73 Real Life Debt Elimination Tips
1. Don’t get into debt. Use cash for all your purchases
and don’t take on any debt except home and auto.
2. Spend less than you earn.
3. When debt is closed out, put 60% in savings and enjoy the
remain 40%.
4. Take stock of all your liabilities, so you know exactly
how much you owe to the world. Put them in a spreadsheet,
with monthly payments, interest amounts, balances, and a
running grand total of all your balances. Update it monthly
as you pay off debt, and watch the overall amount go down
slowly. It’s very motivational.
5. Have only one credit card with a low limit, and only one
loan with monthly payment not exceeding 25% of income.
6. Build up an emergency fund first. If you come into extra
money (tax returns, etc.), use it to build an emergency fund
and pay off debt after that.
7. Cut up your credit cards.
8. Speak to a credit counseling service to help work out a
plan: your “must pay” outgoings, arrange with creditors to
freeze interest and accept a revised monthly payment.
Warning: a reader informed me that using a credit counselor
will show up on your credit report and adversely affects
your FICO score — not as bad as a bankruptcy, but it is
coded, and lenders can see it. Only exercise this option if
you’re really in dire straits.
9. Stop using credit cards to make it to the next paycheck.
Stop getting further into debt.
10. Don’t overpay your debts — leave enough so you have
enough for regular expenses too.
11. Avoid eating out. Cook your own meals, except on very
special occasions.
12. For entertainment, visit friends and be creative on how
to entertain yourselves and your family without spending a
dime.
13. Don’t pay off your credit card balance from the
emergency account. Don’t touch the emergency account at all
— it doesn’t exist!
14. Look for expenses coming up in the future and plan for
them, so you don’t have to go into debt when they come up.
15. Make a budget - Purpose every dollar (including some
buffer).
16. Snowball the debt - Pay minimums on everything, attack
the smallest balance with all the extra cash you can
assemble, then move on to the next one.
17. Be on the same page as your spouse or partner. Competing
interests are suicide.
18. Recognize your spending tendencies (and your family’s)
and place limits on them. Develop good habits instead.
19. Read Dave Ramsey. Read “Your Money or Your Life”.
20. Keep trying and don’t give up. Make a commitment, and if
you aren’t getting out of debt slowly but surely, revisit
that commitment. Change is difficult and it takes drastic
change in mindset and behaviors to get out of debt. Anyone
can do it - as long as you really want to do it.
21. Stop spending! You have to really, truly want to do
this. Otherwise, you’ll put yourself on a financial diet and
then crash and burn and find yourself justifying why you
deserve to spend so much money on a new iPhone when you have
a perfectly good phone and $20,000 in debt.
22. Praise yourself for every small accomplishment. But,
don’t praise yourself by spending frivolously.
23. Find the tools that work for you and stick to them. If
the tools aren’t working, find new tools. There are plenty
of tools and ideas out there - for free.
24. Change yourself. If you have a spouse or partner that is
contributing to the debt, it can be a big challenge to get
them to change. Focus first on changing your behaviors and
attitude.
25. Be realistic. If you started accumulating debt three or
four years ago, realize that it will probably take you more
then three or four years to get out of debt and stay out of
debt.
26. Create a realistic budget. Put as much money as you can
towards paying down debt and having an emergency fund, but
allow for a little bit of. Only the truly dedicated can live
with no social/recreational activities for the amount of
time it takes to become debt-free.
27. Eliminate. Take a hard look at what’s truly necessary,
and be willing to make compromises. Cable TV, satellite
radio, and lunches in the office cafeteria are not
necessities. If you have a hard time letting go of these
things, run your numbers through a debt calculator twice -
once with your current budget, and once with additional
money currently paying for niceties. You’ll be amazed at how
much of a difference those few extra dollars make.
28. Get creative. If there’s something you think you don’t
have time to do more frugally, find a way around it. For
example, cooking at home is much cheaper than eating out. If
you don’t have time to cook, try investing in a crock pot.
