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  • Eating On A Tight Budget

    By John

    With household budgets being squeezed, people are increasingly looking for ways to save money and make the dollars stretch a little further. Food accounts for quite a large part of the monthly expenditure and we are often asked for our tips on how to economize on the cost of eating at home without sacrificing healthy foods. You can do this surprisingly easily, actually, but it takes some effort and you do have to have the discipline to do without some of your expensive favorites.

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    Planning

    The key to eating well on a tight budget is planning. You need to plan your menus for a definitive period – the next week, or fortnight, or month – based on your family’s favorite 7 or 14 or 28 recipes. List the meals and their ingredients. Total the ingredients, cost them as far as is practicable, and that is your shopping list for the week, or fortnight, or month. Take the exact amount of cash you need (after all the available discounts, rebates and coupons have been applied) when you go shopping and don’t buy anything that is not on the list.

    A scientific refinement of this is to allocate a percentage of your available food budget to the main nutritional components, which are staples, produce, and protein, when planning the recipes and menus for the upcoming period. Your shopping list should reflect these percentages. As mentioned earlier, this takes a little work! And you can see where you may well have to make the sacrifices of some of your favorites to make the budget balance, however that is what eating on a tight budget entails.

    Shopping

    Where, when and how you shop will have an effect on how far you can make the budget stretch.

    Where

    Stores may be convenient, but they may not give you the lowest prices, or the best value, even after discounts and coupons. A farmer or a butcher will probably be cheaper for meats, and also give you cheap, less popular options that you may not find in stores – like offal, beef shins, and knuckles. Bread is a usually lot cheaper from a bakery than a store. Online vendors often have lower prices for the same products as stores.

    When

    Timing is important too. You should only buy seasonal produce in-season, for instance. The prices of perishable products almost everywhere are reduced later in the day and you can pick up remarkable bargains for immediate consumption or even freezing, if you can wait until the evening to do your shopping.

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    How

    We have mentioned coupons before. While they can get you amazing reductions, especially when used in combinations with other available discounts, you have to make sure that they are used on items on your shopping list, and not on extras or exotic stuff.

    Buying in bulk is plain common sense when you’re on a tight budget, especially when products are on sale. It works for meats – especially if you buy from a farmer or butcher who will make cuts for you – which you can freeze. Try to buy non-perishable items, such as the staples like oils, flour, rice and even cheese, in bulk.

    Working out how to eat on a tight budget should become easier for you if you follow these tips.

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  • Shopping For Bargains

    By John

    In these times of financial uncertainty people are increasingly concerned with saving money, either to be able to afford something special, or to put their financial future on a more secure footing, or simply to make their day-to-day dollars stretch a little further.

    Whether you are shopping for bananas or a sofa, there are ways to ensure that you get the best deal, or bargain. A combination of increasingly competitive retailers, increasingly savvy shoppers and the ubiquitous internet has spawned a whole new method of internet-based shopping. However, there are some bargains that you won’t find via your computer, so let’s look at those first.

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    Old-Tech Shopping For Bargains

    There are lots of professional and amateur traders or sellers who generally don’t advertise their wares online. You have to go and find them yourself, at estate sales, clearance sales, moving sales, yard sales, thrift shops and flea markets and more. Probably the best way to find out where such sales are taking place near you is to look in the local newspapers. You are sure to find some excellent bargains in all these places.

    But be prepared to haggle!

    One useful tip: it’s common practice for stall-holders or stores with clearance sales to put the pricier items or the ones they have difficulty in selling in a prominent position at the front. So go to the back and delve around for even better bargains.

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    Away from these types of sales, if you are looking for a particular branded item, it may be worth calling the store direct to ask if they have any clearance or overstocking sales coming up. If you get a really good bargain you can always resell it yourself at a profit!

    New-Tech Shopping For Bargains

    If you don’t have a particular purchase in mind but are always on the lookout for a bargain, you should sign up for email newsletters giving details of available deals, and bookmark deal-of-the-day websites. Some websites will send you an alert if a deal comes up for types of product you have specified.

