As a college student, I’ve racked up some credit card debt. I have never missed a payment, and have always paid at least -10 over the minimum amount.
My grandfather recently passed away and he left me quite a large sum of money. What would be the best way to pay off these credit cards? Should I pay half one month, and then half the second month?
The goal here is to a) settle my credit card debt, and b) improve my credit score. The inheritance money will be released to me monthly until the amount expires (around 0 a month for the next 10 years). Any guidance/suggestions are greatly appreciated.
Get them all consolidated into one debt and cut up your cards
I would try to pay the balances off in full as soon as you can. If you are still using the cards that will show that you still have revolving credit but whenever possible, pay off credit card debt in full just don’t close the card.
Pay in full
it’s best to keep the balance below half of whatever your credit limit is. Also in order to pay towards the principle as well as the interests double your minimum payment
I would spread it out over a few payments. When granting credit, creditors look at how well you are able to maintain making monthly payments. Having credit lines open with no balance doesn’t look great either. It’s strange, but they actually want to see you using some of your credit. This is per a loan representative that granted me a loan two years ago.
its better to keep paying month after month but pay more than ur minimum. by doing this you are showing that u are responsible and can keep making a payment. its better than buying something and just paying it off next month.
Well, at least you are mature enough to want to fix this. You have the right idea. Sit down and make a list of what you owe. Take care of the smallest ones first, and continue making the payments the way you have done. Every small debt you pay off take that payment and apply it to the larger ones. Make double payments whenever you can. Watch your spending and don’t charge any more. First thing you know, you’ll be out of debt, and what a wonderful feeling that is!! THEN, when you do charge, keep a list of your charges and set a limit for yourself, so that you can pay your cards off in a timely manner. Good luck my friend.
It really doesn’t matter, as long as you pay it down within a few months. FICO scores are computed based on a mix of factors:
Payment history – 35%
Amounts owed – 30%
Length of credit history – 15%
New credit – 10%
Types of credit used – 10%
By paying down, you will decrease amounts owed, which will eventually (but NOT instantaneously) result in a higher credit score…
Hello,
The best thing to do, is pay them off, but keep the lines openned. It’ll improve your score significantly in a few months.
The reason I know this is because I sell Mortgage Loans for a living, and it is critical to have a good FICO score. So of course, I do my research so my clients would get better FICO scores to get better Mortgage Rates.
Thanks,
Tim
The best way to improve your score is to pay the balances off as quickly as possilbe, but do not close the account, just do not use the cards. If you keep the account open it shows you have available credit that you are not using and it makes the score go up. If you cannot pay the balance in full reight away, that’s ok, you want some payment history, but always try to keep the balance below 50% of the credit line on any one card, or no more than 90% on a single card if you have several cards that have 0 balances. example: if you have 5 cards at a $1000 credit line each or $5000 credit available on all cards, keep no more than $500 on any one card or no more than $900 on a single card if you only use one and the other 4 are empty.
Again. don’t close the accounts even after they are paid. I closed several of mine not knowing this and ended up hurting my score.
Do not drag this out longer than is absolutely necessary. Pay those cards off, cut them up, and don’t apply for any more.
Pay them off. I would not necessarily close the accounts. If you continue using them, and I would, use them only for things you would buy anyway and pay the entire bill when it comes, always leaving a zero balance.
Once you have them all paid off, use that $500 a month to make some wise investments so you’ll have some of it left down the road. If you spend it all, 10 years from now when it ends, you won’t have much to show for it. $500 a month can go a long way towards a fantastic investment account or savings for a down payment on a house when you finish school.
Congratulations for thinking this out and not just going out and blowing all that money!!