29. Be patient. Debt reduction is a long, slow process.
Depending on the method you use, you may see no significant
progress at first, but it will happen.
30. Stop borrowing money - no matter what! This means no
more credit cards, no more car loans, no more cash advances,
no more home equity lines, etc. If you can’t afford to buy
something with CASH you have now, then YOU CAN’T AFFORD TO
BUY IT.
31. Save up the money and buy it with cash. By the time
you’ve saved up the money, it’s very likely you will have
realized you don’t even need the item you were thinking
about buying anyway. This happens all the time.
32. Track your expenses in a software program like Quicken.
Categorize your expenses and report out how much you spent
in each category so you can easily spot your problem areas
(eating out, clothes, gas), then target those for reduction.
Always know exactly how much money you have in your checking
account.
33. Maximize your 401K contribution. Every time you get a
raise, increase your contribution by 1-2% because you won’t
miss the extra money if you don’t ever see it.
34. Pay yourself 10% first. Put this into an account that is
hard to touch. A money market account can earn good
interest. Make sure it is a chore to get the money out (you
have to drive to the bank), so you will only tap it
consciously and for major expenses.
35. Make a plan … ANY plan. You’re better off with a
mediocre plan than no plan at all. When in doubt, the
“snowball method” is simple and works well.
36. Leave yourself some “wiggle” room. Life throws some
unexpected expenses your way, so include some slack in your
plan for these little setbacks.
37. Have a long range vision. Keep your eyes focused on
where you will be five (or ten, or fifteen) years from now,
because getting out of debt takes time.
38. Turn off your television, and discard catalogs and other
advertisements immediately (but not coupons!). Do this, and
your urge to buy stuff you don’t need will plummet.
39. Move into a smaller place. Forcing you to get rid of a
lot of stuff that you’re probably still in debt for will
show you just how little any of it matters.
40. Find your purpose. Is it your children, to start your
art business, work from home, free money so that you can
give? Finding motivation beyond the money drives our
passion. Otherwise our drive is limited. This passion will
lead us find out the ‘right’ things to do like stop
borrowing, creating budget, etc. Take a look at the things
you value deeply and view that framework to judge your
actions buy.
41. Examine your expenses and eliminate the unnecessary.
Thing about gym memberships you’re not using, cable TV,
Netflix, other types of subscriptions and see which are
least necessary.
42. Got a raise coming up? Bookmark it. Pretend it didn’t
even happen, and funnel all of the new money into the debt
relief.
43. Focus on the debt and getting out of it. Not focusing
and humming along on credit is what gets people in trouble
every time.
44. Change how you think of money. Calculate how much money
you make (net) per hour. Do this regardless of whether you
are a business owner, salaried or hourly employee. Now apply
the time factor to any purchase you make. For example, is
that 32″ flat screen television you’re thinking of
purchasing worth 10, 20 or 30 hours of your time. Once the
dollar amount was removed from the equation and the time
factor applied, spending habits can change overnight.
45. High interest. Pay off the cards with the highest
interest first.
46. Balance transfers. By transferring balances on credit
cards, you can consistently pay an average of 4%. One thing
to look out for is transfer fees: make sure that the fee
isn’t greater than the interest you would save.
47. Optimize small long-term advantages instead of large
short-term payments — for example, go for the difference
between 8% and 6% on a note, or cancel satellite TV and
save/invest/pay debt with the difference.
48. Educate yourself on your alternatives. Sometimes we
spend a lot on things because we assume there are no
alternatives. Is cooking at home as bad as you think? What
about ten-year-old cars? Roommates? Cheaper parts of town?
Thrift stores? Libraries? Bicycling? Wearing a sweater and
fuzzy slippers inside in the winter so you can turn down the
heat? Ask questions, do some experimenting, do some
research. Find your biggest expenditures and do some
brainstorming and some googling.