    When you have decided on a particular item that you want to buy, you need to comparison-shop online. There are many websites that will help you – but remember that those websites derive their income from the retailers whose products they list, so you should visit several different websites to ensure balance. It’s also worth being patient, as prices of new items, especially gadgets, can drop quite quickly. Waiting for the off-season for some items will also produce better bargains. Another option is to look on eBay and similar sites for the cast-offs from early-adopters or those with buyer’s remorse – often almost brand-new goods for a bargain price.

    Once you know what you want to buy, and have found the best price for it, you need to look for ways to reduce the price even further. If you purchase through websites with links to retailers they will often give a percentage cash back. Some credit card companies linked to retailers will do the same.

    Then there are coupons. There are websites that will track them down for you, and coupon code aggregators that will help to tailor the coupon requirements for your particular purpose. Don’t forget to read the details on all coupons carefully, especially the validity period, expiry date, and any restrictions on usage. Clever use of coupons can turn even a bargain into a bargain.

    All this can be done on-the-go as well, of course. There are smartphone apps that will do all the same research and comparison-shopping while you are on the ground. Snapping an item’s barcode with your phone camera speeds the process up.

    All of this sounds like quite a hassle. But if you want a real bargain, you have to work for it!

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  • Unusual Ways To Save Money

    By John

    Just about everybody is keen to save money in these difficult times. There are the conventional strategies and methods…. Then there are the less-common ideas that people have come up with. Here is the list of our favorite tips that can help you save money in unusual or innovative ways.

    At Home

    *One person saves $18.50 buying a sponge from the bathroom department in place of a $20 squeegee from the auto shop for washing his car. *Another has given up all newspaper and magazine subscriptions and reads all the news online – via a free wi-fi hotspot. *A wife cuts her husband’s hair. Not sure if it works as well the other way round! *A space heater costing $20 can save 20 gallons of heating oil in a month. *Many people have started having a No-TV Day once a week. *Making sure that all closet doors are closed when the heating or cooling is on could save up to $50 a month. *A $40 investment in rechargeable batteries and the charger could save you up to $100 a year in batteries for remotes, torches and other gadgets. *Buying firewood in the spring can save $100 a cord come the snow. *A smart power strip costing around $30 can save you over $200 a year off your electricity bills. *A $55 water filter can save you over $350 a year in bottled drinking water.

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    Buying/Spending

    *Several families don’t buy new clothes, they swap what they have amongst themselves – adults and kids. *A couple giving up soda and smoking save $500 a month. *If you use two coupons – the store’s and the manufacturer’s – on a Buy One Get One Free offer, you get two items almost free. *You can live off free samples for a surprising length of time. *Some gas stations give away a free paper if you buy a minimum amount of gas. If you fill up on a Sunday you get the paper – and all the coupon inserts, for free. * For a minimum purchase amount, some stores give a discount of 20 cents per gallon if you fill up with their gas. Combine this with a credit card which gives a 5% rebate on gas purchases and you can save nearly 30 cents per gallon. *You can kill impulse buying by making a list of your shopping requirements, looking up the prices on the store’s delivery website, and taking the exact right amount of money with you when you go to the store. *Some people have one No-Spending Week each month.

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    Out And About

    *There are websites on which you can buy gift certificates for local restaurants. You can pay between $2 and $10 for a $25 discount on a $35 meal. *A zoo membership can pay for itself within two visits. *Many hotels have racks of flyers for tourist attractions. The flyers often contain discount coupons. *When ordering meals, give the kids’ menus a miss. The adult portions are usually cheaper or better value and you can divide them up for the little ones.

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  • Top Ways To Save Money Quickly

    By John

    Who isn’t looking to save money these days? Whether you’re saving in order to buy something special, or set up a more solid financial future for your family, or simply to make ends meet, you have probably worked out a strategy on how to save to meet your goal. But while waiting for the big saving items to kick in, how can you start saving money right now?

    Here is our list of favorite money-saving tips that you can action straight away. Taken individually they may only save a dollar or two here and another couple there, but they can all add up to quite a tidy sum. And they’re easy!

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    Save On Transport Costs

    You can do a lot of the basic maintenance tasks on your car yourself, such as changing the oil and rotating the tires. Using websites and apps on smart phones to help you find the cheapest gas may save you as much as 20 cents per gallon. Driving conservatively and, of course, making less trips through better planning, carpooling and walking or biking more will save you gas and save you money.

