Meet Sara and Randy. Sara is a newly-arrived immigrant to the United
States and Randy is a middle manager at Corporate Co. The two met six months ago on Tinder and have
been together ever since. Their future looks bright, except for one
thing: bad credit. To put it bluntly, Randy has horrible credit,
mostly due to a previous bankruptcy. Sara’s isn’t much better. As a newly minted permanent resident, she
has no credit history to speak of. Both of them would like to improve their credit,
but have no idea where to start. What should they do? Well, luckily for Sarah and Randy, there’s
actually a product, called a secured credit card, designed specifically for people in
their situation. However, if Sara and Randy don’t have a
firm understanding of what a credit card or credit score is, or how to effectively use
either, we highly recommend watching our three videos “Credit Cards 101”, “Credit Scores
and Reports 101”, and “Credit Cards: Mistakes and Best Practices” before continuing further.
But let’s get back to the matter at hand. What are secured credit cards? Simply put, they are credit cards designed
for people with minimal income and no or low credit scores, generally below 600. Normally, banks consider these people very
risky, aren’t willing to give them a credit card. However, in the case of secured credit cards,
they’re actually willing to make an exception, simply because they require applicants to
deposit cash with them. This cash then serves as the basis of the
card’s credit line. For example, if you deposit $200 with the
bank, your credit card will then be given a $200 credit line. Not only that, if then you max out your card
and fail to repay, the bank can take that money as collateral. This little quirk, plus high interest rates,
can make secured credit cards seem unattractive.
However, they do have one undeniable benefit. Any transaction done with one is reported
to the three credit bureaus. That means if Randy and Sara responsibly use
their secured credit cards, the bureaus will eventually bump up their credit score. Pretty great right? So what’s the best way to “responsibly”
use a secured credit card? Well, turns out it means almost never using
it. Randy and Sara should continue to use debit
cards for almost all of their purchases.
In fact, they should only ever use their secured
credit cards for one small purchase every month, like a gallon of milk, and always completely
pay that balance off on time. This regimen will minimize the amount of credit
used, while maximizing on-time payments, both of which overtime will lead to a very healthy
credit score. In fact, within a year or two of responsibly
using a secured credit card, Sara and Randy should have have credit scores at least above
640. At this point, they should be eligible for
great unsecured credit cards and loans! Hopefully you now understand how to rebuild
your credit.
Be sure to watch our next video, which covers
how to get out of credit card debt, and be sure to check out our website, where you can
find more educational content, your free credit score, and great credit card recommendations..
Meet Tom. Tom is a few years out college with a great
job and a lot credit card debt. Tom wants to get out of debt, but isn’t
quite sure how. Luckily for Tom, there exists a great solution
to his problem: balance transfer cards. However, before we continue, if Tom doesn’t
have a firm understanding of what a credit card or credit score is, or how to effectively
use either, we highly recommend watching our three videos “Credit Cards 101,” “Credit
Scores and Reports 101,” and “Credit Cards: Mistakes and Best Practices” before continuing
further. But let’s get back to the matter at hand.
What is a balance transfer? Well, a balance transfer is simply the act
of transferring an existing credit balance to another credit card. Most credit cards aren’t good this for:
they’ll immediately start charging interest on the transferred balance, plus a fee, generally
about 3-5% of the transferred balance. However, there is a specific subset of credit
cards, called balance transfer cards, that won’t immediately start charging interest,
instead giving Tom a 15-21 month window of 0% APR to pay off his balance interest-free. This is a great deal, but let’s still walk
through the steps you’ll need to take to get one: Step 1: Before doing anything, make a debt
repayment plan, ideally using our free recommended website, and rank your credit cards by interest
rate, as no matter what you end up doing, you’ll always want to tackle the highest
interest rate debt first.
Step 2: Once that’s done, call your credit
card company and try to get them to lower your APR. Emphasize that if they don’t agree, you’ll
move your balance to another company offering lower rates. Step 3: If the call fails and you still want
to transfer, keep in four three things. One: You’ll need good credit to get a balance
card. Two: You can’t transfer a balance to a card
offered by your current bank. Three: Depending of the size of your debt,
you may not be able to pay it off by the end of the promotional period, so have a plan
for that. And Four: The credit line on your balance
transfer card may be below your total debt load, meaning you’ll either have to:
Apply for a second balance transfer card Keep the remaining debt on your current card
and pay the high rate. Or use a personal loan, which is slightly
more expensive than a balance transfer card, but comes with a lower credit score requirement. And don’t worry, we’ll cover this option
in our next video.
