Personal Debt Management Colorado Springs CO

How To Keep Your Debt Under Control The surest way to keep your debt under control is not to spend more than you can afford. But to do that, you need to know how much you have to spend and where your money goes. In other words, you need a budget, or if you prefer, a spending plan. Most people in Colorado Springs don't like budgets. Budgets are constricting.

Schofield R Scott
(719) 599-4304
3510 Austin Bluffs Pkwy
Colorado Springs, CO
Summit Bank and Trust
(303) 460-4707
16501 Washington St
Thornton, CO
Consumer Credit Counseling Service
(719) 542-6620
200 W. 1st Street, Suite 302
Pueblo, CO
North Valley Bank
(303) 452-5500
8410 Umatilla Street
Federal Heights, CO
TCF Bank
(720) 670-0007
9660 Washington Street
Thornton, CO
Colorado Springs Chamber of Commerce
(719) 635-1551
6 S. Tejon, Ste 700
Colorado Springs, CO
Fortress Credit Pro
888-900-3678
1155 Kelly Johnson Blvd.
Colorado Springs, CO
FirsTier Bank
(303) 625-2317
2921 W. 120th Avenue, Suite 100
Westminster, CO
Bellco Credit Union
(303) 689-8130
8851 Harlan St.
Westminster, CO
Pueblo West Chamber of Commerce
(719) 647-9086
665 E. Spaulding
Pueblo West, CO

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Personal Debt Management

How To Keep Your Debt Under Control

The surest way to keep your debt under control is not to spend more than you can afford. But to do that, you need to know how much you have to spend and where your money goes.

In other words, you need a budget, or if you prefer, a spending plan.

Most people don't like budgets. Budgets are constricting. They take spontaneity out of spending and make you pay attention to where your money goes. But without a budget, or a plan, you don't know how much you have to spend or where you are spending it, so get started.

Even if you seek help, you have to do the basics:

  1. List your expenses. All of them. Do it daily, as you spend. Be sure to include the daily double lattes, the cleaning, the stamps used to pay bills, the newspaper, the gasoline, the bus fare. Everything. Add up the daily expenses so you know what you spend each week. Add in your mortgage, utility, phone, credit card and loan payments so you know what you spend each month. Precisely, not just an estimate.
  2. Analyze what you spent by category: good debt (mortgage and student loans), bad debt (much of your credit card spending falls in that category), and things you can't avoid (taxes, utilities, food and other cost of living expenses).
  3. Figure out what you owe and what it costs you. This means listing everything from mortgage and car loan to each credit card by balance and interest rate.

That exercise, done honestly--and if you don't, you re only fooling yourself--should show you where you can begin cutting back on what you spend, freeing up some money to start paying down the debt. Little things add up. The $4 lattes cost $80 or more a month, the daily $5 (if you're lucky) sandwich another $100.

It should also be a guide for your budget, or, if you prefer, spending plan. If you need help, now is a good time, whether from a financial advisor or consultant (and be sure to check out the credentials and fees ahead of time) or one of the many books available from your local library.

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