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Paying For Debts: Past And Future


Updated on 17 February 2009 | 29 Comments

Read about the cheapest way, for most people, to pay off old debts and to borrow yet more...Or you could just start living within your means!

Those of you familiar with credit cards know the drill. You swap your debt from one card to another, therefore paying as little as possible. You do this using a credit card offering 0% on balance-transfer deals. This way, if you pay off enough each month, you'll clear your debt faster and more cheaply. It's been the cheapest way for most people to clear a debt for many years now.

It's best if you have debts to reduce them every month, and we strongly suggest that you should get into the budgeting habit, to that end. Please!

However, we know that some people can't help borrowing still more. If this is you, and we can't persuade you to start living within your means just yet, at least take a look at your cheapest options before you simply spend more on your existing credit card or expand your overdraft further. It is possible that you can borrow more for free, and make your existing debts cheaper at the same time.

The cheapest way to pay for existing debts and to borrow some more

Most people will find that the cheapest way to pay back some of their debt in the near future, and to borrow more at the same time, is to get a single credit card with two deals: a 0% on balance-transfer deal and a 0% on new purchases deal.

Many cards offer deals on both, but it is very important that you look for cards that have deals of equal lengths. The reason is that, once one of the deals runs out (usually the 0% on purchases deal), you'll start paying interest on the debt you have run up. And you won't be able to even start reducing the interest you pay until you've paid off everything you borrowed with the other deal. This is called Negative Payment Hierarchy. (It's a bit complicated, but you can read more about this dodgy trick in Beware Of This Dirty Card Trick!)

With the balance-transfer deals, you pay no interest for the length of the deal, but you do pay a transfer fee, typically 2.5% to 3%, up front. This is usually added to your debt. With the new purchases deals, you pay no interest or fees whatsoever for the length of the deal.

It's important that you always pay the minimum payment, even if you're not charged interest. Please try to pay more or you'll never clear your debt. Missing a payment will usually mean the deal is cancelled, and you go straight on to the horrific, standard interest (APR) rates .

Here are the top cards that are suitable for both balance transfers and purchases currently available on the market:

The top five credit cards for both transfers and new purchases

CardLength of deal (transfers and purchases)Balance-transfer feeCard issuer
Barclaycard Platinum 10 Month Card10 months2.5%Barclaycard
Bank of Scotland All In One9 months3%HBOS
Halifax All In One9 months3%HBOS
Clydesdale Bank Gold6 months2.5%National Australia Bank Group
John Lewis6 months2.5%HSBC

 

I've included the card issuer. This is because if you already have a card from the same issuer then you won't be able to get another one. You should always close card accounts as soon as you stop using them.

Never use your credit cards for other things, such as cash advances or cash withdrawals, and don't spend using any credit-card cheques you get either. These things are even worse than horrifically expensive, and you will get caught out by the nasty small print.

Two more good cards

There are two other cards that didn't make my table that deserve a mention. The Saga Platinum Visa has a 6 month deal on both purchases and balance transfers, with a fee of just 2%. Therefore, it should be in fourth place on my table, but I excluded it because it's available to the over-50s only.

The Nationwide Gold card is always worth a mention when you're considering purchases and balance transfers, because it's one of just two cards that are currently available to new customers which doesn't apply Negative Payment Hierarchy. (The other is the Saga card I just mentioned!)

On the downside, Nationwide's purchases deal is for just three months. However its balance-transfer deal lasts 13 months with a 3% fee.

Alternatives to these credit cards

If you think you won't be able to pay off all your debt before the deal expires and if you expect your credit situation to deteriorate in the next half year or so, you should consider getting a cheap, unsecured personal loan or a lifetime balance-transfer card instead. This is because you don't want to be stuck with a big debt on one of these cards when they start charging you their huge, standard interest rates (typically around 16% APR).

After transferring debts, please cut up your old cards, close the accounts, and don't use them again!

If you've decided to start living within your means, you won't need a 0% on new purchases deal. If you concentrate on balance transfers only, you can get deals lasting up to 16 months. Compare balance-transfer cards through The Fool.

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Comments



  • 09 February 2009

    sorry if this is a belated reply but ive had alot of fool articles to catch up on! I am 26 and was given a credit card like it was a bar of chocolate at the age of 19. I went on holiday and brought a versace dress those are my 1st 2 purchases. and now looking back YEs i wish id never started on that route but I was VERY young and should never have been given a 2k credit card to play with as over the yrs it escalted and now I am living with my parents to pay them off! sorry u cannot just blame the consumer for this mess when credit cards were given out willynilly 7 yrs ago. and lets not blame my parents I got the I told u so speach and to teach me the value of money they wont assist as its my debt. fair one if u ask me. Lazban - you live life once, id like to think i did as much as i can with the time that I had accept, maybe now I will try and do that within my means!

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  • 20 January 2009

    Lazban, your post - "One of the big problems is that too many people have come to believe that so called luxuries like holidays, large screen TV's, eating out, clubing etc., are necessities. (Real necessities are somewhere warm to sleep and sufficient food to eat.) Unless we can get these people to be more realistic about their NEEDS they will always be submerged in the debt culture." I think a real necessity is having a good standard of living, and enjoying life. BUT reckless credit is not the way to do this. Whole generations need to be re-educated that if they want a good life, which we all do, they NEED to EDUCATE themselves and work hard to build great futures. What is needed is an overhaul of financial education, for it to be taught in schools, together with widespread independent financial advice, so there is ACTUALLY a savings habit, adequate pension funding and investment. (Would Labour borrow trillions to pay the many trillions of pension gap building up in the UK now?! Or would they educate people to invest for their future?? The former I think!!!!) All of this is the foundation that a strong and successful economy will be built upon. Add in place responsible lending and The Great Unwashed are faced with 2 choices - live very modestly OR work your but off to make a good life, and have the things that you want. We already have a vastly aspirational culture in today's 20 to 50 somethings, but those aspirations are met by credit, not by aspirational careers!! There is so much rot at the very foundations of the UK society, from the benefits underclass, to the vastly irresponsible 30 somethings who lived as if they earned £60k, when they earned £25k. The whole of the UK needs a massive wake up call, and I hope that is what this recession will bring, together with the new government who won't be as vastly and utterly incompetent as Labour.

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  • 18 January 2009

    http://www.fool.co.uk my first time on the post, and i was always told that your best friend was a pound in your pocket, and that all i have is all i need, probably wont help anyone but its true if adhered to!!

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