However let’s assume for now that Tom has
been approved for a balance transfer card with a high enough credit limit. This is an important first step, but they’re
still a few more things to keep in mind: One: Don’t spend on the card, as the 0%
APR period may not extend to purchases. Two: Complete the transfer as fast as possible
or the 0% APR offer may expire. Three: Be careful about consolidate multiple
balances onto one card, as that will lower your credit score. Four and Finally: Once you’ve completed
the transfer, always pay on time and don’t close out your old accounts, as failing to
follow either will lower your credit score. Hopefully you and Tom now better understand
balance transfer cards. Be sure to check out our next video, where
we’ll teach you how to get out of credit card debt without them, and be sure to website,
where you can find more educational content, your free credit score, and great credit card
recommendations.
Debt consolidations is really when you're
taking a lot of different debts and your consolidating them into one loan or one payment and there's
some good things about debt consolidation and some not so good things. So, let's start with the benefits, a lot of
times when you're trying to manage a lot of different debt it can be overwhelming. So there could be some real benefits in consolidating
things into one payment, that's a benefit. You also may be able to get a lower interest
rate then some of your individual debts have, so you can potentially lower the interest
rate.
And sometimes you can stretch out that payment
in such a way that your monthly payments are lower. So those are all the good sides of consolidating
debt, simplifying your life so that you can focus on it and make progress. What's bad about consolidating debt? Number one, when you consolidate debt, sometimes
you're just moving debt around and you're not focusing on the real issue. I've seen this a lot with people, they consolidated
all their debt into one place and then some of the other debts start coming back. Right, so they're moving debt around but they
are not necessarily paying it down. Another challenge when it comes to consolidating
debt is sometimes I see this a lot with home equity loans that people might have, they
consolidate a bunch of credit cards onto a home equity loan. And there are some real benefits there but
what are the draw backs? If they can't make their home equity payment,
their house is now at risk. Keep that in mind, if I couldn't make my credit
card payments, no one can come take my house.
So sometimes you're putting collateral at
risk by consolidating. Third, a lot of time people consolidate all
of their debt and they stretch it out over a long period of time. And anytime you stretch debt out over a long
period of time, yes it's lowering what you're paying each month, but sometimes you may pay
more in interest over the long term, simply because you're stretching out the debt so
long. So keep that in mind, when you're consolidating
debt, ask about how long the loan is, that's no different if you were getting a four year
car loan instead of an eight year car loan, yes your monthly payments are lower but over
the long term you pay a lot more. Debt consolidation can be a great strategy
or it can be a terrible strategy depending on your situation.
So you want to make sure you evaluate all
of these pros and cons that we're talking about to see if it makes sense for your situation..
– 80% of Americans are
living paycheck to paycheck because of debt. So, let's talk about how
to free up your finances and your future. (upbeat music) All right, this year we are doing a series on each of the Baby Steps. So, if you missed last episode, we talked about Baby Step 1, which is saving a $1,000 emergency fund. In this episode, we're gonna
talk about Baby Step 2, which is getting out of debt. So, we're gonna bring
on my dad, Dave Ramsey, who came up with the Baby Steps and has been walking people through them for the last 25 years.
And then we're gonna talk to a couple who are working their way
through the debt snowball, and they're in the middle
of their debt-free journey. It's great, because they're just starting to feel the freedom in getting
control of their lives, and best of all you guys,
they have hope again. Now, a lot of people think
that debt is not bad. Like, it's just a normal way of thinking. That's what society tells us. And in fact, 80% of Americans are living with some form
of consumer debt right now. Listen, you cannot create a life you love while you're in debt. When you are in debt, it forces you to live life looking
through the rearview mirror because you are chained
to stuff in the past.
So, how do you get rid of debt? Well it all starts with the debt snowball. Okay, this is the best way, the most effective way, to get out of debt. And this is the debt snowball: where you list out all of your debts smallest amount to largest amount, regardless of the interest rate, pay minimal payments on everything, and pay off the smallest debt first. And once that's paid off,
you roll all the payments, all the money you were
throwing at the smallest debt, to the second smallest debt. Then once that's paid off, you have the minimal
payments of the smallest debt and the second smallest debt to roll over to the third smallest debt. So it gets bigger, and bigger, and bigger. You're money continues to expand to start knocking down each debt. And I love this because what
this takes is motivation. And once you pay off that smallest debt, motivation comes.
