Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Redoing Budgets

In order to come up with enough money to cover the extra $525/mo in increased minimum credit card payments to Chase, we sat down and reviewed our finances. We evaluated monthly expenditures, paring things back where possible. Overall, we didn't find much that we were willing to eliminate, so the majority will come from deferring money that would have gone to the emergency fund or other credit cards and instead paying it to Chase. 

We decided to cancel an insurance policy, which will save us $356/year. The policy was up for renewal anyway, so we are going to just let it lapse. Otherwise, we would have had to pay half of it by the end of next week. 

We also decided to put a 90-day hold on our NetFlix account. It's only $9.53/mo, but every little bit helps. I thought about canceling it altogether, but I love being able to stream movies at home - and it's far cheaper than going out for a date. I'm hoping that 90-days will give us enough time to get a grip on the bills, and then decide whether we want to keep it or cancel it. In the interim, we don't have to pay the monthly fee, and all the movies we've added to the queue won't be deleted! 

The biggest decision was to pay off several credit cards with smaller balances (and higher interest rates, ranging from 13-20%). In total, we have decided to pay off three credit cards with a combined total of $6204. The money to do this is going to come from a few different sources: 
  • $4500, from some self employment work ($2000 of this was supposed to go to the IRS in September for estimated quarterly income taxes, but we have instead modified our withholdings for the rest of the year, so that take-home pay will be around $300/mo less than normal)
  • $1150 in reimbursement checks (from a medical flex spending account, the overage on the mortgage escrow account, and for some items we purchased for someone else) that should be coming any day
  • $150, for selling some older electronic items that we no longer need
  • $400, from the emergency fund
Once these are paid off (by the end of July), we'll be left with only two credit cards - both with a large outstanding balance but with low fixed interest rates. Paying these smaller cards off won't have much impact on monthly payments (roughly $150/mo, which will be going right back to Chase now), but I'm hoping it'll give us extra momentum to keep going with the debt payoff.  

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