Control Your Holiday Credit Card Debt
Susan Taylor, Consumer and Family Economics Educator
The holidays should be a joyful time for you and your family. But
for many families raising grandchildren, it’s tough to find
the extra cash for holiday expenses. Using your credit cards may
solve the immediate problem, but the debt can create other problems.
Most families don’t plan to run up high balances on their
credit cards during the holidays—it just happens. Nearly one-third
of adults say they spent more than they planned on holiday gifts.
Most spent $100 to $500 more than they planned. It is hard to pay
off an extra $500 on credit cards after the holidays.
Ways to Control Spending
- Start by making a written plan for holiday spending. Think about
how much you can afford to spend on gifts, decorations, holiday
meals, and travel.
- Set a spending limit for gifts for each person. Include limits
on other items in your spending plan. Start looking for bargains
early. If it’s been a tough year for you, think about cutting
back on what you usually spend. Talk with friends and family about
not exchanging gifts, drawing names so you give fewer gifts, or
setting dollar limits on gifts.
- Decide if you are going to use a credit card for holiday spending.
If you use only cash, leave your credit cards at home so that
you won’t be tempted. If you write checks, be sure to record
each in your register and figure the balance before writing another
check. Stay within your limit!
- If you need or want to use a credit card, pick just one to
use for your holiday spending. It’s easier to control your
spending with one card. Write your spending limit on an envelope
and put it in your wallet. When you use your credit card, write
the amount on the envelope and subtract it from your limit. Put
the receipt in the envelope. When you’ve reached your limit,
stop using your credit card!
- Try to separate shopping trips from spending trips. Make one
trip to compare prices and value but don’t take along your
checkbook or credit cards. When you’ve decided what you
can afford to buy, go back to make the purchases.
Ways to Cut Holiday Costs
Make gifts by hand or give gift certificates promising your time
or talents. Have friends or family over for dessert rather than
for a meal. Make your own holiday decorations. The gift that each
of us remembers as most special is usually one that involved someone’s
time and thought, not large amounts of money.
Credit Card Offers
During the holidays, your credit card company may offer to let
you skip a payment or two. Or, it may invite you to pay back only
the minimum or even reduce your minimum payment. Don’t take
these offers—you’ll end up paying more in the long run.
Stick to Your Plan
The best gifts are those that do not burden you with debt into
the next year. For more information on using credit wisely, check
out our Credit Card Smarts website at http://www.ace.uiuc.edu/cfe/ccs/index.html.
In this Issue: Holidays with
Extended Family | Control Your Holiday Credit Card Debt | Recipe
Corner | Making Family Memories | Give
Toys that Stimulate Creativity |