Your
behavior starts to change. Now, some of you might
be thinking, "But Rachel, shouldn't you pay off the
highest interest rate first?" Yes, technically that would
be mathematically correct, and that method is what they
call the debt avalanche, which is terrible by the way. I mean, avalanche or snowball? Okay, snowballs are way more fun. I don't want to be caught in
an avalanche. No, no, no, no. So, stick with the debt snowball. But again, mathematically speaking, yes, the debt avalanche could
save you a few hundred bucks, mathematically speaking, but when studies have been done of people who do the debt snowball versus the debt avalanche, they actually get out of debt faster using the debt snowball.
Again, because it's all
about your motivation, it's all about your behavior change. And a debt snowball, it has worked for millions
and millions of people, and I promise, it can work for you. But up next, I wanna talk
about something that you need no matter which Baby Step you're on. (light piano music) So, earlier this year
I was at a live event, and before some of our live events we do these backstage experiences. So you can purchase these tickets and me and the other speaker will go back, and answer questions, and
meet people backstage. And during one of these
backstage experiences, this man came up to me, and he
was like six foot something, like huge, he was tall,
big, big, big beard. I mean just like this burly man. And he asked me if he could
talk to me for a second. And I was like, "Yeah, sure." And so he pulled me aside,
and he just started crying. And it took him a second to kinda console himself
to even get his words out.
But he began to tell me that him and his wife were on
the journey of the Baby Steps. And they were working their way through, and she actually watched
The Rachel Cruze Show for motivation, which is obviously so fun
to hear, I always love that. And I could still see though, obviously the sadness from his tears and the way he was talking
that something happened. And so, as he began to tell me his story, three months prior to that live event, him and his wife, they got in a car wreck, and she actually ended up passing away, leaving him with their
three young children. And so, at the time I was newly pregnant, and I mean, you just put
yourself in that situation and I'm like, that's the
absolute worst thing that could possibly happen, and that happened to him and his family. I mean, it's unimaginable. And then he began to tell me though that he had purchased term life insurance, him and his wife, and
they had it in place.
And so, he was saying, "Rachel, this is not the way to
get to Baby Step 7, but because of term life insurance, I don't have to work,
our house is paid for, everything's taken care of. And if we had not gotten that, this entire grieving process
would look so different." And in that moment, I was like, man, that's why we do it, you guys. We talk about term life insurance
all the time on this show, and you know that Winston and
I, we use Zander insurance, I talk about it all the time. And you might be thinking,
"Okay, that's great. Maybe I'll get it one day." But listen, stuff happens you guys, and you want to make sure that you and your family
are taken care of.
And I was so thankful
for him and his story that money didn't have to play a role in their grieving process.
Like, all of that was taken care of. And again, that's not the way you want to get to Baby Step 7. But man, how much more
stress, and heartache, and life heaviness would be on that family if they didn't have life insurance. So, if you do not have
term life insurance, go to zander.com, get
started on a quote today, because they will find you the best rates, and they're going to take
care of you and your family.
Again, if something were to happen, having term life insurance is
one of the best safety nets that you can have for your family. All right, up next I wanna
bring on my dad, Dave Ramsey, and we're gonna get back to talking about getting out of debt because this is one place that can free up your family as well. But debt in general, it's changed,
you guys, over decades now. And so, we're gonna hear all
from big Dave's perspective when it comes to that. (musical tone) All right, you're back. – I am. – Here you are at "The Rachel Cruze Show". – Almost like I work here. – (laughs) Almost, sort of. You're
sort of connected, I guess. Okay, so this episode's
all about Baby Step 2, and you've been known as
the get-out-of-debt guy for decades now. So I'm curious from you, you take calls on the radio everyday, what has changed about debt in 25 years? Like, peoples questions,
have you seen a difference from 25, 30 years ago with debt to today? – I think there's different, we've gone through different ebbs and flows of which kind of debt is
the crisis of the day, the flavor of the day.