    Save When Buying Stuff

    You can save a lot by buying in bulk – and if you go shopping with friends, they can help split  bulk purchases up into more manageable proportions. Keep receipts – you never know when you may be entitled to cash back if an item goes on sale within a specified number of days after you purchased the same item. Making more use of thrift shops and yard sales will save you money. So will buying refills instead of buying new all the time. Give yourself a thinking-break of a week or a month before buying a larger item to see if you really need it or simply just want it. Buying generic rather than name brands is a sure way to save money.

    And, above all, don’t be afraid to haggle!

    Save On Food And Groceries

    Cutting out prepared and convenience foods and making more of your own meals yourself will save a large amount. Ditto with those lattes from the coffee shop. Making a shopping list and sticking to it will limit unnecessary impulse purchases. It goes without saying that you should make maximum effort to comparison-shop and maximum use of coupons and any available discounts and rebates when they work for you.

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    Save On Entertainment

    Cutting back on eating out is undoubtedly a major way to save money immediately. It doesn’t mean having to cut back on your social life – just entertain more at home. It’s a lot cheaper and, if the idea catches on, who knows, your friends will probably appreciate the savings too when their turn comes round to do the hosting. Making more use of the library for free books and DVDs and music will enable you to drop some expensive services and TV channels which will save you an appreciable amount of money each month.

    Save On Trips

    Hotels are more open to negotiation than they pretend – especially as it gets late in the day. Just try asking for a cheaper rate. If you can juggle the dates with the kids’ holidays, try to take vacations off-season, and fly at off-peak hours; both are money-savers. Talking of vacations and hotels – what about camping for a change?

    Closer to home, you can cut out visits to the gym and expensive personal trainers and save a bundle by finding somewhere local to jog, and exercise in your own home. There are several excellent free smartphone apps which will help you plan and carry out circuit-training, and the yoga-type exercises.

    Maybe some of these tips won’t work for you, but the majority are within your control and are some of the best suggestions we know to help you save money quickly.

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  • Saving Money On Lighting Bills

    By John

    The cost of lighting is estimated to account for 25% of the bill for energy consumption in the average American home. You can make a big saving on this item – will do eventually, actually, as it is just a matter of time before you make the necessary move.

    The old incandescent bulb has been around forever, is cheap, familiar and available everywhere – but is rapidly becoming a dinosaur. It was first upstaged by the compact fluorescent light (CFL), which brought many benefits yet has still to be embraced by many consumers. Rapid research and development has already produced a viable successor to the CFL – the light emitting diode (LED). There is little doubt that the LED will become the standard bulb of the future, however people are still uncertain at this stage, if they are planning to change at all, whether to upgrade to the middle-ranking CFL or to take the plunge and go straight for the LED option. It is the classic ‘spending-to-save’ dilemma.

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    Out With The Old

    The old incandescent bulb is still in use in the majority of homes. It is cheap to buy (and replace, which is something that needs to happen quite frequently), does its job well enough, as long as you don’t buy it from a low-quality foreign manufacturer, and is far more expensive to operate than its successors.

    In With The New

    The CFL costs more than twice as much as the incandescent bulb, but lasts ten times longer, and uses around a third of the energy for the equivalent amount of light. It releases around two-thirds less carbon dioxide. It comes in all shapes and sizes.

    The CFL has drawbacks. It can be temperamental in extremes of temperature, takes time to warm up from a cold start, and rapid switching on-and-off shortens its life-span. Because it contains mercury it is hazardous if broken and troublesome to dispose of in an eco-friendly way.

    In With The Newest

    The LED costs ten times more than the CFL but lasts up to ten times as long, and uses less than a third of the energy. It releases half the amount of carbon dioxide. It comes in all shapes, sizes, colors and throw-patterns. It emits little heat, is impervious to temperature extremes, is unaffected by rapid on-off switching, and contains no mercury. Disposal is not a problem – in fact, components of the LED can be recycled.

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    So When Will You Make The Move?