49. Think about your goals. The author of The Tightwad
Gazette was willing to work harder to save on food,
clothing, and entertainment so she could spend more on
housing, have more kids, and let one parent stay home with
the kids. Quit spending money on stuff you don’t care about.
50. Pay attention to whether you’re buying stuff just
because of societal norms or parental expectations or
keeping up with the Joneses. Hang around people who are the
way you want to be so that peer pressure can be used for
good instead of evil!
51. Pay more than the minimum.
52. Make it a habit. You’ll be very happy when you have some
extra spending/saving money after your payments stop.
53. Think about wealth rather than debt. If you think “I’m
going to get out of debt” you will keep thinking about debt.
If you think “My financial situation will contribute to my
overall wealth,” that thought can keep you going.
54. Extra cash. When you make extra money from overtime or
bonuses, use it to pay debt.
55. Debt slavery. Realize that (almost any) debt = slavery.
If you don’t mind debt, why get out of it?
56. Read personal finance books, publications, blogs.
Self-development blogs like this Zen Habits are also great.
57. Think positive. Telling yourself “no” stinks, choosing
to not go on vacation stinks, looking around and feeling
like everyone else has more money than you stinks, even if
you make a good chunk’o’change. Instead think about how each
month you owe $1 less is a good month.
58. Pay off your smallest debt first to get the momentum
going. Some people go by the rule to pay the highest
interest ones off first, but others like the rush from
paying a card off completely and closing it. It’s a great
motivation to continue.
59. Be willing to make sacrifices. Remember, you own things.
They do not own you. We had to sell one of our cars and get
a “beater” but this was the best move we could have made. It
was so empowering not to have a car note hanging over our
heads.
60. Put a note in your wallet with this text: “DO I REALLY
REALLY NEED THIS?”
61. See yourself as completely debt free. FREEDOM! What is
that gonna feel like. Imagine it.
62. Use supermarket fliers and plan menus for the week, clip
coupons, and put the amount of money you save from coupons
each week into a savings account.
63. When you make your budget, be honest. Make sure you
budget for gifts, entertainment and whatever other things we
all spend too much money on and don’t like admitting.
64. Find free or low cost entertainment. Check the local
newspaper, or look online and see what upcoming events are
going on. Many towns have free concerts in local parks, the
local libraries often have fee arts and crafts classes, get
a state tourist guide and see what’s going on in your area,
and be a tourist in your own town.
65. Be creative. Learn to paint or refinish hand me down
furniture, or sew curtains and pillows. I have been reading
DIY blogs and gotten some really great ideas for my home.
66. Start a garden. Grow tomatoes, peas, beans, and herbs in
pots if you don’t have a yard.
67. Make more money. Sometimes you can only stretch your
current income so far. But how can you start an online
business, without spending a lot of money? And without your
own product? By selling other people’s products - as an
affiliate.
68. Educate. Above all else, teach your children early so
they don’t make the same mistakes as us!
69. Create a balance sheet and update it every month. List
your assets on one side and your liabilities on the other.
Assets should only include things you can easily sell and
there approximate value. Liabilities should include all of
the money you owe others. If your starting value is negative
your goal should be to make that number smaller every month.
If your number is positive your goal should be to make that
number larger every month. The real value of this exercise
though is it puts you in the habit of checking your
financial situation every month which will reinforce habits
that are increasing your wealth and hopefully allow you to
catch and stop habits that are decreasing your wealth.
70. Credit documentary. Watch the PBS documentary about
credit card companies. Get mad, really mad and start hating
the credit industry. They are enabling you to do some
terrible things to yourself. Cut up your cards and pledge to
never use them again. It is a form of slavery.
71. And another. Another movie that looks critically about
credit cards is MaxedOut.
72. Oprah. Great advice on Oprah’s Debt Diet along with
great forms to help you find out where you are and plot a
course out.
73. Read the book: How to Get Out of Debt, Stay out of Debt
and Live Prosperously by Jerrold Mundis. Once you’ve read
it, read it again.