When we first started, everybody was talking
about credit card debt, how evil and how horrible
credit card debt is, and we still think it is. – Do you find that people
are in more credit card debt, it's become more normalized
than even 30 years ago? What do you see around
that subject specifically? – 30 years ago people wrote checks. – Yeah. – And so, it was a big deal. – The chunk-chunk of the credit card. – You would run across the thing. – You know what I always
think about? Home Alone 2, when he's lost in New York, and he has to give it to the guy, and they pull it out, and they chunk-chunk, and he
gets into The Plaza Hotel. That's always my thought
of credit cards back then. – It's like pulling out the
cell phone in Jerry McGuire that's this big. Same thing. It shows you the age of the movie, right? So credit cards are,
what's happened with them is, the debit card has
eclipsed first the check, and now checks have
just about disappeared.
And then the debit card
has become so normalized, and we've helped with this.
We've made it very, very popular as an alternative to the credit card. So the credit card kinda looks like the dirty, crazy cousin
of the debit card now. – The crazy thing is that
Millennials, studies are showing, are actually getting into
less credit card debt than their parents were. – Because they have this option,
and it's been put forward.
I mean, people are starting to realize the credit card is the cigarette
of the financial world. It used to be cool, and
all the movies had it, in 1950's everybody's
smoking everything, right? And then people start talking about, hey this stuff kills you. And then the surgeon general came out. And then we put it in
the elementary schools and said, "Oh children, don't
smoke.
It will kill you". – D.A.R.E. programs popped up everywhere. – And that's what's happening gradually with the credit card, only
in a more adult level, to where the Millennials
are coming along going, hey, this credit card didn't
work for our boomer parents. They got screwed by
this. We're not playing. But it's not at the forefront
of society's mind today. Then we kinda went through this thing where we went from car
payments to car leases. Car companies realized they could make a lot more money on leases than they could on regular
payments on regular car loans, and so they start pushing. And today, 78% of the cars
that roll off a new car lot are car fleeces, and the reason is they
make more money on them, but we went through a phase because it was kinda
new and it was faddish.
And then of course we moved into the
student loan epic plague, because it has grown. It's exploded. – But the difference though, of 30 years ago with
students loans and today, is massive, probably
more so than car loans and credit cards combined. – Because of just the volume
of it, the number of dollars. And there's a little
bit of a stigma shift. You know, my generation
to the next generation, those are two previous to today. If they took out a student loan, they kinda did it holding their nose. And now everybody's like,
well that's just what you do. And so, the stigma has gone away from it.
The fear around it has gone away from it. But now this epic plague
is bringing the fear back. Which is good news because
it's waking people up going, this is not working. – So, debt has somewhat changed, shifted the conversations
around it in 30 years. But the way to get out and the mindset around it hasn't changed in the sense of the things you need to do. So, we talk about budgeting
all the time on the show about being intentional, and it's the best step you can take to not just get in control of your money, but to get out of debt. So, do you still find that to be true, that budgeting is still a key
part of getting out of debt? – Well, because you have to
control the fuel that you have to get out of debt with, and the fuel is the money. And the money, the way you
control the fuel, is the budget.
It's you turn it up,
turn it down. And you go, okay, we'll turn this one down, this one down, this one down,
so that more comes over here. And so we're cutting back lifestyle because we're sick and tired
of being sick and tired. We're really angry. We're really scared. We really have had it. We're
really going to change. And we're not going on vacation. And we're not going to a restaurant. And we're gonna dress the
kids in consignment clothes. And we're really, for the next 18 months, the next 36 months, whatever it is, we're really gonna sacrifice deeply, and that shows up in the written plan. That is not just a random
series of decisions. – Yep, so good. And then also, taking responsibility.
When you look at your life
and the mess you've caused, not to put shame, but to say, okay, I've done this. But then at the same time, I have the power to be
able to clean up this mess. Do you see that as still a huge
step in getting out of debt? – Absolutely, the power and the dignity to make their own decision. And, you know, and really the realization that no one's coming. The Lone Ranger's not coming.
