Debt and Credit

Learn how credit and debt work both for and against you.

Debt and Credit

Is Debt Settlement Worth It? How Settling a $12,000 Credit Card Debt for Less Damages Your Credit Score for 7 Years — and What the Tax Bill Looks Like

Settling a $12,000 credit card debt for $6,000 sounds like a $6,000 win. The actual math is more complicated. The IRS considers the forgiven $6,000 taxable income, adding $1,320 in federal taxes at a 22% rate. A settlement company charges 15-25% of the enrolled balance ($1,800-$3,000 in fees). Your credit score sustains significant damage starting the day you stop making payments — damage that sits on your report for 7 years. And the settled account shows "settled for less than full amount," not "paid in full," which affects future mortgage approvals and rental applications for years afterward. Sometimes settlement is still the right call. Here's when it is and when it isn't.

Debt and Credit

How Much Does Health Insurance Cost If You Retire at 62 Before Medicare? The Real Numbers on COBRA, ACA Marketplace, and What Most Early Retirees Actually Pay

Medicare eligibility starts at 65. Social Security can start at 62. The three years between those two ages — the coverage gap — is one of the most expensive and least-discussed parts of early retirement planning. COBRA continuation from your employer costs $700-900 per month for a single individual and ends after 18 months. An unsubsidized ACA marketplace plan for a 62-year-old runs $750-950 per month. But a 62-year-old who manages retirement income carefully — primarily Roth IRA withdrawals rather than traditional 401k distributions — can qualify for ACA subsidies that bring the monthly premium down to $50-250 per month. The income management strategy is worth up to $21,000 over the 3-year gap. Here's how each option actually works.

Debt and Credit

Should You Pay Points to Buy Down Your Mortgage Rate? The Break-Even Math at 7.25% vs 6.75% on a $350,000 Loan

Paying 2 discount points to buy your mortgage rate down from 7.25% to 6.75% on a $350,000 loan costs $7,000 upfront and saves $118 per month. The break-even point is 59 months — roughly 5 years. If you stay in the home longer than 5 years, buying the points saves you money. If you move, refinance, or sell before then, you've overpaid. This sounds straightforward, but there's a refinancing wildcard, an opportunity cost question, and a "temporary buydown vs permanent points" distinction that changes the math significantly. Here's how to run the calculation for your actual situation.

Debt and Credit

Should I Refinance My Car Loan From 7.9% to 5.5%? The Break-Even Math on a $25,000 Balance and When It’s Actually Worth the Paperwork

Refinancing a car loan from 7.9% to 5.5% on a $25,000 balance with 48 months remaining saves approximately $27/month and $1,308 in total interest over the life of the loan. The break-even on refinancing fees — typically $75 or less for an auto loan — is under 3 months. Unlike mortgage refinancing, there's no appraisal, no closing costs, and no points. For most people who got a car loan in 2022-2023 when rates spiked and now have improved credit or better rate options, refinancing takes about 20 minutes online and the math strongly favors doing it. The one trap to avoid: extending the loan term for a lower payment that ends up costing more in total interest.

Debt and Credit

What Actually Happens to Your Credit Score When You Cancel a Credit Card You’ve Had for 10 Years?

Canceling a credit card you no longer use sounds like responsible financial hygiene. In practice, it can drop your credit score by 10-40 points depending on your specific credit profile — and the damage from canceling a 10-year-old card with a large credit limit is often larger and longer-lasting than people expect. The effects hit two of the five FICO score factors simultaneously: credit utilization (30% of your score) and average age of accounts (15%). Here's the exact math, when canceling is actually fine, and what most people should do instead.

Debt and Credit

Is a 0% Balance Transfer Card Worth the 3-5% Fee on $10,000 in Credit Card Debt? The Break-Even Math Most People Skip

The standard balance transfer fee is 3-5% of the amount transferred. On $10,000 of credit card debt, that's $300-$500 you pay upfront to move your balance to a 0% promotional APR card. Most people wonder whether that fee is worth it. The answer — almost always yes, if your current card charges 20%+ APR — becomes clear when you calculate how much interest you're paying per month right now. At 22% APR, $10,000 costs you $183/month in interest alone. The transfer fee pays for itself in under two months. The real question isn't whether to do a balance transfer. It's whether you have a plan to pay off the balance before the promotional period ends.

Debt and Credit

Does Medical Debt Still Hurt Your Credit Score? What the Courts Changed — and What Still Shows Up on Your Report

In March 2023, the three major credit bureaus — Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion — jointly removed all paid medical collections from credit reports and all medical collections under $500 from credit reports. For tens of millions of Americans, this wiped out credit damage from old hospital bills, ambulance charges, and emergency room copays. But unpaid medical debt over $500 still appears on credit reports in 2024, still affects certain FICO Score versions, and still matters for mortgage lending. Here’s exactly what changed, what didn’t, and what to do if you have medical collections on your report right now.

Debt and Credit

Why Your Credit Karma Score Is Different From the Score Your Mortgage Lender Sees — and What the Gap Costs You at the Bank

Credit Karma shows 742. Your mortgage lender pulls 701. The loan officer explains — correctly — that the lender uses a different scoring model. You get the loan, but at a higher rate tier than you expected. The 41-point gap between the score you checked this morning and the score the bank used just added $87/month to your mortgage payment for 30 years. This is not a bug or a mistake. It’s the predictable result of checking a VantageScore when your lender uses FICO — two different mathematical models with different weightings that produce meaningfully different numbers for approximately 25% of consumers.

Debt and Credit

What’s the Best Age for Each Spouse to Claim Social Security When One Earned Much More Than the Other? The Married Couple Strategy That Can Add $1,900/Month

Most married couples don’t optimize Social Security — they both claim at 62 because it feels like getting money sooner, or both wait until 67 because someone told them to. But for a couple where one spouse earned significantly more than the other, the right strategy coordinates two very different claiming ages and can produce $1,900/month more household income than both claiming at 62. The math involves spousal benefits, survivor benefits, and one coordination rule most couples miss: the lower-earning spouse can’t claim the spousal benefit until the higher-earning spouse has already filed.

Debt and Credit

Personal Loan, HELOC, or 0% APR Credit Card: The True Cost of Financing a $15,000 Home Renovation at Today’s Rates

A $15,000 home renovation — new HVAC, kitchen appliances, bathroom remodel — financed the right way costs $0 to $1,372 in interest. Financed the wrong way for your situation, it costs $5,664. The three main options (personal loan, HELOC, and 0% APR credit card) each win in a specific scenario, and each is the wrong choice in others. Here’s the complete total cost comparison at 2024 rates, broken down by credit score range and payoff timeline.

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