    It’s just a question of doing the sums. Take the life-span of the longest-lasting bulb, the LED. Take the number of incandescent and CFL bulbs you need to purchase over the life-span of the LED (the initial purchase plus the number that will need to be replaced). Multiply that by the unit cost per bulb. Multiply that by the unit cost of electricity in your area against the energy consumption of each bulb. And the answer will probably show that if you replace, say, 25 incandescent bulbs with CFL ones, you should save several thousand dollars, and more if changing to LED. The average life of a typical LED is quoted as 50,000 hours or more so even if you have your lights on for 12 hours per day (we hope not!), that means that these savings can be achieved within about 3 years.

    The initial expense of replacing incandescent bulbs with CFL or LED will obviously deter many people from making the change. However, making the change now will start the process of saving you money in the long run, and as the cost of LED bulbs comes down, will save you even more money on your lighting bill in the future.

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  • Top Tips For Saving Money

    By John

    Everything is going up these days – food, gas, energy, theatre tickets – you name it. Except, sadly, our incomes. Saving money to a greater or lesser degree is becoming a priority for most people. Here is the list of our favorite Tips For Saving Money.

    Cash And Money Management

    The first priority should be to pay off your debts, starting with the easiest and smallest ones first. Then you need to examine your credit card usage. Save money on ATM fees by going to your bank instead. Try to get a rate reduction on your credit card – then pay off the debt. Use cash whenever possible and just leave the credit card at home.

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    Move to a bank with lower maintenance fees and better interest rates on checking and savings accounts.

    Consider moving to a cheaper state or area, or to a smaller house. Rent out any spare space you have. Ferret out and use all the old stuff in your house, or sell it.

    Be willing to buy more used stuff. Make best use of thrift shops, eBay and yard sales.

    Time your buying. Do seasonal holiday shopping immediately after the holiday is over. Buy perishable foods like bread and salads in the evening when they will be discounted.

    Don’t over-indulge your kids with expensive toys.

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    Home

    Save money by buying a used car that is reliable and fuel-efficient. Keep it well-maintained, do more of the basic maintenance yourself, and drive conservatively. Make less trips by planning ahead, and walk or bike or use the bus more.

    Turn off/switch off running water and appliances when you’re not actually using them. Buy appliances for reliability and value, not necessarily the cheapest, and keep them clean. Seal your home against leakage of heating and cooling. Use programmable thermostats and turn the heating down by a degree or two, and the air-conditioning up by a degree or two, from the level you are used to. Replace your old incandescent light bulbs with CFL or LED ones. You could even take cold showers….

    When shopping for the home, go for value rather than price. Sign up for free customer loyalty and rewards programs and use coupons as much as possible as long they apply to products you were going to buy anyway. Cut down on the fast foods, prepared meals and deliveries, and make more of your own meals instead. Be prepared to plan your menus around what is on sale at the time. Cook in big batches and freeze what you don’t eat immediately. Try your hand at growing your own vegetables if you have space for a garden.

    Buy refills instead of new whenever possible. You can actually make many of your own detergents and cleaning products.

    Entertainment

    You can save a good deal of money by cutting out things that you don’t need or under-use (same thing, in effect): magazine subscriptions, gym and golf memberships. If you can’t drop them, at least try to get a cheaper rate.

    Eating out less will save you – what – $60 or more for each meal? Why not invite your friends round to your house for a meal instead of eating out (they may also be trying to save money!).

    You can make better use of the library for books, music and DVDs. This will help you to reduce the amount you spend on cable TV. Drop channels and services you don’t need or use, the same thing on your cell phone plan – it will all save money. Watch less TV and make more of your own entertainment – or read more books, or go to a park or museum.

    Maybe not all of these tips will work for you, but they are certainly a good starting point for anyone seriously interested in saving money.

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  • Top Tips To Reduce Your Cable Bill

    By John

    The average American household’s monthly cable bill is reckoned to be $75. With costs rising by at least 5% annually (outstripping inflation), it won’t be long before it reaches $100 per month. No wonder people who are already looking for ways to save money are increasingly wondering how to reduce their monthly cable bill. The trouble is, cable is mostly provided by a few big companies who to a large extent are able to dictate their own terms. They may say they are being squeezed by their partners but that is little comfort to us, the consumers.

