Budgeting for Debt Management

Debt Consolidation Loans: Yes or No?

A multitude of small monthly payments can add up to very big trouble. Before you know how it happened, you can suddenly have more payments going out than you have income coming in every month.

You aren't alone. It happens to a lot of people.

On the upside of debt consolidation loans, all debt is included. In debt management agreements, only unsecured debt is considered (credit cards). But in a debt consolidation loan, all debt is considered...secured debt as well as unsecured debt.

On the downside of debt consolidation loans, these loans are almost always second mortgages. In a nutshell...you really are betting the farm (the house) that you can meet the monthly payments every month until the consolidation loan is paid off.

With debt management agreements, even if it comes to the point where you must declare bankruptcy, this is still unsecured debt. Courts can set it aside. When you make a debt consolidation loan in the form of a second mortgage, this debt that was once unsecured now becomes secured. If it comes to the point where you must declare bankruptcy, your home can be foreclosed upon to satisfy debtors.

This point should not be taken lightly. Your home and the equity that you are establishing in it is your largest single asset. The mortgage on your home is usually also your largest monthly payment.

The low monthly payment that is promised with a debt consolidation loan is not always because the interest rate is lower. Sometimes it is because the debt payments have been extended for many additional years instead. Second mortgages can be as long as 30 years, and remember that you have bet the house that you could make every single one of those payments in full and on time.

See Also:
Credit / Debt Management - Credit Repair Improve Credit Score and Pay Off Debt

Debt Management Correcting the Course

Debt Management and Health

There aren't many things in life more stressful than having bills due that you cannot pay, a mail box full of second, third, and final notices, and bill collectors calling day and night.

Stress itself is a health issue and can also cause many other health issues. Financial health has a direct connection to physical and emotional health. Financial problems lead to relationship problems which lead to emotional, mental, and physical health problems. Controlling your financial life is important not just from a financial standpoint, but from the relationship and health standpoints, as well.

Of course, I am not suggesting that you can avoid every health problem, all stress, or that your relationships will flourish if you just stay in control and manage your debt well. I am saying that you can avoid a lot of unnecessary grief by making a plan and managing your debt in order to prevent stress and all of the problems that stress can and does cause.

Make a plan -- think budget. Take control of your financial situation. A written plan takes the pressure off. You don't have to remember things. You simply use your budget and your financial plan.

Pay your bills on time and in full each and every month. When you conduct your financial life in a well-planned and responsible manner, you will find that other areas of your life become better organized and better functioning as well.

It isn't easy to take control in midstream, so to speak, but it can be done. The first step to relieving some stress in your life is to find a budget form on the Internet or in a brick-and-mortar store. Follow the directions that will be provided.

As you take control, you will relieve your stress and improve your physical, mental, and emotional health as well as your financial health.

 


More articles:

Debt Management When Starting a Business
Credit Card Debt Management Helps You Say Goodbye To Creditors
Comparing Debt Managements Services
Debt Management and Collecting Your Debts
Debt Consolidation Solutions, Settlement, Information

Debt Consolidation Loans-Yes or No

Debt Management: Getting the Priorities Straight

Using half your paycheck to buy lottery tickets in hopes of winning millions instantly is not a satisfactory debt management plan. Successful debt management is based upon truth, reality, and keeping your priorities straight.

The necessities of life must come first when you make your debt management plan. You need food, shelter, utilities, transportation, and clothing....and pretty much in that order. After the total cost of these necessities is subtracted from your bring home pay, what's left is your disposable income.

How much you spend on each of these necessities will determine the total cost of your necessities. When you cut the cost of any of the necessities, you will have more disposable income and when you add to the cost of the necessities, you will have less disposable income.

My daddy summed it up pretty well for me. He said, “The less you spend on what you have to have, the more you will have to spend on what you want to have.”

You have to make your own choices, of course, but here are just a few ideas that might help:

1. Food: It costs less to eat at home than it does to eat out.
2. Shelter: Less space costs less money....usually.
3. Utilities: Raise the thermostat by two degrees in the summer and lower it by two degrees in the winter. Turn off lights when you leave a room. Don't leave water running.
4. Transportation: A five-year-old car will take you to the same places that a new car will take you.
5. Clothing: Clothes purchased at discount stores costs less than clothing purchased at upscale clothiers.

Debt management is all about getting your priorities straight and making choices. Priorities are nonnegotiable, but how much you spend on them is negotiable.

 

Related Topics: Debt Management Makes a Comeback,  Budgeting for Debt Management, Debt Management-The Controls


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