Avoiding Financial Trouble: Ten Tips
by Nolo.com
From
the Nolo.com Debt & Credit Center
These simple suggestions will help you stay out of financial
hot water.
There are no magic rules that will solve everyone's financial troubles. But
these suggestions should help you stay out of financial hot water. If you have
a family, everyone will have to participate--no one person can do all the work
alone. So make sure your spouse or partner, and the kids, understand that the
family is having financial difficulties and agree together to take the steps
that will lead to recovery.
- Create a realistic budget and stick to it. This means periodically checking
it and readjusting your figures and spending habits.
- Don't impulse buy. When you see something you hadn't planned to buy, don't
purchase it on the spot. Go home and think it over. It's unlikely you'll return
to the store and buy it.
- Avoid sales. Buying a $500 item on sale for $400 isn't a $100 savings if
you didn't need the item to begin with. It's spending $400 unnecessarily.
- Get medical insurance if at all possible. Even a stopgap policy with a large
deductible can help if a medical crisis comes up. You can't avoid medical
emergencies, but living without medical insurance is an invitation to financial
ruin.
- Charge items only if you can afford to pay for them now. If you don't currently
have the cash, don't charge based on future income--sometimes future income
doesn't materialize. An alternative is to toss all of your credit cards in
a drawer (or in the garbage) and to commit to living without credit for a
while.
- Avoid large rent or house payments. Obligate yourself only for what you
can now afford and increase your mortgage payments only as your income increases.
Consider refinancing your house if your payments are unwieldy.
- Avoid cosigning or guaranteeing a loan for someone. Your signature obligates
you as if you were the primary borrower. You can't be sure that the other
person will pay.
- Avoid joint obligations with people who have questionable spending habits--even
a spouse or significant other. If you incur a joint debt, you're probably
liable for it all if the other person defaults.
- Don't make high-risk investments, such as investments in speculative real
estate, penny stocks and junk bonds. Invest conservatively, opting for certificates
of deposit, money market funds and government bonds.
- Find alternatives to spending money. For a friend's birthday, take her on
a picnic rather than to an expensive restaurant. When someone suggests that
you meet for lunch, propose meeting at the museum on its free day or going
for a walk in the park. Instead of buying book and CDs and renting videos,
borrow them for free at a library.
Click here for
related information and products from Nolo.com.
|
 |
|