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    Most people have a triple play cable package, comprising telephone, high-speed internet and TV services. Of these, TV is usually by far the most expensive component. This is obviously the main area where you should be looking for a reduction, and there are 3 ways to approach it that we recommend.

    Ask For A Better Deal

    The cable provision business is highly competitive and companies have devised multiple different plans, schemes, packages and promos to attract new customers. Having attracted customers they are keen to hold onto them. They have dedicated loyalty or retention departments devoted to this, whose staff have a wide degree of discretion over what reductions they may agree to. So if you call your cable company to ask for a better deal, make sure you get the right department. Before calling, be clear in your own mind what you want from them and what you are prepared to accept. For instance, can you drop some of your extra channels to reduce the bill, or would you accept an extra channel or two for free? (If you do, make sure you know how long the arrangement will last for.) Discuss your billing in detail, as there may be line items on there that you were not aware of and can do without.

    Depending on how this works out, you may need to get a little tougher in your negotiating. Bear in mind that the company is possibly keener to keep you as a customer than you are to remain one. Ultimately, of course, you unleash your ultimate weapon – threaten to drop the TV component altogether (assuming that you are happy with the internet and phone service and want to continue these). If that doesn’t produce the solution you are seeking, then drop it. You have alternative options.

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    Shop Around

    Ask your friends and family what they pay. Compare deals from other providers online – there are a few websites which will analyze your requirements and usage and find the best available deal for you. Detailed research like this will almost certainly throw up a better deal than the one you have and will result in a reduction of your monthly cable bill.

    Still Not Happy?

    Then it’s time to get out of cable TV altogether. You have a number of options:

    • Streaming services. There are several available. This way you don’t pay for channels you don’t want, although you won’t get all the network shows you may be used to. It’s a monthly subscription and cheap to cancel, so you are not tied up to a long-term contract that is expensive to get out of. A streaming box costs around $100. You can combine this with one of these:
    • HD TV Antenna, which costs around $20 and will pull in your local channels and other live broadcasts, for free.
    • DVD by mail. This method will save you a lot of money in a month.
    • Use your library. Cheap DVD rental, including new releases.

    If you can’t negotiate a better deal with your cable company – and you are in quite a strong position – then go for an alternative. Either way you will achieve a significant reduction in your monthly cable bill.

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  • Easy Ways to Improve Cell Phone Battery Life

    By Dr. Kavita

    No matter how expensive and sleek your cell phone is, if it has a battery life shorter than the life span of a Mayfly, then it is best used as a showpiece. By the way the Mayfly has a life span of just 30 minutes. Well, it is easy for me to suggest that you use your expensive cell phone merely as a showpiece but tough for you to implement. So, instead of that, let me help you use your cell phone by suggesting easy ways to improve your cell phone’s battery life.

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    Always use updated software

    You may be using a number of apps and other softwares on your cell phones and if any of the are outdated versions, you should update all of them at once. Not only will the continued usage of outdated software expose your cell phone to security risks, but also can take a toll on your battery life too.

    Cut back on apps

    Apps are great tools and they can really take the user experience on your cell phone to a totally different level altogether. But irresponsible usage of apps is going to land your battery life in trouble. The more apps you have installed on your cell phone, lesser will be the life of your cell phone battery. So try to be very selective when it comes to apps, and download and install only those that are really necessary.

    Also the ones that you decide to keep on your phone should be kept switched off when not in use to conserve battery charge.

    Let go of the push notifications

    Not only are those push notifications utterly annoying when you are in the middle of work or something equally important, but they are guzzling your battery charge as well. So select the option to switch off those pesky notifications from Facebook and Twitter and all those beeps you get when someone sends you an email.

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    Wi-Fi and Bluetooth are best kept off

    It is best to keep the Wi-Fi and Bluetooth off unless you are using it. You must have already noticed how rapidly the battery begins to empty as soon as you switch on those two applications.

    Take precautions while you charge your phone

    Most of us leave our phones in its covers or cases when we plugin to the sockets to re-charge our batteries. Doing this traps the heat within the case and the battery does gets heated up in the process, leading to a much shorter life than if you had not exposed it to such unnecessary heat trauma.

