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16 Jan

25 Tips To Help Pay Off Your Debt Faster

General

Posted by: Garry Grewal

1. Make a double mortgage payment whenever you can. Doing this once a year can help pay off the mortgage 4 years sooner! If your payment is $2,000 a month, four years of no payments is $96,000!!

2. Increase the frequency of payment. Going from monthly to accelerated bi-weekly can reduce your mortgage by over three years! For a mortgage with $2,000 monthly payment, three years of no payments is $72,000!!

3. Increase your payment. For example a one-time 10% increase can shave 4 years off the mortgage. That’s $96,000! Imagine if you bumped the payment 10% every year from the get go!!! You would be mortgage free in 13 years! Start to finish! Can’t do it? How about 5% every year? You would be mortgage free in 18 years! Or how about increasing the payment by the amount of your annual raise?

4. Lump sum payments … same idea … mortgage is gone way faster! Even just one payment a year equivalent to 1 monthly payment will give you similar results as #2 above! How about using your annual work bonus?

5. Renegotiate whenever rates drop to save interest and pay mortgage faster! Generally a good idea, however, get independent professional advice (a cost benefit analysis) to make sure it makes sense for you at that time: I can help! A 1% reduction on a $300,000 mortgage will save $250 a month … times 5 years … that’s $15,000!!

6. Keep your credit rating high to obtain the best rate. Always pay on time. Never let payments slip past their due date. Always keep balances low in relation to credit limits on credit cards, lines of credit, etc. 50% or less is best even if you pay the balances in full every month. What generally reports to the credit bureau is the statement balance each month. So if your credit limit is $3,000 and you are running $3,000 a month through the card each month (to collect all those points you never spend or can’t use in blackout periods) and paying in full, it will look like you are maxing out your credit limit and your credit score will drop accordingly.

7. Increase your mortgage! It may sound counterproductive! Do it to roll in your credit cards, line of credit, car loan, etc., for a better rate and a set payment plan. Do you have a low or promo rate credit card? Those seldom end well. Keep the total payment amount the same but pay it in one neat monthly payment to the increased mortgage.

8. Make an RRSP contribution and use the refund to pay down your mortgage.

9. Go variable rate with your mortgage but keep payments as if fixed (higher) rate. Variable rates usually win out over fixed rates in the long run. By paying a higher payment you will pay off the mortgage faster. It’s also a buffer in case the rate rises above the fixed rate for short periods of time. Remember that variable rates are not for everyone. Get independent professional advice to find out what is best for you. I can help again!

10. Take your mortgage with you when you change properties to avoid penalty or higher rate on a new mortgage. This is called “porting”. Make sure that your mortgage has this feature. It is not widely known and could save you a ton of dough.

11. Set up auto savings every pay cheque, even $10, when it reaches the amount of one mortgage payment, apply it to the mortgage. This concept goes nicely with #4 above.

12. Unhook from the money drip … stop paying with your fancy points credit or debit card. Way too easy to overspend! Go old school, go off the grid … pay cash, it works!

13. Don’t ever buy on layaway, you know, six months don’t pay schemes. You think … No problem I’ll just pay it in six months, it will be okay. Think again! If you don’t have it, don’t spend it.

14. Downsize your house. Two good friends and clients of mine, having followed many of the tips here, are in great shape except they have a six bedroom house! Two people, six bed house – go figure! They are nearly debt free so no worries, but can you say the same? Circumstances change, make the adjustments along the way!

15. Don’t want to move? Convert the basement/rooms to rental and use the income to pay down debt.

16. Convert your mortgage to tax deductible. If you are self-employed, own rental property or have investments, this is likely possible. I won’t go into details here, just ask me how.

17. Have a payment priority. Pay ‘on time.’

18. Pay off the highest interest rate first.

19. If you have tax deductible loans, pay them off last, slowest. Pay the non-tax deductible loans first and fastest.

20. Pay off ugly debt first. Stuff like credit card purchases.

21. Payoff bad debt next. Stuff like car loans, boat loans. Things that depreciate in value.

22. Pay off good debt (or shall I say “not so bad debt”) last. Stuff like mortgages, investment loans. Things that hopefully appreciate in value.

23. Buying a car? Finance it if you have to, don’t lease! Check with a professional first – if you are self-employed it might make sense.

24. You have $20,000 in a secret bank account for a rainy day fund and $20,000 owing on a line of credit. Seriously? The bank account is paying you next to nothing (which is taxable income to boot) and the line of credit rate is way higher (and not tax deductible.) You know what to do! You can keep the line of credit open and on standby for rainy day funds. Make it the secret line of credit that you have but never use.

25. Give your Banker more money. No really. Keep enough in your chequing account to meet the minimum requirement to waive your service charges. “My bank charges $10 a month for 25 transactions and nothing, zero, zilch, zip if I keep $2,500 in the account.” Let’s see $10 x 12 is $120 a year to pay off debt. I’d have to earn 5% with the $2,500 in my savings account to come out ahead. No brainer here. Oh yeah, if you need more than 25 transactions a month…see #12 above.

26. #26? BONUS TIP and MOST IMPORTANT. Let’s face it, you’re not the Government and you’re not a Bank, you can’t run deficits forever and you won’t get a bailout … stop procrastinating already! See 1 through 25 above and take action now!

A Word of Caution: Beware of some too-good-to-be-true ultra-low-rate mortgages. These “no frills” mortgages are often loaded with restrictions like pre-payment limitations, fully-closed terms, stripped-out features, or unusual penalties. You really need to compare product to product. If you’re not looking at what you’re giving up, you may regret it in the future. This alone could prevent you from taking advantage of tips #1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 14, 16 and 22!

Call me any time at 416-674-2318 for a confidential conversation and an objective review of your debt situation.