Not exact matches
Maybe it was because of the cost that went into it upfront; with the knowledge that it would
pay off in a few
months with the money we would save from not buying disposables.
You also show how if you do some leg work and set up the relationships and start building the elements,
maybe six
months before you need them, it can really
pay off and not be a crazy launch.
@LorenPechtel, I just checked a credit card that I carry solely as emergency - I never spend on it, it is tied to my bank as my check overdraft protection but it's been used
maybe 3x total in the last 5 years and always instantly
paid off (prior to reporting utilization in every case I believe)- and the credit report indicates I've made monthly payments every
month as far back as it goes.
So, I mean if I may rhyme them
off here, which you told me the first time around, limiting the number of payday loans that somebody can get in a certain period of time, lengthening the time that they have to repay them so instead of having to
pay it back in 14 days,
maybe you
pay it back in a
month or two
months, reducing the interest rates, considering the borrower's ability to repay before giving a loan.
Maybe try again in a couple of
months when you've
paid off a substantial chunk?
And then
maybe that's $ 300 a
month and you get that
paid off, and then you can apply $ 500 a
month on the next bill.
Basically I use card monthly
maybe $ 5 a
month pay it
off and just have constant small usage reported to credit bureaus to help my credit score go to excellent and stay there.
2:56 «
Maybe this will work for you... I would look at my income over the next eight, nine
months and try to budget extra payments so that by the tenth
month I can have it all
paid off with my salary.»
If everything goes according to plan, we'll hopefully have our student loans
paid off in exactly a year (or
maybe 14
months).
Maybe by
paying off more than the minimum each
month?
If I made no additional charges on the card and only made a payment of $ 95.36 each
month (not sure how they came up with this amount —
maybe it's the 36 -
month pay -
off amount), it would take me 36
months to
pay off this debt and end up costing me $ 3,432.96.
Hopefully you are
paying off your credit cards in full every
month or
maybe you operate on cash alone.
So
maybe you plan on
paying something
off in a few
months.
Maybe the cash flow ends up being lower than higher for the next four years, but if you just set aside about $ 80 a
month, you'll have that balloon
paid off when it's due, and you'll own that thing free and clear.
I'd want the PM to explain that the full rental amount is due now, but they can
pay a reduced amount next
month as a good will for the inconvenience (you decide what that is,
maybe 10 %
off).
Maybe don't constantly do it every so many
months as that amount builds up but once every other year or something to still make a significant impact in getting the loan
paid off but not leaving you without funds to invest during that time.