✓ Accepted Answer
To get out of credit card debt efficiently, use the avalanche method: list all your debts by interest rate and pay minimum on all of them, then throw every spare pound at the highest-rate debt first. This minimises total interest paid.
Alternatively the snowball method (paying off smallest balance first regardless of rate) provides psychological wins that keep you motivated. Research shows many people stick to the snowball method better even though it costs slightly more in interest.
Either way, stop accumulating new debt while paying off old debt. Cut up the cards if needed. Call your card providers and ask for a rate reduction — many will lower it, especially for long-standing customers. A balance transfer card with 0% interest for 12-24 months can help if you qualify.
Track every penny using a budgeting app. Finding even £200/month extra to throw at debt makes a massive difference. Cook at home, pause subscriptions, sell things you don't use.
by rubybrown76489
· 51 upvotes
The best starting point for investing $1000 is an index fund that tracks the S&P 500. Instead of trying to pick winning stocks (which even professional fund managers rarely do consistently), you buy a tiny slice of 500 of the largest US companies in one purchase.
Vanguard, Fidelity, and Charles Schwab all offer excellent low-cost index funds. Look for funds with an expense ratio below 0.1%. Fidelity's FZROX has 0% fees.
Before investing anything, make sure you have 1-3 months of living expenses saved as an emergency fund in a high-yield savings account. Investing money you might need in 6 months is risky because markets can drop 20-30% and you'd be forced to sell at a loss.
If your employer offers a 401k match, contribute enough to get the full match first — it's a guaranteed 50-100% return that no investment can beat. Then open a Roth IRA (US) or ISA (UK) for tax-advantaged growth.
by tsehaymekonen18936
· 11 upvotes