Step 1:
Create a column for the name of the company you owe, the total amount
you owe, the minimum monthly payment, or the usual payment you make,
and the interest rate.
Step 2:
Add up the grand total of your debt and the total monthly payments you are making.
Step 3:
Add up all of the interest rates you pay. Put them all into your
calculator and then divide that total amount by the number or interest
rates. This will provide and "average" rate of interest you are paying.
This is a simple method and is only meant to provide an "average," for
concept sake. For instance, if your largest debt is based on a low
interest rate and other small debts based on high rates, it may not be
a fair average. Keep this in mind and calculate accordingly. Your goal
is to come up with a fair average of your current interest rates.
Step 4:
Determine the number of years it will take you, again on average, to
pay off all of your debt based on your normal monthly payments. Take
the total amount of debt you owe and dived it by the total "yearly"
payments you are making. You may want to eliminate debts from this
calculation that will be paid off very soon.
Step 5:
Now look at your new consolidation loan proposal. What will your new
monthly payment will be, the rate of interest and length of time, or
the term? The term is a very important factor to consider.
Step 6:
We need to determine how much interest you will be paying on your
current debt as compared to a new consolidation loan. Here is an
example. Use $25,000 as the total current debt based on 10.000 average
interest rate using a five-year repayment term. The monthly payment is
$531.18 and the monthly interest portion of this payment is $208 for a
total amount of interest paid in of $12,480, which is the $208 per
month times 60 months. To determine the interest portion of the payment
use the loan amount multiplied by the interest rate divided by 12.
Step 7:
Now take the same $25,000 based on a 30-year term at 7.000 interest.
This monthly payment is $166.33 and $145 per month of it is the
interest portion, for a total of $52,200 paid in interest. This is the
$145 per month multiplied by 360 months.
Step 8:
Keep in mind that as you reduce your principal balance each month the
amount paid towards interest will also reduce in both scenarios, but
the plan with the shorter term will decrease much quicker. We would
need a full-term amortization chart to get exact figures, so please
consider the "actual" amount of interest paid in to be a fictitious
figure, but should serve as an example to see the general difference
for proportion sake.
Step 9:
See the difference here, even though the interest rate is only 7.000
for the new loan compared to the 10.000 on the current debt, because
the loan is on a much longer term, 30 years instead of five, it will
cost you $39,720 additional in interest. This is the difference between
the $52,200 and $12,480 mentioned above.
Step 10:
Look at the $323 per month savings now, ($531. payment for the
five-year term versing the $208. payment for the 30-year term), you
will have in your pocket if you do stretch your debt over to a 30-year
term. Can you invest that money and gain back more of a return than the
cost of the additional interest you would pay over a 30-year term?
Step 11:
Also consider the cost, if any, in obtaining your new consolidation
loan, such as closing costs, appraisal or broker fees. If you turn your
original $25,000 debt balance into $27,000, how much more will this
cost you?