    Also, make it a point to let the battery empty out totally (at least once in a week) before you plug it in to recharge.

    These tips are not only easy but effective as well. Try them out and you will be grateful that you read this post to the end.

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  • Tips to Save Money on your Cell Phone

    By Dr. Kavita

    You set out to purchase your new cell phone with so much enthusiasm and excitement and everything went well for the first two months or so. Then slowly as your honeymoon with your cell phone ended, realization began to dawn in on you about how costly your cell phone was getting day by day. Each month a big (if not huge) chunk of money gets spent on cell phone usage.

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    Don’t worry, because today is your lucky day and you are going to find some great tips to save money on your cell phone expenses.

    Compare cell phone plans

    Now this is common knowledge that more the players in the market, more cut throat will the competition amongst them be. That is precisely why there are so many chances for cell phone users like you to find out economical and money saving plans. You only need to compare and contrast between the plans offered by the competitors.

    Try out the prepaid cell phone plans

    For many cell phone consumers, prepaid is the way to go now. These prepaid plans help save a considerable amount of money, mainly by limiting and restricting the amount that is available to use. You can choose a certain amount of money and refill your prepaid plans for this amount every month.

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    You can use this amount to the full and once it gets over, you are free to decide if you want to refill additional amounts for the rest of the month or just wait and watch until you are ready to refill again. This way you will never over shoot your monthly budget for cell phone usage.

    Employee discounts

    There are tie ups that exist between companies and cell phone service providers, but not all of them gets in to the public eye. You may not think so, but it is highly possible that your company too has a tie up with some cell phone company. Go ask your HR head if there are any such offers available for employees like you. You might just find a way to save money if you asked.

    Try family plans

    Family always comes in handy in times of crises and will help you save money on your cell phone plans too. Just enquire about the discounts and benefits that your cell phone service provider has up its sleeve for families that are using their service. The best part is that you do not even need to be a member of an actual real life family to start reaping the benefits.

    Even if you belong to the unlucky few whose family members have different service providers, you can still add your classmates, roomies, and colleagues and so on and so forth (anyone outside your family) who share your provider in order to start getting discounted rates under the family plan.

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  • Three Ways You Could Kill Your Credit Score

    By Dr. Kavita

    I am sure that you decided to read this post, not because you want to really know tips to kill your credit score, but because you realize the importance of credit score to your finances. You know that higher your credit score, higher will be your chances at securing loans, credit cards with benefits, and so many other financial conveniences.

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    But the reason I elected to elaborate on ways to kill your credit score is that many people are unknowingly or unwittingly killing their credit score with their own actions. Let us take a detailed look at the issue and learn from our mistakes. Let us learn about ways to kill credit score with an intention of steering clear away from those ways ever in our lives.

    Closing out credit cards

    Most of us do not realize how much damage this single action could create in terms of our credit scores. But on first impression, it seems counter intuitive to even suggest that closing out your unused credit cards can damage your credit score. The fact is that when you close out, the reports related to that credit card will fall off your credit report and that is not going to prove any credit worthiness to your lenders.

    Instead if you choose to keep the credit cards, despite not using them, the reports connected to them will be shown in a positive manner and will have a good impact on your overall credit score.

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    Defaulting on payments

    This one is pretty simple to understand. No matter how small the outstanding bill is, if you defaulted on paying them, then it will leave a blemish on your credit score. You will be labeled as a high risk customer, one who is a highly risky person to trust your money with.

    Overshooting your credit limits

    Limits are meant to be stop people from overshooting them. If you have a constant tendency of maxing out your credit card or overshooting your limit, your credit score is in for trouble. A safe rule of thumb is to limit your credit card usage to 10% of your actual credit limit.

    Too many credit card inquiries

    When people become too desperate to get a credit card, the first blunder that they commit is to put in many applications with different credit card companies, thinking that if they apply for 10, they might get approval for 2. Well, your desperation is showing and getting reported back to the credit bureaus as well. This desperation is considered by the bureaus as a lack of credit worthiness and hence reflected negatively by pulling your credit scores further below.

    Stop and think for a while if you have been committing any of these blunders and if the answer is yes, you now know that you were killing your credit score with your own hands!

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