Whatever's happening, the
pioneers are all surrounded, they're being attacked, or whatever, and the calvary is not coming. And so, you are the problem
and you're the solution. And that's both wonderful
news, and it's scary news. – Yes, absolutely. And then, the third is a tool that you've been teaching for decades now, is Financial Peace University. And we talk about this,
but getting signed up, going through that course,
being around like-minded people, this is a huge step to help
accelerate your journey. – In a much more intense situation, if you're dealing with
someone who has an addiction there's two things that they do. One is, they quit hanging out
with their friends who drink, if they've got a drinking problem, because you're gonna become
who you hang around with, it's just nature. And you know this because you don't let your
kids hang around people, the kids that are misbehaving, because they're gonna
misbehave like that kid. And so, you can't hang out
with your drinking buddies if you want to quit drinking because you have a drinking problem.
And guess what else you do? You get in a group of
people who are solving this, called 12 Step. And so, you go to Alcoholics Anonymous, and you sit down, and you go, "My name is David, and I've got a problem". Now that's a much more extreme situation. That's a heavier burden than just simply changing
your behaviors on money, but it's exactly the same
equation, only on a lighter form.
And so, you can't hang out
with your broke friends who are putting stuff in your
face on Instagram all the time that you can't afford, and
that they can't afford either, and you can't keep hanging out
at the bar, if you're a drunk, with drunks. And you need to get in the group of people who are positive peer
pressure in your church and in your 12 Step that are gonna turn this around with you. And so, you get around a
bunch of people who are going, hey, this is now, in this
group, being weird is normal. – Yes, and walk with it. So you guys, if you haven't
checked it out, do it. Because again, those are the things, besides just the debt snowball and the tactical side
of getting out of debt, that's really gonna help the mindset shift while you're in Baby Step 2.
– It's a very unusual person
that has enough backbone and enough chutzpah to completely change
their lives by themselves and not have people
like-minded around them, and not have continual content and input from new lessons coming at them. If you can just sit in
the corner, in the dark, and change your life, you would've probably already done it. – That's a good point, so good. Always wonderful. (hand clap) Thanks for coming in. – Good times. – So fun, so fun.
All right, coming up next,
Micah and Chelsea are here. They're on Baby Step 2, and we get to see what life
is like for them on this step. (musical tone) – Before we decided to get out of debt, we stayed frustrated with our finances, frustrated with each other constantly. – I was really confused
about how much we had, neither of us knew. – Every time we got a
check it was a relief because we thought, okay, finally, another band-aid to
kinda fix the problem.
We both grew up with money
being a huge stress always, and to start our family,
when we get married, I didn't want that same environment. I didn't want the inheritance
to be frustration. – Especially for our marriage,
and thus for our kids. – I'd heard about Dave
Ramsey when I was early 20s and knew he had written some
books, and that was about it. Something about pay something off and then roll that money to the next. – I had found the app through a friend, but didn't know it was
the Dave Ramsey app, a few years back. And I had shown him, but we had looked at so
many budget apps together, I think I caught him at the wrong time and he was just like, yeah, we're not gonna
do an app right now. It took him finding it and
being like, look at this, and us sitting down together
and really playing with it.
– I think the ah-ha moment for us was probably the same as most people when they do the budget
for the first time, is you see what's left over. She showed me, and I said, "No, that's not
right, you miscalculated". And there is an
unbelievable amount of peace to having every dollar, and
having every thing in control, and you're in control of it. – I tell people all the time,
I think it's actually freeing. It keeps us on the same page all the time. We don't have to fight,
I don't have to ask. – It's good for your finances, but it's also good for your
marriage, and teamwork. There's a transparency there that is necessary in a marriage. It's not just when you're debt-free, but it's while you're
in debt and budgeting. It's brilliantly titled Financial Peace.
It is a really comforting thing. – All right, Micah, Chelsea, thank
you so much for being here. – Thanks for having us. – So we always talk about how you can wander your way into debt, but you cannot wander your way out. And Baby Step 2 is tough because you have to be fully committed. And you can't just be on the plan-ish. We call that ish people. And so, you would say that
you were kind of ish people before being fully committed. So kinda tell me your story around that. – Yeah, so before we really dove into it, I guess we were as ish as it could be. I knew how to spell Dave
and that was about it. – There you go. – I knew Dave Ramsey.
I knew he had written a book, and that was about what I knew. We had some friends that
were hosting FPU, and we went to their house one night and got a cute little folder, and we were like, great, we'll order water
when we go out to eat. And we went to one class
and didn't go back. And also didn't realize it was
a regular thing you attended.
