Whether we’re talking about high-interest debt such as credit cards or longer-term investment debt such as mortgages, making the minimum repayment is good, but not always great. On credit card debt you can end up paying interest of 20% or more, potentially adding thousands of dollars annually to your repayments. Even small increases in your regular mortgage repayments can cut years off the loan and save tens of thousands of dollars in interest along the way.
Many aspects of financial success are about putting good habits in place early and avoiding traps that can damage your dollar value. Here are our top five traps to avoid.
1. Making only minimum repayments
2. Leaking money to businesses
Many businesses are moving to a subscription or regular repayment model - whether it is for apps, TV streaming services, gym memberships or holiday packages - because it seems cheaper and causes less financial pain in the short term. Those businesses become wealthy over time and you do not. Being aware of these regular outgoings, living a leaner lifestyle and plugging these financial leaks can be the equivalent of adding several percentage points to your investment interest.
3. Spending your redraw/equity
Paying extra into your mortgage is an exceptionally good habit. Constantly redrawing the available funds, or borrowing on the equity for non-investment purposes, is not. Keeping all of your savings within your mortgage, or in an offset account, will likely save a considerable amount of interest over time. But be sure to set yourself a budget or savings goal to reap the full benefit of your discipline.
4. Lacking familiarity with your finances
We are all guilty at some stage of being less familiar than we should be with the investment mix of our super fund, or the interest rate on our mortgage. But checking in with your finances on a regular basis – monthly, bi-annually or yearly – is a simple way to check things are moving in the right direction and to take action if they are not.
5. Prioritising spending rather than investing
All great plans begin with a goal. Wealth planning usually begins with a retirement lifestyle goal. A strategy is then set to achieve that goal – perhaps the diversified investment of $100 every week for the next 20 years – and that becomes the absolute priority. Households often prioritise and plan for holidays, new cars, furniture updates and wide-screen TVs. The fact that a plan is in place means they will likely have those things. But such purchases should only be allowed after the real priority has been taken care of.
Talking to a financial planner can help you understand your situation and make confident financial decisions (big or small) so you can get the most out of life.
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