Not exact matches
If you're someone who has already graduated college, or soon will and are struggling with your student
debt, this might be
advice you wish you had gotten
earlier.
Advisors often make a mistake by limiting their financial
advice to younger clients to pay off
debt and save money in their
early years, she said.
Q: I am considering retiring
early (at 55) and based on
advice from my financial planner, I can rather easily do so, primarily based on our assets, lack of any
debt, and my wife's existing defined benefit pension plan.
But far too often the problem of overwhelming
debt is made worse by not seeking
advice from the experts
early in the process.
Contact your credit provider
early if you have trouble making repayments or see trouble with
debt for help and
advice.
Any
advice I have would be the same readers have already been given, stay out of
debt, live beneath your means, start saving
early.
A. Live within your means B. Begin saving at an
early age C. Avoid high interest
debt D. Get sound financial
advice from a trustworthy resource E. Learn how to invest wisely
If you believe that you and your spouse will have difficulty agreeing about division of marital property and
debt, then it is critically important to seek legal
advice as
early as possible.
Best for: saving and budgeting tips, frugal living
advice, how to get out of
debt,
early retirement strategies.
My best
advice for someone approaching their 30s is to start saving as
early as you can and focus on paying down your
debt so you can ready for whatever comes in the next decade.
Not that my
advice would be
early loan repayment, but I think if you do decide to go that route then which loan to pay off
early really depends on the rate and remaining life of the loan, and not the overall size of the loan, if you're looking at reducing your monthly
debt payments.