So it was, that started
Daveish, and we always knew, at least I always knew,
that credit cards were bad and snowballs were a thing. And so, we said we snowballed, but we might had done it once or twice. So we don't count out debt-free journey until we really started the budget. We just wandered in darkness and was confused and frustrated. – Yeah so, Chelsea, what
did marriage look like when you guys were in that season? – It was okay, but we just either avoided and/or I wouldn't even say argued as much as just constant frustration and miscommunication.
– Yeah, so were you guys, so you felt like you
didn't really have a plan, it was kinda just like here and there. So what was the catalyst? What was the point that you were like, okay, something has to change, something has to be different? – Every time she grocery shopped it was— – Those were arguments. – Okay, okay. – We felt good because
we had good intentions, but we didn't follow through
with any kinda budget. So we felt like, it's almost like, I think I'll start a
diet, and feeling like, good for me, I thought
about having a diet. (Rachel laughs) I feel thinner already. – I think I'm gonna be a
runner, that feels good. (group laughs) – So that was kind of the
mindset. We just stayed frustrated because there was always confusion. But as income increased, we start to see, I'm making more so we can
pay more, we can do more. And that was a hard part
when we initially started and thought we were gonna go at it, I had gotten laid off,
she had gotten pregnant.
And I started a job, and I
was getting $800 a month, and that's what we had, and there was no way of surviving. – The income was the
problem at that situation. – And so, just promotions and job changes, it kind of led and grew quickly, and then we saw we have enough to where we can really go at it. And that's always a Dave thing. If it's not a debt problem,
it's an income problem. And it was initially. – So what was the one thing that really helped you guys
get out of debt, would you say? – The budget app. – The budget app, EveryDollar, okay. So tell me about that? How was that, doing it for the first time? – I mean, it took us a few
months to really get in the groove and really start seeing, but even just the first
month he was like, what? I got done and it was like, we can put this much towards debt.
He was like, no, I don't
even make that much. Are you sure you did everything? And it was really freeing to see how much we could get
done as quick as we could. – And when we had started or
knew about Financial Peace, I kept thinking, financial
peace is when you're debt-free, but part of that peace
is having structure. – Even in the process, yeah. – And that budget brought peace. I mean, we're gonna be
doing our budget meeting on the way home, and that
was the turning point. – So compare your budget conversations before doing EveryDollar,
and all of that, to after, because it sounds like night and day.
– Oh yeah. It used to be, I would write
it down on a piece of paper, and sometimes he would, and
we do math really differently, so he'd show me what he did
and I'd be like, what? – How did you get there? – And vice versa, we'd
do the exact same thing, and neither of us even understood the way each other did math.
And then we'd end up not talking about it because you'd be like, you
know what? No, we can't. Either we're gonna argue or we're just not gonna talk about it, so a lot of times we didn't talk about it. – And so now, it's so opposite because you're on the same page. So would you say, we talk
about, especially with couples, that working together and doing a budget eliminates so many money fights and money problems within a marriage, would you say that's true for you guys? – [Micah] Oh yeah. – And not even just that, I think it's relationship building. It's more than just taking
out something. It's adding. It's changed so much of the
way that we think about it. – Within marriage, and then also, obviously,
with paying off debt, because doing a budget is a
big part of Baby Step 2, getting out of debt.
So what did you guys start with? How much debt did you start with? – Well, we didn't really know, and that was a terrible
feeling, is not knowing. And unfortunately for about a year we would get another letter
in the mailbox saying, hey, your ADS loan has
been bought out by so-and-so, and now you owe us this
with this interest. So ultimately, overall,
once we figured it all out, it was about $80,000–85,000. – Okay, and how much
do you guys have left? – $5,000. – $5,000. You're like, right there. How does it feel? Because, I mean, I know you're
technically not debt-free, you've got one more month, you've got to get that paycheck in, but emotionally it's there. So like, how do you feel? – It feels good to know that our money's going toward the green, it's going towards something, something that's really in the positive. And that alone is exciting. – So good. Okay, so what encouragement do
you have for people watching that are like, okay, I've
got my $1,000, I'm about to embark on Baby
Step 2 on this journey, and I think I'm
committed, I might be ish.
