The Chronicle

TIME FOR A LITTLE PLASTIC SURGERY

If Christmas spending has left your credit card balance looking ugly, don’t wait to sort it out, follow our step-by-step guide

- MARTIN LEWIS YOU CAN TWEET ME @MARTINLEWI­S

The key weapon to cut interest is a balance transfer... so you shift the debt and owe it, but at no interest cost...

LETTERBOXE­S become dangerous at this time in January, and not just due to trapped fingers. Mail takes on a demonic hue for many waiting for credit card statements to land on the doormat after giving them a hammering over Christmas’.

If your plastic has a festive hangover, don’t ignore it, it’s time to sort it.

There are three key rules to sorting your existing debts: 1. Stop borrowing more. 2. Cut the interest rate. This means your repayments clear the actual debt rather than just profiting the lender.

3. If you’ve more than one debt, prioritise repaying the one with the highest interest rate first – as it’s growing fastest – and just pay the minimums on everything else.

THE BALANCE TRANSFER TACTIC

THE key weapon to cut interest is a balance transfer. This is where you get a new card(s) that repays debts on existing credit or store cards for you, so you shift the debt and owe it, but at no interest cost. And there’s another ‘rule of three’ here to get the right card.

1. Don’t apply willy-nilly, first see what you’ll be accepted for. When you apply for a credit card they do a credit check.

Unfortunat­ely, banks are the type of organisati­on that’d lend you an umbrella when the sun shines and ask for it back when it rains. So those in most need of cutting their existing debt costs tend to be those who struggle most to be accepted.

Worse still, just applying for a card marks your credit file, which has a marginally negative impact, so if you’re rejected, being accepted elsewhere gets slightly tougher.

To help, use an eligibilit­y calculator, like mine at moneysavin­gexpert.com/BTeligibil­ity

These let you home in on the right cards, by showing which of the top deals you’re most likely to be accepted for – and they don’t impact future creditwort­hiness.

2. Go for the card with the lowest fee in the time you need. Most balance transfer cards charge a oneoff fee on the amount of debt transferre­d up to 3% (so £30 per £1,000 shifted).

In general the longer the 0% period the higher the fee, so you should aim for the card with the lowest fee but ensuring the 0% period is long enough. So calculate how long you think you’ll take to clear the debt, add a bit for safety, then pick the lowest fee within that

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 ??  ?? Finding the right 0% card is vital to get balances down as quickly as possible
Finding the right 0% card is vital to get balances down as quickly as possible
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