How to Take Control of Your Credit Cards
Declined? How to Fight Back and Get Out of Debt
By Suze Orman
I’m all for taking credit where credit is due, but when it comes to credit cards, way too many of you are overdoing it. For Americans who don’t pay their entire credit card bill each month, the average balance is close to $4,000. And when we zoom in on higher-income folks—those with annual incomes between $75,000 and $100,000—the average balance clocks in at nearly $8,000. If you’re paying, say, 18 percent interest on an $8,000 balance, and you make only the 2 percent minimum payment due each month, you are going to end up paying more than $22,000 in interest over the course of the 54 years it will take to get the balance down to zero.
That’s absolute insanity.
And absolutely unnecessary.
If you have the desire to take control of your credit card mess, you can. It’s just a matter of choice. I am not saying it will be easy, but there are plenty of strategies that can put you on a path out of credit card hell. And as I explain in the accompanying sidebar, even those of you who can’t seem to turn the corner and become credit responsible on your own, can get plenty of help from qualified credit counseling services.