But what encouragement would you say to be fully committed to this process? – I would just say,
especially if it's a couple, just really be open to talking about it, and getting started, and
trusting each other with it. It just helps so much
to get on the same page, and you'll be shocked at
how much you can get done, even if you have a fairly small income. – I had a friend ask me,
how are you doing this? And my response, he took it as an insult, but I just said, well, self-control. And that's what we
don't have as Americans, as just people blessed
with so much that we have. If we wanna get it, we can go get it. Ultimately, I think it's just
self-control and patience. And that's the hardest
thing to have, to pray for, and to just manage. – Well you guys are incredible, I mean, seriously, the
amount that you've paid off, and that you're so close, and that you guys are
working together as a team. I mean, it just transformed, I know, so many different parts of your lives.
And so, I'm so thankful that
you came and shared your story. – Thank you. – Thank you guys so much, and I can't wait for you
to be debt-free next month. – Yeah, thank you. – So exciting, so exciting. Thanks for coming on. – Appreciate it. (upbeat music) I just love their story. And for you guys, I'm so rooting
for you to get out of debt. And so, I hope that this episode
motivated you to do that. Thank you so much to all of my guests for coming on this episode, and
thank you guys for watching.
Now to get everything that we
talked about in this episode, make sure to click the
link in the description. And I always want to hear from you and answer your questions. So, I set up a new voicemail just for you. You can call, leave your message, and I may answer your question in a future episode of
the show or the podcasts. So, just call 844.944.1075 and ask. If you haven't subscribed
to my YouTube channel or my podcast, make sure you do that so you don't miss anything
new coming out from me.
And as always, make sure to
take control of your money and create a life you love. (musical tones).
Meet Tom. Tom is a few years out college with a great
job and a lot of credit card debt. He wants to get out of debt, but isn’t quite
sure how, especially because he didn’t qualify for a good enough balance transfer card, detailed
in our two-part video series “How to Get Out of Credit Card Debt”. While Tom may think all hope is lost, there
is another way: personal loans. However, before we continue, if Tom doesn’t
have a firm understanding of what a loan is, or how to effectively use one, we highly recommended
watching our two videos “Loans 101” and “Loans: Mistakes and Best Practices” before
continuing further.
But let’s get back to the matter at hand. What is a personal loan? Well, like most loans, personal loans offer
Tom a fixed amount of money at a certain interest rate for a set period of time. However, unlike most loans, personal loans
can be used for a wide variety of expenses, ranging from home improvement projects to
paying off credit card debt. Speaking of credit cards, personal loans,
especially those from online lenders, will have interest rates lower than almost every
credit card. In addition, if Tom borrows from an online
lender that considers not just his credit score, of which he’ll need at least a 640,
but also his education status and earnings potential, those interest rates can be even
lower. Plus, even better, applying for a personal
loan from an online lender couldn’t be easier. All Tom needs to do is fill out a short credit
application.
Then, the lender will likely use a “soft
pull” for his credit history, which won’t hurt his credit score, and within a few minutes,
Tony will be able to see the amount see can borrow and the APR he qualifies for, a process
he can then repeat at multiple online lenders. Should Tom instead choose to get personal
loan from an offline lender, like a big bank or credit union, which just have one warning. These institutions tend to have higher interest
rates due to their much greater overhead, plus they tend to avoid “soft-pulls”,
which makes it harder to check your rates without hurting your credit score. So let’s assume Tom has chosen to get a
personal loan through an online lender. What’s his next step? Well, assuming he’s chosen his lender and
has checked his rates, he can then fill out the actual loan application online.
This should be very simple process, but there
is one thing to watch out for. Online lenders often charge a nonrefundable
origination fee for creating the loan, generally ranging between 1-5% of the loan’s value. This generally means two things:
One: If Tom wants to borrow exactly $10,000, and has to pay a 1% origination fee he’ll
need to borrow $10,100 dollars instead. Two: If Tom wants to use the loan proceeds
to pay off credit card debt, he needs to make sure the origination fee is less than the
interest he’ll save by using a personal loan. And don’t worry, our online calculator makes
this process a breeze. Finally, assuming the math checks out, Tom
just needs submits his application.
At this point, there will be a hard credit
check, but assuming Tom is approved, his bank account will generally be funded within a
few days. Tom is now on his way to being debt free. Congratulations! You’ve finished our personal loan basics
curriculum! If you want to see our free recommendations
for personal loan lenders, or just check out more educational material, be sure to check
out our website!.