk and
http://www.creditcards2go4.com